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How do I set Terminal scripts to run at start up on Mac OS X Snow Leopard?

Hello I'm using Mac OS X 10.6.8. How can I set some simple Terminal commands to run on start up as if I was opening up Terminal and putting those commands in myself? I basically need to start a few server daemons on start up. The commands I use in Terminal to manually start them look like sudo ruby myrubyserverscript_control.rb start. I apologize in advance if this is super obvious or already answered on here a million times in some way I don't know enough to recognize.

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pitachip Avatar asked Sep 21 '12 16:09

pitachip


2 Answers

Here are two different things:

  1. you want run a script after the system startup (boot), or
  2. when you logging in

for run a script at boot, you should put one XML config file into /Library/LaunchDaemons (and the launchd process will run the script at the boot time)

for run a script after you logging in - see this: https://stackoverflow.com/a/6445525/632407

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jm666 Avatar answered Oct 29 '22 14:10

jm666


Open System Preferences and go to the Users and Groups / Login Items tab. You can add a scipt with the + button or drag it to the list of items. Usually scripts end in .command that are used in this context but they are just bash scripts. I suppose you could use any script that is executable and has the correct #! line.

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Will Avatar answered Oct 29 '22 13:10

Will