boinc_5.2.13_powerpc-apple-darwin.zip boinc_4.19_sparc-sun-solaris2.7.gz This type of installation requires that you be familiar with the UNIX command-line interface.
After downloading the file:
boinc_client -attach_project http://setiathome.berkeley.edu df0d93e384a2700f70e0bc45a1b2c96c(substitute the actual name of the core client for boinc_client in the above example.)
The core client is controlled by a number of other command-line options, configuration files, and environment variables.
You may want to automatically start the core client at boot time.
To control a running BOINC client, use the BOINC command tool.
Several tools for Macintosh system administrators are available to:
Normally, you should not install the separate command client if you are running the BOINC Manager. The BOINCManager.app bundle contains an embedded copy of the core client. The installer adds the BOINC Manager to the installing user's list of Login Items so it launches automatically whenever that user logs in. To have BOINC Manager run automatically when other users log in, you can manually add the BOINC Manager to each user's Login Items. For details, see here.
On Mac OS X, the core client executable is named boinc.
If you wish to run the embedded core client without launching the Manager, a typical command is:
/Applications/BOINCManager.app/Contents/resources/boinc -redirectio -dir /Library/Application\\ Support/BOINC\\ Data/Normally, quitting the BOINC Manager also quits the embedded core client. But if you launch the core client (as in the above example) before launching the BOINC Manager, then it will continue to run even after the user quits the Manager.
On Mac OS X, the BOINC screen saver will also launch the Manager's embedded core client, and will kill it when the screen saver is dismissed, but only if the core client was not already running.
If you must mix the stand-alone core client and the BOINC Manager on the same Mac OS X system, be careful of the following: