The Network Utility app provides a series of useful networking tools, including a GUI frontend to ping, netstat, nslookup, trace route, whois, finger, a port scanner, along with details about general network info and on a per NIC level for IP address, MAC hardware address, link speeds, data transfer statistics, and more. Network Utility is a great tool that has been around on the Mac since the very first version of Mac OS X, so now you’re able to enjoy it again on the very latest version of MacOS macOS Ventura, macOS Monterey, or Big Sur. Relaunch Network Utility, it should work fine in Ventura, Monterey, or Big Sur.Now launch Terminal, and enter the following command string:Ĭodesign -f -s -deep "/Applications/Network Utility.app".Put “Network Utility.app” in the Applications folder of macOS Ventura, Monterey, or Big Sur.Copy the “Network Utility” application from Catalina or earlier to the new Mac, it is found in: /System/Library/CoreServices/Applications/.Install Rosetta on the Mac if applicable.Do that before proceeding if you’re on any Apple Silicon powered Mac, whether it’s an M1, M1 Pro, M1 Max, or M2 chip. Note: If you’re on an M1/M2 powered Mac, you will need to install Rosetta to be able to use Network Utility. How to Run Network Utility in macOS Ventura, Monterey, or Big Sur If you happen to have an additional Mac running Catalina or earlier however, you can copy Network Utility from macOS Catalina to a Mac running Ventura, Big Sur, or Monterey, and get Network Utility working again, even on M1/M2 powered Macs. Alas, a working version of Network Utility is no longer found in the system location on modern MacOS versions that it was once, as Apple deprecated the popular networking tool for whatever reason.
0 Comments
Leave a Reply. |
AuthorWrite something about yourself. No need to be fancy, just an overview. ArchivesCategories |