War Maker Mac OS
If a user wanted to install the operating system on his computer or create a rescue diskette for it a few years ago, he would burn the operating system to CD / DVD. In order to create a bootable pendrive for installing the operating system on our computer, we have to burn the operating system to CD / DVD. So in this article we are going to talk about the best bootable USB maker.
Best USB Maker Tools for Windows and Mac
1. Rufus
DiskMaker X is a practical tool developed with AppleScript that lets you copy an install file for the OS X Yosemite operating system to a USB drive so you can turn it into a boot disk during startup. To make the copy, you just have to install the DiskMaker X application on your computer, download a copy of Yosemite, and follow the assistant's. Movie maker is a software or program designed for the purpose of editing video clips. It incorporates features such as transitions, effects, titles, audio track and timeline among others. For Macintosh, iMovie is a program that can be used in place of movie maker.
Firstly Rufus is simple and easy to use. It automatically detects your USB flash drive and capacity so that you can easily identify which device you are formatting. A bootable USB drive can be built for new hardware or legacy BIOS supporting UEFI. You only have to select the appropriate options from the list.
- Mac OS, operating system (OS) developed by the American computer company Apple Inc. The OS was introduced in 1984 to run the company’s Macintosh line of personal computers (PCs). The Macintosh heralded the era of graphical user interface (GUI) systems, and it inspired Microsoft Corporation to develop its own GUI, the Windows OS.
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2. RMPrep USB
It is all in one tool. Features come with a cluttered interface. If you want a simple bootable USB to install a new operating system, I personally do not recommend it.
RMPrep UBS specialized in creating multiple partitions on a single USB drive. You can install multiple ISOs of different OSs or save user files along the edge of a bootable USB.
The special feature of this USB is that we can create partitions easily so that you can so in hard-drive so that you can make it easily accessible to save the files as well as a separate folder for storing files. Uses the same drive.
- It keeps your files separate from operating system files.
- For advanced users. difficult to use.
- Create ISO from USB drive.
- Edit the hard drive grub .
- Test speed of USB drive.
- Support all OSs.
3. Universal USB Installer
Special tools for creating a bootable live Linux OS. It has a predefined list of most Linux distributions available. Route the ISO image and USB flash drive you want to boot from. Create a live antivirus rescue disk using it. A special option for this is also given for reuse of CDs.
+ Special menu for Linux, also supports Window 7
4. YUMI
Yumi, short for your universal multiboot installer. This software allows you to create a bootable USB drive in a format of more than one operating system in a USB drive.
YUMI has a large collection of free OSs based on Linux and other free OS projects. Just choose what you want and YUMI will give you a direct download link for it. Its appearance is quite more attractive and easily hand able.
5. U-Netbootin
This device is an exact clone of the Universal USB installer or you can also say that the Universal USB installer is a clone of UNetbootin.
Create a bootable USB for any Linux distribution.
The best option is to use UNetbootin if you are not using Windows OS .It is available for Linux, iOS and Windows.
most of the software listed here will not run where U-Netbootin comes in to help. Whenever you are using LINUX
6. Linux Live USB Creator (LiLi)
LiLi is another software used to create a bootable USB. A special feature called built-in globalization allows users to run the installed Linux operating system without restarting Windows which is a distinctive feature of Lily.If you are only concerned about Linux then you should go for it.
7. Win Setup from USB
It is also a tool for those who want to install multiple operating systems on one USB device. With Win Setup USB you can use any recommended windows windows 7, XP or anyone which you want.it is necessary you will be presented with a list of operating systems installed on the thumb drive whenever you are preparing to install USB drive and then select the preferred operating system to boot. Although the interface is simple, non-specialist users may find it difficult to use.
8. X-Boot
This is more than just a bootable USB manufacturer. You can create a rescue CD or a disk that contains many operating systems or tools such as antivirus rescue CDs.
It combines many tools in the ISO image and is more useful than just USB-making tools. X Boot can create ISO images from files and then write these files to a USB drive for booting or installation.
9. Windows Bootable Image Maker
It is a simple and ultra-small device that does its job as you expect. WBIM has a super-simple interface and minimal buttons to avoid confusion for new users. It is a tool of Ask VG.
There are only basic buttons and only one function to do. Simply create a bootable USB drive to install or try out the new operating system. you will be very surprised by the weight and how small this software is. It is just 160KB in size.
Related – Best Rainmeter Skins for Windows 10, 8, 7.
