![]() ![]() Here you will need to set up a port forward from all external traffic on port number 9091 to you local computers’ IP address – the one that you just retrieved from the Network screen – on the same port. It will most likely have a NAT tab or settings screen. Now go to your the manager interface of your router or ADSL modem. Next to show, select ‘Network Status’ which will show the active network adapter and its IP address. With Mac OS X 10.4 (Tiger) and lower, select the Apple menu and choose ‘Location’ and then ‘Network Preferences…’. The local IP addres is shown in the networking status. Here, choose ‘Networking’ and on the left click the active network adapter (Ethernet for wired and AirPort for wireless connections). For OS X 10.5 (Leopard) and 10.6 (Snow Leopard), select the Apple menu and choose ‘System Preferences…’ or use Spotlight to find it. You will need to open up the port 9091 and redirect this to your home computer. The next step is very important if you want to use Transdroid to control Transmission from anywhere you go and not just your home Wi-Fi network. If you now see the web interface of Transmission, you may continue. It will ask for the username and password that you just entered. If it doesn’t, open the browser yourself and go to. Click on the ‘Launch web interface’ button. Lastly, make sure that you leave the IP filtering option off. Remember it because you will need it later. It is strongly advised to also enable authentication. If you change this, remember it because you will need it later on. You can leave the listening port to the default 9091 or change it. ![]() Choose ‘Transmission -> Preferences’ from the menu and go to the ‘Remote’ tab. Next, we will enable the web interface, because this is used by Transdroid to communicate with it. When it is done downloading, copy it to your Applications to install it. To install this client on your Mac, visit the Transmission website and download the latest Mac OS X build, which is a. Transmission has a native Mac OS X interface now and is becoming more and more popular on this platform. Unfortunately I missed the Transmit official beta signup, otherwise I would attempt to make this a feature request… maybe it will be adopted as a permanent feature with a simple settings switch.Here are the steps to install Transdroid when you use Transmission on Mac OS X: Setting up Transmission And yes, that instant message is the reason for this post, he’s a smart guy and couldn’t find it, surely other people have this problem. htaccess files on his webserver, and then he felt stupid after I told him it was just under the “View” menu. This makes sense on a per-view perspective, but I want to always be able to see invisible files which makes it more of a preference in my mind.Īpparently I’m not the only one with this frustration, a friend of mine sent me a really peeved instant message cursing Transmit saying it was crippled and he couldn’t even see the. This is one thing that’s always bothered me about Transmit though, the ability to view invisible files isn’t part of the File Preferences as you’d expect, instead it’s stuffed somewhat awkwardly in the View menu. I love Transmit, it is by far my favorite FTP client for Mac OS X and I’ve used it on a near daily basis for years. ssh, etc) that would appear invisible to Transmit, even if you’ve enabled hidden files to be shown on a Mac using defaults command strings. Instead, to see hidden files in Transmit, just pull down the ‘View’ menu and scroll down to ‘Show Invisible Files’ to enable this functionality, where invisible files will become seen immediately both when navigating local folders and remote servers.įor managing remote servers, this is particularly useful and it should probably be enabled by default, given the amount of dot prefixed files (.htaccess. ![]()
0 Comments
Leave a Reply. |
AuthorWrite something about yourself. No need to be fancy, just an overview. ArchivesCategories |