I've read questions where they state "Run Shell Command" isn't same as running in terminal but honestly I couldn't find a solution nor are actions composed in 10.14 working while my services workflows from previous OS (and Automator) version continue to work fine.
To remove ZipCloud, start by backing up all data (not with. Although ZipCloud may not be malicious itself, it should be deemed suspect by virtue of the company it keeps. The OS X client is sometimes distributed along with the 'SearchProtect' malware. I had assumed this was covered in the shell selection menu above, e.g. 'ZipCloud' is some sort of cloud-storage service with a doubtful reputation. I've tried adding shebang statements based on other questions here, although my previous shell script workflows work fine without one. While this still works in earlier Automator workflows (see below), I fail with the same error. I much prefer to pass all the arguments to artest as it's multithreaded, but I have tried to iterate over the arguments: for f in based on another question and in order to test everything I could think of I left out the explicit all arguments: for f
I've tested this by just using the help switch with no other arguments: #!/usr/bin/env bash The fact that the arguments are the error leads me to believe it's not the script that's the issue.
The same code in a shell script executes perfectly. The executable has proper permissions and is in the path: → wl artest The best solution seems to be to source ~/.bash_profile but I've tried export PATH=/usr/local/bin:$PATH as well. I've added path statement to ensure the executable is in the path. In this case we have granted a user the permissions to suspend (pause/continue), start and stop (restart) a service. Run the command: subinacl.exe /service Spooler /grantcontoso\tuserPTO. Next, go to the following locations in the Finder, by clicking on the Go menu and choosing Go to Folder. In the elevated command prompt, go to the directory containing the tool: cd C:\Program Files (x86)\Windows Resource Kits\Tools\'. Drag them to the Trash and then empty it. I've read every question I could find on and "Automator encountered an error: cannot execute binary file” and am unable to find a solution. The first step is to get rid of the app that you downloaded, along with anything named ZipCloud in your Applications folder. I've written similar Automator shell scripts in the past and never encounter this error. A selected directory returns : Is a directory at the end. I keep getting The action “Run Shell Script” encountered an error: “/Users/me/test/test1.zip: /Users/me/test/test1.zip: cannot execute binary file” for any selected items. I'm trying to run a command line app through Automator "Run Shell Script" on selected files/folders in Finder as QuickAction/Service in OS X 10.14 Mohave.