Mac OS X Server
Mac OS X Server 1.x is basically the first production release of the Apple Rhapsody project, which is the PowerPC port of OPENSTEP designed to run on the Macintosh. The OS X Server operating system does not use the aqua appearance of the later released OS X, nor is it compatible with later OS X software.
Release history
Version | Code name | Date | OS name |
---|---|---|---|
Mac OS X Server 1.0 | Hera1O9 | March 16, 1999 | Rhapsody 5.3 |
Mac OS X Server 1.0.1 | Hera1O9 | April 15, 1999 | Rhapsody 5.4 |
Mac OS X Server 1.0.2 | Hera1O9+Loki2G1 | July 29, 1999 | Rhapsody 5.5 |
Mac OS X Server 1.2 | Pele1Q10 | January 14, 2000 | Rhapsody 5.6 |
Mac OS X Server 1.2 v3 | Medusa1E3 | October 27, 2000 | Rhapsody 5.6 |
The 1.0.2 version is incorrectly referenced as 1.1 in some places.
Limitations
- No FireWire
- Only supports built-in video cards, or Apple-supplied video cards
- No DVD-RAM support
- No software RAID
- Devices can only be detected on one USB port at a time
Installation
This will cover some notes about installing the OS X Server operating system.
Requirements
Beige G3 systems as well as the blue & white G3 tower and G4 towers should run OS X Server without issue. You must also ensure the hard drive size being used for the OS X Server boot volume is no larger than 8GB. If you pre-partition a larger drive giving the first 8GB as OS X Server, this may work for you.
64MB RAM is the minimum but 128MB or higher is recommended.
Error: Desktop folder on the startup disk could not be created
This error is displayed when performing the initial OS 9 side booting of the install media and you're using a badly created CD image. The error blocks the boot process before the Finder is available. The "Pele1Q10" image found at the Winworld site and other archives is confirmed to boot properly.
Old World G3 can't boot OS X after PRAM battery failure
If you install Mac OS X Server on an Old World ROM based Macintosh without a working PRAM battery, the boot settings pointing to the UFS volume will be lost if power is removed from the system. You must either enter Open Firmware and manually point to the mach_kernel boot file or boot from the OS X Server installer CD and using the System Disk utility to select your existing UFS partition.
Notes
Change appearance to NeXTStep
You should be able to change the interface appearance back to NeXTStep using "defaults write NSGlobalDomain NSInterfaceStyle NeXTStep" in the terminal. If that doesn't work, try replacing "defaults write" with "dwrite".
Videos
External Resources
See Also
- Apple Copland - Apple's original attempt at a next generation operating system prior to the NeXT merger
- Apple Rhapsody