I believe if you want something more esoteric you can execute a script in a
different language. I'm not sure on how to accomplish it but I'm sure the
googles do. I'm glad this is headed in the direction you need though, it's
definitely something we added with this sort of usage in mind.

On Fri, Apr 7, 2017 at 6:40 PM, Richard L. Hamilton <[email protected]>
wrote:

> Well, this seems to do what I want, as near as possible - enable or
> disable Time Machine depending on whether the backup drive is mounted, and
> in either case (since this doesn't seem to be remembered!) turn off local
> snapshots, which seem to me not a great idea with an SSD, at least if one
> doesn't need such a guarantee that backups will be particularly recent.
>
> using terms from application "Growl"
>    on evaluate notification with notification
>       if notification's app name equals "HardwareGrowler" then
>          if notification's note title equals "LaCie Mounted" then
>             do shell script "sudo tmutil enable;sudo tmutil disablelocal"
>          else if notification's note title equals "LaCie Unmounted" then
>             do shell script "sudo tmutil disable;sudo tmutil disablelocal"
>          end if
>       end if
>       -- absent an explicit return, defaults are used
>    end evaluate notification
> end using terms from
>
> This does assume that the account using it is able to do a "sudo" without
> password; other than that and the name of the volume mounted or unmounted,
> it's probably fairly generic for such a use.  Having the Script Editor show
> me Growl's dictionary, along with looking at actual recent examples in the
> Growl log, provided the information I needed.
>
> AppleScript was clearly descended from something intended to appeal to
> non-programmers; as such, it makes my head hurt a bit; but for something
> small that can't as easily be done any other way, I guess I can live with
> that. :-)
>
> On Mar 27, 2017, at 14:13, Chris Forsythe <[email protected]> wrote:
>
> It's fine I think you're golden with Growl given it has two events. I'd
> really suggest the applescript rules. Think of applescript as just a
> different language and don't try to make it a 1:1 comparison to say bash or
> python. It's more like plain talking so to speak.
>
> Anyhow you could write a script to watch for the contents for the
> different things you want to watch for. The very end of our documentation
> talks about how to execute a shell script from there:
>
> http://growl.info/documentation/applescript-rules
>
> I think this is going to handle what you need and be fairly simple once
> you've got it worked out in your head and laid out. If you read it and run
> into issues once making the script reply back here.
>
>
> On Sat, Mar 25, 2017 at 2:27 AM, Richard L. Hamilton <[email protected]>
> wrote:
>
>> (apologies if this is a dupe; it looked like it failed before, when I had
>> a cc to [email protected] when my membership hasn't
>> been approved yet)
>>
>> I'd like to have a script run
>> sudo tmutil enable
>> when /Volumes/LaCie is mounted, and
>> sudo tmutil disable
>> sudo tmutil disablelocal
>>
>> when it's unmounted (I don't want local snapshots on the internal SSD,
>> but tmutil disablelocal doesn't seem to be remembered across reboots; it's
>> good enough that I have backups running when the Thunderbolt drive is
>> plugged in).
>>
>> Additionally, for that and any other mount/unmount not in
>> HardwareGrowler's exception list, I'd like the usual visual notification.
>>
>> Assume that I've tweaked /etc/sudoers or otherwise made arrangements
>> (such as porting Linux pam_ssh_agent_auth.so and configuring it) so that I
>> don't need to enter my password for sudo.  And of course, the system won't
>> let me unmount the drive if it's in use (not counting forced unmounts), so
>> the script doesn't need to worry about that.
>>
>> I've never really worked with AppleScript, and have no idea how the
>> arguments (like whether it's a mount or unmount, and what the mount point
>> is) are passed, so some help would be great!
>>
>> I'd actually rather use ControlPlane than HardwareGrowler+Growl, but
>> ControlPlane doesn't (AFAIK) have a mount/unmount "evidence" source, and
>> neither HardwareGrowler nor ControlPlane seem to have a provision for
>> noticing the connection/disconnection of Thunderbolt devices.
>>
>> thanks...
>>
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>
>
>
> --
> Chris Forsythe
>
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-- 
Chris Forsythe

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