And what about the question? I have X11-server installed from MacPorts. An Aqua App is installed in /Applications/MacPorts/X11.app. When I want to launch it, nothing since my update to Mojave :-(
The only way I found is to execute the binary directly from a Terminal like
that:
$ /Applications/MacPorts/X11.app/Contents.MacOS/X11.bin &
It’s not really fun.
Is anyone have a solution?
> Le 13 déc. 2018 à 02:36, Ryan Schmidt <[email protected]> a écrit :
>
>
>
> On Dec 12, 2018, at 03:02, Tabitha McNerney wrote:
>
>> I just installed XQuartz 2.7.11 today on a fresh Mac running Mojave 10.14.2.
>> I installed XQuartz from the XQuartz.pkg found in the disk image (dmg) file
>> on the XQuartz support site: https://www.xquartz.org/
>>
>> I didn't have any problems installing and then later running XQuartz.
>> However, on Mojave, there was an interesting alert panel which appeared
>> during the pkg installation process which I have not seen on previous
>> versions of macOS when installing XQuartz, which alert panel with two
>> buttons, one which stated "Don't Allow" and the other stated "OK", and text
>> which stated the following:
>>
>> "Installer.app" wants access to control "System Events.app". Allowing
>> control will provide access to documents and data in "System Events.app",
>> and to perform actions within that app.
>>
>> I didn't know what to do so I waited. There must have been a timeout because
>> the panel disappeared on its own without me making a selection. The package
>> installer process then finished on its own and stated XQuartz had been
>> installed successfully. I was then able to run XQuartz without any issues.
>> Interestingly, when I now run System Preferences and select Security &
>> Privacy -> Privacy -> Automation there is an entry for "Installer.app" and
>> underneath a check box next to "System Events.app". The check box is
>> unchecked. I gather this all has something to do with changes to Mojave's
>> security and privacy settings. Has anyone else seen this with or without
>> XQuartz involved? If so, any ideas of what this means?
>
> The XQuartz.pkg installer's postinstall script uses System Events to display
> a dialog:
>
>
> /usr/bin/osascript <<EOF
> tell application "System Events"
> activate
> display dialog "You will need to log out and log back in to make
> XQuartz your default X11 server." buttons {"OK"}
> end tell
>
>
> If you don't allow the installer to control System Events, then it cannot
> display that dialog for you.
>
> I guess previous versions of macOS didn't restrict scripting access in this
> way and just always allowed it. Probably a good thing for security that the
> OS now warns you about this, but the installer was built 2 years ago, so the
> developer couldn't have anticipated that macOS would be changed in this way.
>
> This has nothing to do with MacPorts. You could report the issue to the
> developer of XQuartz:
>
> https://bugs.freedesktop.org/enter_bug.cgi
>
>
--
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