Some of the issues below, though written under earlier versions of OS X, still apply to Snow Leopard.
X11.app was initially available as a downloadable public beta for Mac OS X 10.2 Jaguar and later included as a standard package for Mac OS X 10.3 Panther.In Mac OS X 10.4 Tiger X11.app was an optional install included on the install DVD. Mac OS X 10.5 Leopard, Mac OS X 10.6 Snow Leopard, and Mac OS X 10.7 Lion installed X11.app by default, but from OS X 10.8. Steps to get X11 Forwarding in macOS High Sierra. Download and install the latest release from xquartz.org website. IMPORTANT: verify xauth location SSH configuration file /etc/ssh/sshconfig might contain path to xauth tool, which may be incorrect depending on your OSX/MacOS version. Here’s how to check. MacPorts for Mac OS v.1.9 an open-source community initiative to design an easy-to-use system for compiling, installing, and upgrading either command-line, X11 or Aqua based open-source software on the Mac OS X operating system. To that end we provide the command-line driven. Security Update 2021-004 (Catalina) macOS Catalina Security Update 2021-004 (19H1323) is recommended for all users and improves the security of macOS. For 10.5 and 10.6, we recommend getting a newer version of the X11 server from the XQuartz project because the graphics support is much better (although XQuartz won't support Mac OS X 10.6 until version 2.4.1 comes out).
Mac OS X Leopard update
Think about it. One hundred poodles are scarier than one leopard. That's assuming, of course, that the leopard has no legs.Ellen DeGeneres
Leopard's new X11
Leopard (Mac OS X version 10.5.x) is assumed here.For old notes pertaining to pre-Leopard Mac OS X, see here. That page also contains important survival tips that still apply to Leopard.
The starting point for these notes is an Intel Mac on which you have just upgraded from the Tiger operating system to Leopard. Simply kodi. This page addresses the question of how to get X11 and other UNIX software running under Leopard.
Install X11
If you're buying or upgrading to a Mac with Leopard version 10.5.3 or above there should be no problem with Apple's X11. Problems with X11 may arise if you installed Leopard versions below 10.5.3.
As a replacement for the faulty X11 that came with those earlier installations, you may have obtained the latest 'fixed' version (X11 2.2.3 or above) available from Mac OS Forge. You would install this over an already existing Apple X11. However, Apple's Software Update may in turn potentially overwrite (or damage) a Mac OS Forge installation of X11 if the update downloads System software. If that happens, you have to re-install X11 from that web site after running System Update (so keep the Disk Image). For this reason, and also because the 10.5.4 update fixes several other bugs, it is now perfectly OK to stick with Apple's X11 which is also updated through Software Update.
In order to customize X11 beyond the options exposed in the menu bar, have a look at man Xquartz
.
What if you already have Mac OS Forge installation of X11 but want to go back to Apple's X11?
To avoid having to manually re-install your Mac OS Forge X11 after system software updates on Leopard 10.5.3 or above, you can revert to Apple's X11. How you do that depends on the Leopard version on your installation disk. For the most up-to-date instructions, look at the wiki. Here is what I did (on Lepard): start by installing the X11 and X11 SDK packages from that disk. If the disk has Leopard 10.5.0, you can get back to 10.5.4 (the current version as of this writing) by downloading and installing the Mac OS X 10.5.4 Combo Update. After that, perform a Software Update.
For Snow Leopard, I was forced to go back to XDarwin from MacOSForge because Apple's stock X11 had a window focus bug: Switching between X11 windows by using Apple's keyboard shortcut (Command-`) froze the X11 interface (unless you check 'Enable key equivalents' in the X11 preferences, which wasn't an option I wanted). So I now use the most recent beta version of XDarwin. One can set automatic updes for these beta relases as described here.
Install XCode 3
XCode is a development environment that provides (among many other things) the C++ compiler that will be used below to compile most of the open-source software that is available for the Mac. To get the most up-to-date version, it's best to check the Apple website, and look for XCode under 'Development Tools'. There are also additional compilers available for download as 'XCode Legacy Tools'. These encompass older versions of gcc which may be needed to compile some older software.
During the XCode installation for OS versions below 10.3, don't overlook theX11 SDK
package, which is needed if you want to compile programs that rely on X11 headers. This is the case for the ghostscript
fink package that I maintain. In order to get the XCode Installer to provide this and other added material, make sure to click Customize to get to the window shown here:
Alternatively, you can also find the X11 SDK
in the 'Packages' folder on the XCode disk image. With OS X version 10.3, you won't have to worry about this anymore because the SDK is installed by default.
Although I have not been afflicted with it, others have reported a mysterious issue where - despite a seemingly successful installation - the required header files are not actually installed. To get an idea whether you have the development headers, type ls /usr/X11/include/fontconfig/
and verify that this outputs three files. If none of the above preseciptions give the desired result, it may be necessary to reinstall X11SDK.pkg
after zapping the installer's 'memory'as described here. Basically, you exectute the command sudo pkgutil --forget com.apple.pkg.X11SDKLeo
and perhaps some additional ones. This should be enough to convince the system that you don't have that package yet (it's removed from /Library/Receipts
), so it will really be reinstalled (this command works only on Leopard, not on Tiger). If you're having trouble with other installed packages and want to do the same thing, taking a look at /Library/Receipts/bom
may help you identify the suspect.
Finally, it may also be possible to fix the installation by following the uninstall instructions in the 'About' document accompanying the XCode installer, and then starting the installation from scratch.
'Leopard Seal of Approval' |
X11 Preferences
If you find at some point more than one X11 icon appearing in your Dock, this probably means you're setting the DISPLAY
variable in some initialization file. This information is now done automatically whenever a program tries to open X11 (via launchd
), so you should not set the DISPLAY
Pixel film studios. variable explicitly.
