Installing this will not only give you access to Broken World and multiplayer but it will also update your game to the lastest version and run with some few custom compability patches to fix some bugs such as sound/graphic/mouse input lags.
This register fix makes your computer aware of where the game in installed, it is required to run the game and also needed for mod managers and some tools.
Install the registry fix as Administrator by right-clicking on the fix and then click Run as Administrator.Copy the reg-patch to your installation folder.Copy everything inside that folder to your Dungeon Siege installation folder.After downloading open the Dungeon Siege II (Broken World) Fix.On the download link look on the right corner of the screen and select download everything as a zip file.
Put your time and effort towards iOS support, which has the most profitable market share and is the future of the Mac.To make the expansion work with steam, you'll need few missing files. Just don't put too much effort into this endeavour. You can serve that market with a package installer, or with executables that work on the command line for users who know where to find them. You are worried about a tiny fraction of a tiny fraction possible users. The macOS platform itself is strictly niche at this point. You can update the target of the symlinks of the current directory by editing the text fields related to the specific filenames and pressing the update button.
Just don't forget who your market is, or isn't. You can create a new symlink by entering the filename and the target of the symlink into the upper text fields and pressing the symlink button. I'm not saying you shouldn't make command-line tools.
You and I, as developers, may use the Terminal and have things installed in /usr/local/bin, but that is very unusual for Mac users. macOS is a "melange" of a number of different origin systems. It is true that macOS has a BSD compatibility layer, but that's not quite the same thing. So, if you were to attempt to create those links, the first thing you would have to do is create /usr/local/bin, if it didn't already exist, and create it correctly.ĭon't read too much into the "BSD origin myth".
After a lot of messing around I figured out how to get it to work and will post the answer. I just checked two different machines to verify. Is there a way of installing Adobe Production Premium CS5 on a hard drive other than C: I tried changing the install path in the installer but after installing parts of the program dont work and it cant find any plug-ins I add. But to clarify, while /usr/local does exist and /usr/local/bin is in the default path, the path /usr/local/bin does not actually exist on a default configuration. This puts the user in control, which is the way Apple wants it. That would be a whole lot easier and less risky than any other method. You could even include a little shell script to do that for them. Anyone who knows their way around the Terminal could add that location to their path, or add symlinks in /usr/local/bin. The ideal solution is to just put any command-line tools in a "Helpers" directory. But again, this could be removed at any time. I mentioned another option using AppleScript in this thread from about a year ago. You could use the old deprecated methods that still work but could be removed at any time. You can create a privileged helper tool, launch daemon, and mach ports to do it the "official" way. The installer and associated scripts run as root. If you have a developer tool and you want to create symlinks there, the best option is a package installer. If the user wants to uninstall something, there is a good chance the only way to do that is to wipe out all of /usr/local. Some other software could overwrite your binaries. Because any open-source project ported to the Mac is going to dump files in /usr/local, it isn't a safe place. It only matters for people who use Terminal. I can't tell for sure because Parallels does use it my VMs. To start off with, I don't think it exists on a fresh install. usr/local/bin is not a good place for Mac software.