![]() The macOS installer is a PKG file that places the files in the appropriate location, one of which is the. Just install it without the service, then run your sudo commands. The way you are starting the server doesn't involve launchd at all, which means you didn't have to install it as a service and modify the files. ![]() You can see the filezilla-server process running, but trying to attach to it with the GUI fails. Attempting to run "sudo /Applications/FileZilla Server.app/Contents/MacOS/filezilla-server" with or without the arguments results in errors, like it didn't launch correctly. I don’t see any reason not to continue using them.Įdit: It seems that trying to launch the service manually doesn't work after all. Hence, why I was asking if there is an “official “ way to do this as there is on the Windows variant.Īlso, the arguments I’m referring to are already defined in the plist. Nothing is wrong with that per-se, but having an ability in the administration GUI or having there be some other way to do this natively so users don’t have to come up with a hack such as this would be more desirable. If you're fine with storing the config files in the user's home directory, you can just use the UI application to configure the server as it pleases you. What's wrong with that? Besides, generally you don't need any command line arguments, they're needed only for very custom things.
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