In Leopard's version of X11, there is a new Preference Click-through
which I enable, together with Emulate three-button mouse
(the other two menu items remain disabled).
If you're using The Gimp or Inkscape the X11 is crucial to have, and an important issue is the integration between the clipboards of Aqua and your X window manager. While some projects such as Gimp have already been equipped with this functionality under the older X11 versions (you can paste images into Gimp that have been copied into the Aqua pasteboard), others such as Inkscape can't handle pasting from the Aqua pasteboard yet, even with the new XQuartz. If you are having problems pasting into one of these applications, there is a setting in the X11 Preferences
(XQuartz 2.3.5) that you may have to change (Inkscape may now automatically do this for you): under Pasteboard
, un-check the option 'Update Pasteboard when CLIPBOARD changes'.
To make multi-windows programs such as Gimp more useable under X11, you may also want the focus to automatically jump to the window the mouse is hovering over. This 'focus follows mouse' behavior is obtained by setting defaults write org.x.x11 wm_ffm -bool true
.
You need to re-launch X11 for this change to become effective (under Tiger, the same thing is achieved with defaults write com.apple.x11 wm_ffm -bool true
).
Integrating X11 and Mac OS X
In xemacs
, gimp
and other applications, you may find that the X11 font sizes don't match those of the OS X fonts. To fix this, you have to change the variable defaultserverargs='
in /usr/X11/bin/startx
to defaultserverargs='-dpi 96'
. This is not needed under Tiger (where the corresponding file is located in /usr/X11R6/bin/startx
).
More and more X11 programs (e.g., gimp
) allow you to exchange not just text but also graphics back and forth with the OS X pasteboard. What if you want to write your own script such that it places a PDF image on the pasteboard? The command pbcopy
does this for text, but not reliably for graphics. In particular, for PDF format there is no way around writing a handmade tool. Here is an example that illustrates how to do this: if the image is called /Users/noeckel/plot.pdf
, you get it onto the pasteboard by typing the Terminal command lineosascript -e 'set the clipboard to (the POSIX file '/Users/noeckel/plot.pdf')'
To launch X11 programs, one usually types their name from a Terminal command line, e.g., xemacs&
(where the ampersand launches the application as a job and immediately returns control to the command line). Instead of this, one can easily wrap this execution shell statement in an AppleScript or other Mac-native interface, and thus create a double-clickable application using the shell executable.
To make such Droplet Applications, there are XDroplet Factory
and Platypus
. I highly recomment Platypus as a flexible but simple framework for wrapping scripts. For very simple scripts on Leopard, I've adopted a do-it-yourself approach. An example of how to make your own droplet using Applescript
is given on a separate page.
Permissions and 'Applications downloaded from internet'
If you have more than one user on the system, there is an annoying side effect for Applications downloaded by one (admin) user when opened by another account: the other user will have only read access and this seems to trigger a security warning asking you to confirm that you want to run this 'Applications downloaded from internet'. This warning re-appears everytime you open the Application, unless you log in as an admin and set the privileges for that Application to Reaad & Write for the affected account.
Changing default shell
To change the default terminal shell for a user, right-click (after you've enabled that right mouse button) on the user's icon in the Accounts
system preference pane, and choose Advanced
. This replaces the NetInfo ManagerUtility from earlier OS X versions.
Middle mouse button
This is not specific to Leopard, as it relates to X11 and the middle-mouse button: if you have a three-button mouse and the middle mouse button pops up the Application Picker (the Dashboard-like icon list you also get with CMD-Tab), then you should change the function of Button 3 to what X11 expects it to be: Button 3. One would assume that this can be changed in the System Preferences, but you may be unable to locate the corresponding panel if the mouse you're using is from a third party: I haven't had this problem with Kensington (its driver software allows full customization), but with Logitech and Wacom mice. For the latter, the middle-mouse configuration only shows up in Mouse Preferences
when you plug in an Apple Mighty Mouse. Fortunately, once the setting is changed for the Mighty Mouse, it also works for other three-button mice. Of course, don't forget to also change the right-mouse button away from its default setting (which is: to do the same as the left button).
Locating or Installing X11
Mac OS X versions 10.5 through 10.7 include a pre-installed version of X11. Look for it in Applications->Utilities.
OR
If you have Mac OS X 10.8 (Mountain Lion), you will need to download X11 from the XQuartz project, and install it following the on-screen instructions after opening XQuartz-2.x.dmg and double-clicking XQuartz.pkg.
Mac Download For Pc
Using X11
Mac Os X11
- Open the X11 application, located in the Utilities folder in your Applications folder.
- An xterm window will open automatically when you start X11. In this window, you will type one of two commands, depending on the version of Mac OS X that you are using. (If you don’t know which version you are using, you can figure it out by going to the Apple Menu and selecting “About this Mac”.)
- If you are using Mac OS X 10.4.0 or higher, the command to enter is
ssh -Y yourlogin@acs-linux.bu.edu (substitute your own BU login name for yourlogin and substitute acs for another machine, if applicable). - If you are using Mac OS X 10.3.0 – 10.3.9, the command to enter is
ssh -X yourlogin@acs-linux.bu.edu (substitute your own BU login name for yourlogin and substitute acs for another machine, if applicable).
- If you are using Mac OS X 10.4.0 or higher, the command to enter is
- Type your Kerberos password when prompted.
- Now you can launch X Windows applications. To run SAS, for example, type
sas & (the ‘&’ puts it in the background so that you can type other commands in your xterm window if you need to). - When you’re done, quit out of any X applications you were running. Then, to exit the X11 program itself, go to the X11 menu and choose Quit X11.