Other Equipment
➤ Novicorp Wintoflash is also a tool that will help you recover a deleted bootloader besides creating a boot flash drive.
➤ Etcher is an excellent tool for Mac OS users
The Windows Official USB Creation Tool is an official tool for creating bootable USB drives to install downloaded Windows 7 and Windows 8 ISO images without burning a traditional disk.
MB Flash Boot is a bit tool, which is about 24 MB in download size. It has more options than any other device, but is actually a paid device, but anyone can use it for free.
If you have a related query or any other problem feel free to ask us in the comment section.
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He has a war file for one of his applications, which I tried deploying on my MAC by dropping it into the webapps directory of my Tomcat Installation while Tomcat was running. When you do this on the PC, the application is automatically deployed. However, on the MAC nothing happened.
Is there a difference in WAR files created for a PC from those create for a MAC?
Is anyone here working on a MAC?
If so, can they descirbe what I need to do special to deploy this application?
Thanks
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As for your question: works exactly the same on a Mac. Are you sure Tomcat is running?
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Perhaps I just don't know the particulars with respect to a MAC. Are you familiar with the MAC?
I placed the Tomcat directory in ~/Library/Tomcat/apache-tomcat-6.0.16
I created a link ~/Library/Tomcat/Home -> ~/Library/Tomcat/apache-tomcat-6.0.16
I started Tomcat by running ~/Library/Tomcat/Home/bin/startup.sh
I then moved application.war into ~/Library/Tomcat/Home/webapps
The file showed up there but nothing happened. It wasn't deployed.
I'm also trying to setup myEclipse and I'm having a similar problem running a project. I've setup Tomcat in myEclipse and I'm able to start and stop Tomcat from myEclipse. When I select my project, right click and select Run As... and then select the Tomcat server, the server starts up, but the project is NOT deployed into webapps.
Obviously, I'm doing something wrong or I don't have all of the pieces installed on my system.
I installed the Developer tools from the Mac OS X installation CD; however, I've been unable to find a JDK directory. All I'm able to find is references to several versions of JVMs. The instructions said if a JDK was not selected for the Tomcat server and exception would result. That didn't happen, so I'm wondering if the JDK is in the JVM, which seems kind of strange.
Totally confused:
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On a Mac, your JDK home directory is /Library/Java/Home (a symlink maintained by the Java control panel thingy). You ought to see /Library/Java/Home/bin/javac, for example.
As far as your WAR file issues: check in webapps to see if the WAR file is at least being unpacked (delete any unpacked directory, hit the URL, check to see if the directory has appeared); maybe it's being unpacked but not working out for some reason. Check TOMCAT/log/catalina.log for any indication that the server is at least trying to deploy the WAR file.
Since nothing in this thread has anything to do with 'beginning Java', the topic of this forum, I'm going to move this thread to our Tomcat forum, where we can continue (follow the link above).
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There is no difference between format of war files across platforms. First thing to check is make sure that your Tomcat installation is configured to auto-deploy the wars.
Here's a snippet from my server.xml:
Check that unpackWARs is set to true.
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There is no ~/Tomcat/Home/logs/catalina.log, which also seems strange. I'm wondering if I'm looking in the wrong location.
Do I need to set a CATALINA_HOME environment variable?
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Originally posted by Steve Sherwood:
Thanks for the help. I checked the unpackWars attribute and it was set to true.
Do I need to set a CATALINA_HOME environment variable?
No, that's set by the startup script.
What version of Tomcat and how are you starting it?
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I put that directory on the Mac at ~/Library/Tomcat/apache-tomcat-6.0.16
I created a link ~/Library/Tomcat/Home -> ~/Library/Tomcat/apache-tomcat-6.0.16
I was starting tomcat using myEclipse, and that was the problem. I don't have something configured correctly in myEclipse.
When I started tomcat directly via ~/Library/Tomcat/Home/bin/startup.sh, the WAR file unpacked and deployed flawlessly.
Thanks for all your help. Now, on to debugging my eclipse installation.
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Tks!
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Originally posted by Leonardo Lira:
Tks!
'Tks'? Please use real words when posting to the forums. Abbreviations such as 'tks' in place of 'thanks' only serve to make your posts more difficult to read and less likely to generate useful responses.
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thanks,
bear
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War Maker Mac Os X
posted 12 years ago- Optional 'thank-you' note:
Originally posted by Leonardo Lira:
Is it possible deploy a .WAR file without Tomcat? Just using Mac OS?
War Maker Mac Os Catalina
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