RazorSQL is a desktop application that provides users with the ability to query, edit, browse,and manage databases. To download RazorSQL, click the "Download" link next to the text below that best describes your computer. Please see the links below for installation and uninstallation procedures for the variousoperating systems supported by RazorSQL.
Download Mac Os Sierra Dmg
To install, download the razorsql10_3_0.dmg (Ventura, Monterey, Big Sur, Catalina, Mojave or High Sierra only)or razorsql10_3_0_aarch64.dmg if the machine has an Apple Silicon processor and is running Ventura, Monterey, or Big Sur, or razorsql10_3_0_x64.dmg (for Mountain Lion, Mavericks, Yosemite, El Capitan, macOS Sierra, macOS High Sierra, macOS Mojave) file to your machine. Double click the .dmg file. Thisshould open a window showing RazorSQL.app. Drag RazorSQL.app to your Applications folder or whereveryou want it to reside. Double-click the RazorSQL.app file to launch RazorSQL.
Yes, you can still download Mac OS Sierra from the Mac App Store and from a few other locations on the internet. The update is free and will allow you to upgrade older Macs to a newer, more feature-filled OS if supported by your hardware.
There are several methods for doing this, but the easiest way is by downloading the Mac OS Sierra Installer via the Mac App Store and then running through the automated wizard. This will guide you through the entire process and is very simple to do.
About that warning tho...the MAS assumes you're trying to download and install, not just download. Without a computer properly configured to follow thru with an actual install as part of that process, you're stuck.
The macOS Sierra installer will start automatically when the download is complete. Do not continue with the installation as prompted by the installer. Instead, quit the installer. If you allow the installer to run, you will need to re-download it.
In most cases, the downloaded dmg file is actually corrupt or had an error downloading. If possible, try downloading the dmg again, turning off any download assistant plug-ins you may have. You can try downloading the file in a different browser as well. Or if you don't need to be logged in to the site to download the file and you want to be fancy, you can try curl -O url in Terminal to download the file. (There's an example of that in my screenshot below.)
Once the downloading process has begun, you should be able to see the progress of the download in the Launchpad. Downloading the installation package of macOS Sierra may be a time-consuming process (the slow downloading of macOS Sierra is a common issue). Sometimes, temporary changing the DNS settings in your network configuration may help you to increase the download speed. Attempt using 8.8.8.8, 8.8.4.4, 4.2.2.2 or 4.2.2.3 DNS servers on your machine. If this method does not increase the download speed, left click the Downloading icon to pause your download. Then left click the icon once more to resume the download. After resuming the download of a file, the download speed increases for the appropriate period of time.
Now that your bootable ISO image with the macOS installer is ready, you should prepare your ESXi host for the installation of macOS as a guest OS on VMs. You need to enable SSH access, download the patch, copy the patch to the file system of the ESXi server, and patch the ESXi server.
The patch is free and can be downloaded from this page. MacOS Unlocker 2.0.8 is used in this example due to ESXi support. The newest version of macOS unlocker is version 3.0.2. Unlocker 2 supports both VMware ESXi and VMware Workstation, while Unlocker 3 only supports VMware Workstation (including the latest versions of VMware Workstation). Version 2.0.8 is the latest version of the patch with ESXi support.
After downloading the patch, copy the patch files to the datastore on ESXi. You can use WinSCP, which supports the transfer of files over SSH by using SFTP, SCP, WebDAV, or S3 protocols (in Linux you can use the equivalent software). WinSCP has a user-friendly graphical user interface (GUI), and consists of two main panels. Copy the unlocker files from your local directory to your datastore on the ESXi server. In this example the unlocker patch and the macOS Sierra installation ISO image (Sierra.iso) were created beforehand, and are placed in C:\Virtual\images_MacOS for convenience. The patch is copied to /vmfs/volumes/datastore1 on the ESXi server. Sierra.iso would be copied to the datastore40. Later, you can mount the ISO image from the datastore to the virtual DVD drive of the virtual machine.
This section explains how to correctly create a macOS Mojave bootable ISO image. First, download the macOS Mojave installer from the App Store. In the current example, a machine running macOS Mojave is used for downloading the macOS Mojave installer to avoid using third party downloading tools. Open AppStore, find macOS Mojave, click View and then click Get to download the installer. Notice that you need a full installer whose size is about 6.03 GB. If after downloading the installer, installation starts automatically, cancel it. After successfully downloading you can see the Install macOS Mojave.app file in the Applications directory. Open Finder and click Applications in the left pane of the Finder window to check the installer file.
This directory contains binaries for a base distribution and packages to run on macOS. Releases for old Mac OS X systems (through Mac OS X 10.5) and PowerPC Macs can be found in the old directory.Note: Although we take precautions when assembling binaries, please use the normal precautions with downloaded executables.
