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Specify @reboot for a job, and it will be launched by cron upon system start. Something similar applies to your shell configuration files .bash_profile etc., that can launch processes in the background as soon as you open Terminal.
29 gru 2015 · Command-S: Start up in single-user mode. T: Start up in target disk mode. X: Start up from an OS X startup volume when the Mac would otherwise start up from a non-OS X startup volume. Command-V...
6 sty 2011 · You could start by reading the man pages for both the commands. You could then look inside /Library/LaunchAgents/ and /Library/LaunchDaemons/ for examples of how to set up applications to load at different times through the launchctl interface.
29 sty 2021 · I want to launch an app on OSX from a script. I need to pass some command line arguments. Unfortunately, open doesn't accept command line args. The only option I can think of is to use nohup myApp > /dev/null & to launch my app so it can exist independently of the script that launches it.
18 maj 2018 · Using Terminal, I just wanna say hey, macOS, start program.app at boot! or hey, macOS, start my /path/to/shell.sh at boot! How can I add a boot item --remotely via Terminal/SSH/Netcat/command line/shell?
23 maj 2024 · Command (⌘)-R: Start up from the built-in macOS Recovery system. Or use Option-Command-R or Shift-Option-Command-R to start up from macOS Recovery over the internet. macOS Recovery installs different versions of macOS, depending on the key combination you use.
Starting in OS X 10.6.2, the open command can pass arguments to the application it opens by way of the --args flag. An AppleScript to use it looks like this: do shell script "open -a /Applications/Firefox.app --args -P default -no-remote". That should give you all the behavior you want.