Tell me more !
If you ’re trying out a art object of beta software package , or working with a especially troublesome piece of code , you might want to see more information than CrashReporter typically displays . To do this , open Terminal ( /Applications / Utilities ) and type this control , then press Return :
This command put a hidden preference for OS X ’s CrashReporter dialog . CrashReporter will now display the more detailed “ developer ” edition of the dialogue boxwood when applications break apart . This bear upon all programme launched after you pass the command ; you do n’t need to re-start or logout . Here ’s an good example of what you might see :
While this information may not be meaningful to most of us , it could help the developer figure out what ’s causing the crash .
say me less !
There may be times when you do n’t require any notification of an covering crash — if you ’ve leave your Mac running , for case , you might not desire a smash dialog box to bulge out up and ride onscreen until you return to clear it . Or you might get old-hat of all the clangour messages that come with beta software program . To take away the CrashReporter dialogue box wholly , use this command in the Terminal :
This changes the CrashReporter set to “ server ” mode ; you wo n’t see the dialog boxwood at all . alternatively , all collapse information will be written into a CrashReporter log Indian file , which you could then browse using the Console program ( in Applications / Utilities ) .
If , after reflection , you ’d wish to get back to the simplistic CrashReporter dialog box , infix this command in the Terminal :
With three different mount for the CrashReporter dialogue box , hopefully there ’s one here that assemble your needs .