Package binaries for R versions older than 3.2.0 are only available from the CRAN archive so users of such versions should adjust the CRAN mirror setting ( -archive.r-project.org) accordingly.R 4.2.2 "Innocent and Trusting" released on 2022/10/31 Please check the integrity of the downloaded package by checking the signature: pkgutil --check-signature R-4.2.2.pkg in the Terminal application. If Apple tools are not avaiable you can check the SHA1 checksum of the downloaded image: openssl sha1 R-4.2.2.pkgLatest release:R-4.2.2-arm64.pkg (notarized and signed)SHA1-hash: c3bb657ca6912b9b98e254f63434a365da26848f(ca. 86MB) for M1 and higher Macs only! R 4.2.2 binary for macOS 11 (Big Sur) and higher, Apple silicon arm64 build, signed and notarized package. Contains R 4.2.2 framework, R.app GUI 1.79 for Apple silicon Macs (M1 and higher), Tcl/Tk 8.6.12 X11 libraries and Texinfo 6.8. Important: this version does NOT work on older Intel-based Macs - see below for Intel version.Note: the use of X11 (including tcltk) requires XQuartz (version 2.8.1 or later). Always re-install XQuartz when upgrading your macOS to a new major version.This release uses Xcode 13.1 and experimental GNU Fortran 12 arm64 fork. If you wish to compile R packages which contain Fortran code, you may need to download GNU Fortran for arm64 from -project.org/tools. Any external libraries and tools are expected to live in /opt/R/arm64 to not conflict with Intel-based software and this build will not use /usr/local to avoid such conflicts (see the tools page for more details). R-4.2.2.pkg (notarized and signed)SHA1-hash: 99b8d184f855e630ac950ca4e62cb7fc9a1f7b2e(ca. 87MB) for Intel Macs R 4.2.2 binary for macOS 10.13 (High Sierra) and higher, Intel 64-bit (older Macs) build, signed and notarized package. Contains R 4.2.2 framework, R.app GUI 1.79 in 64-bit for Intel Macs, Tcl/Tk 8.6.6 X11 libraries and Texinfo 6.7. The latter two components are optional and can be ommitted when choosing "custom install", they are only needed if you want to use the tcltk R package or build package documentation from sources.Note: the use of X11 (including tcltk) requires XQuartz to be installed (version 2.7.11 or later) since it is no longer part of macOS. Always re-install XQuartz when upgrading your macOS to a new major version.This release supports Intel Macs, but it is also known to work using Rosetta2 on M1-based Macs. For native Apple silicon arm64 binary see above.Important: this release uses Xcode 12.4 and GNU Fortran 8.2. If you wish to compile R packages from sources, you may need to download GNU Fortran 8.2 - see the tools directory. NEWS (for Mac GUI)News features and changes in the R.app Mac GUIMac-GUI-1.78.tar.gz SHA1-hash: 23b3c41b7eb771640fd504a75e5782792dddb2bcSources for the R.app GUI 1.78 for macOS. This file is only needed if you want to join the development of the GUI (see also Mac-GUI repository), it is not intended for regular users. Read the INSTALL file for further instructions.Note: Previous R versions for El Capitan can be found in the el-capitan/base directory.Binaries for legacy OS X systems: R-3.6.3.nn.pkg (signed) SHA1-hash: c462c9b1f9b45d778f05b8d9aa25a9123b3557c4 (ca. 77MB) R 3.6.3 binary for OS X 10.11 (El Capitan) and higher, signed package. Contains R 3.6.3 framework, R.app GUI 1.70 in 64-bit for Intel Macs, Tcl/Tk 8.6.6 X11 libraries and Texinfo 5.2. The latter two components are optional and can be ommitted when choosing "custom install", they are only needed if you want to use the tcltk R package or build package documentation from sources. R-3.3.3.pkgMD5-hash: 893ba010f303e666e19f86e4800f1fbfSHA1-hash: 5ae71b000b15805f95f38c08c45972d51ce3d027(ca. 71MB)R 3.3.3 binary for Mac OS X 10.9 (Mavericks) and higher, signed package. Contains R 3.3.3 framework, R.app GUI 1.69 in 64-bit for Intel Macs, Tcl/Tk 8.6.0 X11 libraries and Texinfo 5.2. The latter two components are optional and can be ommitted when choosing "custom install", it is only needed if you want to use the tcltk R package or build package documentation from sources.Note: the use of X11 (including tcltk) requires XQuartz to be installed since it is no longer part of OS X. Always re-install XQuartz when upgrading your OS X to a new major version. R-3.2.1-snowleopard.pkgMD5-hash: 58fe9d01314d9cb75ff80ccfb914fd65SHA1-hash: be6e91db12bac22a324f0cb51c7efa9063ece0d0(ca. 68MB)R 3.2.1 legacy binary for Mac OS X 10.6 (Snow Leopard) - 10.8 (Mountain Lion), signed package. Contains R 3.2.1 framework, R.app GUI 1.66 in 64-bit for Intel Macs.This package contains the R framework, 64-bit GUI (R.app), Tcl/Tk 8.6.0 X11 libraries and Texinfop 5.2. GNU Fortran is NOT included (needed if you want to compile packages from sources that contain FORTRAN code) please see the tools directory.NOTE: the binary support for OS X before Mavericks is being phased out, we do not expect further releases! The new R.app Cocoa GUI has been written by Simon Urbanek and Stefano Iacus with contributions from many developers and translators world-wide, see "About R" in the GUI.Subdirectories: tools Additional tools necessary for building R for Mac OS X:Universal GNU Fortran compiler for Mac OS X (see R for Mac tools page for details). base Binaries of R builds for macOS 10.13 or higher (High Sierra), Intel build contrib Binaries of package builds for macOS 10.13 or higher (High Sierra), Intel build big-sur-arm64 Binaries for macOS 11 or higher (Big Sur) for arm64-based Macs (aka Apple silicon such as the M1 chip) el-capitan Binaries of package builds for OS X 10.11 or higher (El Capitan build) mavericks Binaries of package builds for Mac OS X 10.9 or higher (Mavericks build) old Previously released R versions for Mac OS X You may also want to read the R FAQ and R for Mac OS X FAQ. For discussion of Mac-related topics and reporting Mac-specific bugs, please use the R-SIG-Mac mailing list.Information, tools and most recent daily builds of the R GUI, R-patched and R-devel can be found at -project.org/. Please visit that page especially during beta stages to help us test the macOS binaries before final release!Package maintainers should visit CRAN check summary page to see whether their package is compatible with the current build of R for macOS.Binary libraries for dependencies not present here are available from -project.org/bin and corresponding sources at -project.org/src.Last modified: 2022/10/31, by Simon Urbanek 2ff7e9595c
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