Here's my little script. I keep CHIRP in my home directory Applications, so adjust your path as necessary:
❯ cat bin/chirp_sign.sh #!/opt/homebrew/bin/bash xattr -c ~/Applications/CHIRP.app xattr -c ~/Applications/CHIRP.app/Contents codesign --force --deep --sign - ~/Applications/CHIRP.app
The drivers for the cable you're using really depend on the chipset in the cable. MacOS does have some default drivers, and they may work for you. If they don't I suggest going to the web site specific for the chipset and not the cable brand, they tend to be newer. Google something like "chipset macos driver download" and you should find the page.
On Sun, Sep 12, 2021 at 10:45 AM Kerry Whittle t2ckerry@gmail.com wrote:
Yay! Chirp is running again! I was going to try to figure out those commands again but you got them first. Thanks! I’m going to make a script out of those commands.
Now, about the drivers, how does that work on the m1?
On Sep 12, 2021, at 7:49 AM, Scott Lopez scottjl@gmail.com wrote:
Assuming you put the chrip.app in your Applications folder, try running
the following commands:
xattr -c /Applications/CHIRP.app xattr -c /Applications/CHIRP.app/Contents codesign --force --deep --sign - /Applications/CHIRP.app
Need to run these from the command line (use Terminal) and you must have
Xcode installed.
You'll need to run these every time you update the CHIRP app. _______________________________________________ chirp_users mailing list chirp_users@intrepid.danplanet.com http://intrepid.danplanet.com/mailman/listinfo/chirp_users This message was sent to Kerry at t2ckerry@gmail.com To unsubscribe, send an email to
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