

- #MENUMETERS AFTER HIGH SIERRA FOR MAC OS X#
- #MENUMETERS AFTER HIGH SIERRA DRIVER#
- #MENUMETERS AFTER HIGH SIERRA UPGRADE#
- #MENUMETERS AFTER HIGH SIERRA CODE#
So, how did I port MenuMeters to El Capitan, then? Well, I just gave up having ⌘-dragging. In El Capitan, Apple added a more stringent check of the allowed NSMenuExtra's, and MenuCracker no longer works. then I cleared all Caches and uninstalled ASM (application switcher menu) and MenuMeters. MenuCracker was an NSMenuExtra that pretended to be one of those allowed ones, which, once loaded inside SystemUIServer, removed these checks, so that more NSMenuExtras can be loaded without any problem. iMac with Retina 5K display, macOS High Sierra (10.13.2).
#MENUMETERS AFTER HIGH SIERRA UPGRADE#
With 2013 and later MacBook Airs you are able to upgrade to the NVMe M.2 storage drives and will see close to 3x improvement over the SATA SSDs. MenuMeters used this to inject their own NSMenuExtra's to SystemUIServer in fact MenuMeters' author is one of the main authors of MenuCracker.Įssentially, until Yosemite, SystemUIServer had a fixed list of allowed NSMenuExtras. The original SSDs in MacBook Air are SATA SSDs, not NVMe M.2 SSDs.
#MENUMETERS AFTER HIGH SIERRA CODE#
But until Yosemite, there was a known way to work around it, available as an open-source code as MenuCracker. But since 10.2, Apple had a code that blocked SystemUIServer to load non-system-provided NSMenuExtra's. In fact until and including OS X 10.1, Apple allowed it. it works for OSX El Capitan and still works for MacOS Sierra and High Sierra. But this happened later than the need to port MenuMeters to El Capitan 10.11.)Īnyway, due to this better behavior of NSMenuExtra's, people often wanted to write their own. MenuMeters is a set of CPU, memory, disk, and network monitoring tools for. Has hundreds of different performance counters for Windows and apps running on it. The default display is graph format but it has the option to do numerical too.

(On macOS Sierra 10.12, Apple finally implemented and enabled ⌘-dragging for all NSStatusItem's, including this port of MenuMeters. Windows XP has a built-in performance monitor - its labeled as 'Performace' in the Admin tools menu. I have no idea why ⌘-dragging was not provided for the latter by the system. One good thing about the former is that you can rearrange them by ⌘-dragging the menu items. The latter can be displayed by any app written by any developer. The former are loaded and displayed by SystemUIServer, a process provided by the system.

There are in fact two types of such menu bar items, one known as NSMenuExtra's and another known as NSStatusItem's. Includes 300+ optional plugins (rails, git, macOS, hub, docker, homebrew, node, php, python, etc), 140+ themes to spice up your morning, and an auto-update tool so that makes it easy to keep up with the latest updates from the community.As you very well know and is shown in the screenshot above, there can be various utilities put on the right hand side of the menu bar. 🙃 A delightful community-driven (with 2,100+ contributors) framework for managing your zsh configuration.
#MENUMETERS AFTER HIGH SIERRA FOR MAC OS X#
iTerm2 is a terminal emulator for Mac OS X that does amazing things. Application for monitoring hardware health in macOS Right-click on the MenuMeters icon, and from the pop-up menu, choose to remove MenuMeters. macOS tool to limit maximum charging percentage 🍺 The missing package manager for macOS (or Linux) Karabiner-Elements is a powerful utility for keyboard customization on macOS Sierra (10.12) or later. Patched SmallTree kext for I211-AT support
#MENUMETERS AFTER HIGH SIERRA DRIVER#
Android USB tethering driver for Mac OS X 🖥️ macOS status monitoring app written in SwiftUI.

See all system information at a glance in the menu bar. When comparing MenuMeters and stats you can also consider the following projects:
