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kot

macrumors regular
Original poster
Sep 10, 2011
161
0
Much of software comes in .pkg's which require you to enter your administrator password in order to install. That means they are writing to locations they are not supposed to be writing to.

Is it just bad programming (like putting software components to c:\Windows), does it bring system instability and glitches and makes the system work slower?

I just installed Virtualbox and Wireshark which both wrote something to somewhere other than the ~. I'm worried.
 

GGJstudios

macrumors Westmere
May 16, 2008
44,556
950
Much of software comes in .pkg's which require you to enter your administrator password in order to install. That means they are writing to locations they are not supposed to be writing to.
That's not true. Some apps need to write files in areas that require your admin (not root) password for permission. That doesn't mean they're doing anything that they shouldn't. As long as you're only installing software from trusted, reputable sources, you don't have anything to worry about.
 

Purant

macrumors 6502
Aug 26, 2012
305
0
Much of software comes in .pkg's which require you to enter your administrator password in order to install. That means they are writing to locations they are not supposed to be writing to.

That's not correct. It's not they are writing to locations they're not supposed to at all. It's just that they're not supposed to write there without the user knowing and confirming it.

Some folders of the OS are allowed only to be written by the administrator (or a process with administrator rights). That is in place, so that malware can't write there without the user knowing. It's not because no-one should be able to write there at all.
 

kot

macrumors regular
Original poster
Sep 10, 2011
161
0
Oh, thanks! Now I get it. Anyway, Safari started showing me some graphical glitches and text input in text forms on webpages started to lag a bit, so I thought it was xQuartz or Virtualbox or Wireshark which I installed and all three of them asked me to type in my password. I thought they had messed up my system files. You know there is some software on Windows which replaces system files or settings with their own "improved" versions giving you nothing but trouble.

For example, Wireshark modifies permissions on /dev/bpf, which seems troubling. I can't stand it when third-party software tries to make the OS dance to their tune. It brings instability.
 

kot

macrumors regular
Original poster
Sep 10, 2011
161
0
Then why do many people recommend against installing various UI tweaks and other things which alter OS X look and feel which install themselves among system files, because as they say they are a potential source of glitches and odd behavior, because OS X was not designed to let them be there and do what they do.
 

Mal

macrumors 603
Jan 6, 2002
6,253
30
Orlando
Then why do many people recommend against installing various UI tweaks and other things which alter OS X look and feel which install themselves among system files, because as they say they are a potential source of glitches and odd behavior, because OS X was not designed to let them be there and do what they do.

You're confusing the issue. Asking for admin rights doesn't mean that it's replacing system files. Apps and tweaks that do replace system files carry some inherent risk (such as my black menubar tweak that I use). There are many locations on your computer that cannot be written to without admin rights, however, that do not involve replacing system files. The fact that an app asks for your admin password (which is not your root password, as was noted by others), does not have anything to do with whether it replaces system files or not.

jW
 

mfram

Contributor
Jan 23, 2010
1,356
406
San Diego, CA USA
You also need admin rights to even write to the /Applications folder. So any app install will need admin rights to install there.

As for the O.P., both Wireshark and Virtualbox need admin rights to install system services. Wireshark requires access to read all packets on the network interface. That requires root privs. Virtualbox needs to install kernel drivers to work. Again, that requires root privs. If you aren't happy with this, don't install the software.
 

KnightWRX

macrumors Pentium
Jan 28, 2009
15,046
4
Quebec, Canada
Much of software comes in .pkg's which require you to enter your administrator password in order to install. That means they are writing to locations they are not supposed to be writing to.

No, it means they are installing themselves so that every user on the system can use them, not just your account. That's good programming. Imagine if every user account on your Mac had to have its own seperate installation of every app.

That would be a nightmare.
 
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