Pen Mac OS
Pen Mac OS
Note: If your Computer has only 2 GB of RAM, Still you install Mac OS on PC, By using your pen drive as RAM to Boost your PC Performance. You have successfully install Mac OS on PC completely for free, don’t forget to Share with your friends and relatives, a like, share or tweet don’t cost any penny for you!
- Use a Mac OS X installation Disc. If you’re unable to use Internet Recovery Mode or create a bootable USB installer, you can still use a Mac OS X installation disc. These discs are available for OS X Snow Leopard, OS X Lion, and OS X Mountain Lion. If your Mac is from 2012 or earlier, there was an installation disc in the original box.
- A visit to its online store reveals that Pen-it is a Mac-only digital pen solution. The Pen-it bundle includes a Maxell digital pen, Pen-it NOTES software, and an A5-size Pen-it notebook. I am, however, concerned that this bundle may be a rip-off. It is more than twice the price of the equivalent Logitech kit.
- On the left pane, you’ll see all the Windows PC drives listed, right-click the USB drive that you’re intending to use to reinstall Apple’s OS X and select the Restore with Disk Image option. In the warning dialog box, click the Yes button. Use the Restore Disk Image to Drive dialog box to browse for the DMG file with the installation files for Mac OS X Yosemite in this case, and click the OK button to create a bootable USB of the operating system.
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First...
Configure the local user profile to be exactly how you would like the user's to receive it. Image the Mac's hard drive with either Disk Utility, Carbon Copy Cloner, or Super Duper!
We need to get the UUID for the local user account which will be used for the PennKey logins.
Log into Mac OS X as an administrative user, open the System Preferences applet, and then the 'Accounts' section.
Authenticate into the Accounts applet, to make changes, then control + click the local account created for PennKey users and choose 'Advanced Options'.
IMPORTANT: The UUID field for this account must be changed by deleting the first three digits of the UUID and replacing them with the UID of that user. Only the first three digits must be changed, any more and this exercise will fail. Example: 502E68DF-4C88-4DEB-BB00-11557018D1AB. Make sure that the fourth digit in the modified UUID is a letter and NOT a number. Clicking the 'Generate' button is possible until an acceptible value is produced. Click OK to finish.
Xp Pen Mac Os
Second...
Download and install Penn's Kerberos installer. Don't worry about the Active Directory error setup throws at the end.
Look for a file called 'edu.mit.Kerberos', located at; /Library/Preferences. Verify the first section of the file indicates as follows:
Third...
OS X has to be changed to handle the processing of kerberized logins passed from our PennKey users.
Open the terminal and edit the /etc/authorization file, 'sudo pico /etc/authorization' Your login password is what sudo is asking for.
Press Ctrl + W from within pico to open a search dialog and enter 'system.login.console'
There is a great deal of information here, which if wrongly altered can rendor Mac OS inaccessible to logins of any type. We are just going to modify the one line which reads '<string>builtin:authenticate,privileged</string>' by replacing the 'authenticate' with 'krb5authenticate'.
Modified string: <string>builtin:krb5authenticate</string>
Save changes and close (we are not finished yet, though).
Fourth...
LDAP access to the Penn directory has to be configured in Mac OS X. For this we need to use the Directory Utility. In previous versions of Mac OS, Directory Utility was located in the 'Utilities' folder, but that is not the case with Snow Leopard.
Directory Utility can be accessed from the the 'Accounts' applet in System Preferences.
Select the 'Login Options' under the list of user account, present on the computer.
It is a good time to click the lock at the bottom-left of the window and authenticate with the admin credentials needed to perform this task.
At the bottom there is a button with a label titled, 'Network Account Server: Join…' Click that button labeled 'Join…' A tiny little window will cascade down.
Penmac Usa
Type 'directory.upenn.edu' into the 'Server:' field, then click the button titled 'Open Directory Utility…' Another window will open, with another lock.
Click the lock, authenticate, and select the LDAPv3 method and then little square-shaped button with the pencil icon, directly on top of the lock. Another window will appear.
Expand the 'Hide Options' section and click the 'New…' button to create a new LDAP Connection.
The 'New LDAP Connection' dialog box will appear. Enter the DNS name for the server, 'directory.upenn.edu'. Make sure the 'Use for authentication' and 'Use for contacts' check-boxes are checked, then click the 'Manual' button. Enter a name for the new settings under the 'Configuration Name' column. Example; 'PennLDAP'.
Under the 'LDAP Mappings' column, select 'Custom' from the drop-down menu. A new window titled 'PennLDAP', in this example, will appear with the 'Search & Mappings' tab selected.
Select the 'Default Attribute Types', then click 'Add...'
Select Attribute Types then select the 'RecordName' attribute and click OK.
Highlight the RecordName attribute, just created and click the 'Add…' button below 'Map to < > items in list' enter the value 'uid'
We need to add Record Types. Click on the 'Add…' button below 'Record Types and Attributes', select 'Record Types', then select 'Users'.
Select the 'Users' record type you just added and Click the 'Add…' button that is located under the right pane (Map to 'any' items in list) In the box that appears, type 'inetOrgPerson'.
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Set the Search base for the 'Users' record type:
Search base: ou=People, dc=upenn, dc=edu (with spaces after the commas), select Search in all subtrees
Add several attributes for the User record type. Click add and select Attribute types and add the following:
1. AuthenticationAuthority
2. HomeDirectory
3. NFSHomeDirectory
4. PrimaryGroupID
5. RealName
6. RecordName
7. UniqueID
8. UserShell
Now you can set the following values for the attributes just added, and they should be as follows:
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1. AuthenticationAuthority = #;Kerberosv5;;$uid$;UPENN.EDU
2. HomeDirectory = #/Users/$uid$
2. NFSHomeDirectory = #/Users/$uid$
3. PrimaryGroupID = #20
4. RealName = cn
5. RecordName = uid
6. UniqueID = #UUID which is the UUID you modfied in the beginning of this document, i.e #502E68DF-4C88-4DEB-BB00-11557018D1AB
7. UserShell = #/bin/bash
Pen Mac OS