Leaks lets you parse and visualize the output from the "leaks" command line utility. Open leak reports from file (via double-click if they have a ".leaks" file name suffix) Open leak reports from pasteboard, or via the Leaks system service menu item View merged callstack for all leaks in the report View callstack as bottom-up, or top-down Save preferred window layout and settings The reporting done by the leaks command line utility is fantastic, as is the memory management event history of ObjectAlloc. If you use them together, you have a very powerful tool for finding memory leaks in Cocoa applications. Manually piecing together the data provided by these tools is of course often both time consuming and tedious.
The goal is to make this easier by providing a tool that combines the reports from the leaks command line utility with object memory management event history and user interface and data mining abilities reminiscent of Shark.
As this is a project run in my spare time, it's quite possible that I will not reach that goal... That said, the functionality implemented so far is already useful on it's own.
Services menu in Mac OS X lets you perform actions on current selection, such as opening URL, sending snippets, and more.
Untethered jailbreak for all iPhone, iPod touch, iPad and iPad mini models running iOS 7.0 through 7.0.6.
Wineskin Winery creates Mac OS X ports/wrappers for Windows programs/games, with an easy-to-use GUI, integrated Wine, X11 and an installer.
We don't have a description for the FlashMediaLiveEncoder app yet.
We don't have a description for the Hard Disk Manager app yet.
We don't have a description for the pdfsam- app yet.
We don't have a description for the 有道词典 app yet.
We don't have a description for the Ring app yet.
We don't have a description for the Google SketchUp 7 app yet.
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