Lesson 15: Manage System Resources Flashcards

Editor's Note: The goals listed in Lesson 15 were a repeat of the goals listed for Lesson 14.

1
Q

What are the four default top-level folders visible in the Finder?

A

The four default top-level folders visible in the Finder are as follows:

a. Applications: Apps to which local users have access.
b. Library: System resources to which local users have access.
c. System: System resources.
d. Users: Local user home folders.

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2
Q

What are six common system resources?

What purpose does each resource serve?

A

These are the six common system resources and the purposes they serve:

a. Extensions: Attach themselves to the system kernel to provide hardware and peripheral driver support.
b. Frameworks: Shared code libraries that provide additional software resources for apps and system processes.
c. Fonts.
d. Preference files: App and system configuration information.
e. LaunchAgents and LaunchDaemons: Used by launchd to provide services that automatically start when needed at system startup or at user login.
f. Logs: Text files that contain error and progress entries from nearly any app or system service.

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3
Q

What are the four system resource domains?

What purpose does each domain serve?

A

These are the four system resource domains and the purpose they serve:

a. User: Contains apps and system resources that are specific to each user account.
b. Local: Contains apps and system resources that are available to users on a local Mac.
c. Network: Optional. Contains apps and system resources available to any Mac that has an automated network share.
d. System: Contains apps and system resources that provide basic system functionality.

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4
Q

What purpose does the ~/Library/Containers folder serve?

What items are in this folder?

A

The ~/Library/Containers folder contains resources for sandboxed apps.

macOS High Sierra creates and maintains a separate container folder for each sandboxed app that a user can open.

A sandboxed app is more secure because it can access only items inside its container.

Only items intended for sharing are in a group container folder.

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5
Q

What happens when a user double-clicks a font file?

A

When you double-click a font file, it automatically opens a preview of the font in the Font Book app.

From here, you can click the Install Font button to copy the font into ~/Library/Fonts.

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6
Q

How can you identify duplicate fonts?

A

The Font Book app shows a small dot next to the name of any font that has duplicate resources.

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7
Q

How does System Integrity Protection (SIP) help ensure that macOS High Sierra system resources remain secure?

A

System Integrity Protection prevents users and processes with administrator or root access from modifying core macOS High Sierra items.

Protected items include:
• /System
• /bin
• /sbin
• /usr
• Core macOS High Sierra apps
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