Last version for OS X 10.3?

Message boards : Questions and problems : Last version for OS X 10.3?
Message board moderation

To post messages, you must log in.

AuthorMessage
noderaser
Avatar

Send message
Joined: 2 Jan 14
Posts: 276
United States
Message 51849 - Posted: 2 Jan 2014, 0:11:26 UTC

The downloads page lists the last version that will run on OS X 10.3 (PowerPC) as 6.6.36; however, a time capsule (a G3 iMac from my Dad's garage) has revealed that that was not the last version, as it has 6.10.17 installed. So, what is the "real" last version of BOINC that will run on 10.3? The last release in the 6.10 series, which would be 6.10.60? Is there a download archive where I can find these versions, and is there any reason to use the advertised 6.6.36 over 6.10.x?

I had been using 6.6.36 without question for a while, but I've discovered that it will not work with WUprop; even though their applications page lists compatability with 10.3, I get the "BOINC version too old" message from the project. When I uncovered the iMac with 6.10.17, it gets work from WUprop without incident. I did find the installer ZIP file in the trash on the same computer, so I can use that if needed.
My Detailed BOINC Stats
ID: 51849 · Report as offensive
Claggy

Send message
Joined: 23 Apr 07
Posts: 1112
United Kingdom
Message 51853 - Posted: 2 Jan 2014, 3:31:53 UTC - in response to Message 51849.  
Last modified: 2 Jan 2014, 3:32:41 UTC

Is there a download archive where I can find these versions

Here:

http://boinc.berkeley.edu/dl/

Claggy
ID: 51853 · Report as offensive
noderaser
Avatar

Send message
Joined: 2 Jan 14
Posts: 276
United States
Message 51858 - Posted: 3 Jan 2014, 7:51:31 UTC

I also found this page: http://boinc.berkeley.edu/trac/wiki/MacBuild

It says that 10.4 is required starting with 6.10.58, but I've tried installing versions back to 6.10.54 and I get the "OS X 10.4 is required" message from the installer. Short of trying every version between 6.10.17 and 6.10.54, is there a reliable way to determine which was the last to support OS X 10.3?

I guess another question would be, why does the official download page use an older version, when the newer one seems to be compatible with more projects?
My Detailed BOINC Stats
ID: 51858 · Report as offensive
BobCat13

Send message
Joined: 6 Dec 06
Posts: 118
United States
Message 51885 - Posted: 4 Jan 2014, 17:41:16 UTC - in response to Message 51858.  
Last modified: 4 Jan 2014, 18:04:58 UTC

Short of trying every version between 6.10.17 and 6.10.54, is there a reliable way to determine which was the last to support OS X 10.3?

I'm not sure if the following link is a reliable way, but check the second entry for 6.10.37 where GCC 4.0 is used. You can check your GCC version, and if it is earlier than 4.0 try installing 6.10.36 to see if it works.

http://boinc.berkeley.edu/dev/forum_thread.php?id=2518&postid=31673#31673

Edit: Looks like Jord came up with a more definitive answer, so his advice should be heeded.
ID: 51885 · Report as offensive
Profile Jord
Volunteer tester
Help desk expert
Avatar

Send message
Joined: 29 Aug 05
Posts: 15483
Netherlands
Message 51887 - Posted: 4 Jan 2014, 17:56:01 UTC - in response to Message 51858.  

I guess another question would be, why does the official download page use an older version, when the newer one seems to be compatible with more projects?

A lot of the 'newer versions' are alpha and beta versions, with a lot of bugs in them. The official download page only shows the recommended versions, the download all page shows the latest Alpha version as well. The DL site is just an archive of all older versions that have ever seen the light of day.

The last one that will install on OS X 10.3 is 6.10.21, as per the change log 6.1 - 6.10:
BOINC 6.10.22 released for testing for all platforms

7 December 2009
Charlie
- Mac installer: If user tries to install on OS 10.3.9, display an alert and quit


And why that was done? Probably because of:
3 December 2009
Charlie
- Mac client: update build scripts, XCode project for curl-7.19.7 and c-ares 1.7.0

and
4 December 2009
Charlie
- Mac MGR: Fix crashes on OS 10.3.9 due to accessibility APIs implemented on OS 10.4


The developers can only build one version of BOINC for all platforms, so if OS X has moved to 10.4 by then on the Power PC and that causes crashes on on pre-OS X 10.4, then sorry, but not going to build a version for each release of OS X. If need be, you can always try to build it yourself.
ID: 51887 · Report as offensive
noderaser
Avatar

Send message
Joined: 2 Jan 14
Posts: 276
United States
Message 51891 - Posted: 5 Jan 2014, 3:50:29 UTC

Thank you; I think for my purposes, 6.10.22 will be sufficient. Without building any project-specific apps of my own, most projects that still support G3 will probably be fine with that version for the time being. The major hurdle I was looking to overcome, were the failures in WUprop. I'll make sure to put a post in over there, so that others with 10.3 can get the correct version for data reporting.

I have just noticed that for some OSes, a newer version will be introduced but another OS is held back--I assume that's usually because of OS-specific bugs. I'm referring to the "Recommended Version", not the development version.
My Detailed BOINC Stats
ID: 51891 · Report as offensive
noderaser
Avatar

Send message
Joined: 2 Jan 14
Posts: 276
United States
Message 52075 - Posted: 22 Jan 2014, 1:29:22 UTC
Last modified: 22 Jan 2014, 1:29:44 UTC

I have tried versions 6.10.19, 6.10.20 and 6.10.21 to no avail on two hosts running OS X 10.3.9; an iMac G3 Rev. D and an iBook G3 Clamshell. The later three versions all install successfully, but the BOINC Manager application crashes on startup. 6.10.17 works just fine on both hosts.
My Detailed BOINC Stats
ID: 52075 · Report as offensive

Message boards : Questions and problems : Last version for OS X 10.3?

Copyright © 2024 University of California.
Permission is granted to copy, distribute and/or modify this document under the terms of the GNU Free Documentation License, Version 1.2 or any later version published by the Free Software Foundation.