Earlier, I could read all stdout/stderr data from applications in Console.app. Since a while, this is not the case anymore (NSLog data is still there, though). I\'m on 10.8
Prior to Mountain Lion, all processes managed by launchd
, including regular applications, had their stdout and stderr file descriptors forwarded to the system log. In Mountain Lion and above, stdout and stderr go nowhere for launchd
managed applications. Only messages explicitly sent to the system log will end up there.
If you're writing an application and would like some output to show up in the console, then adopt an API built on syslog(3) or asl(3) instead. NSLog
is one such API, and it has the advantage of logging to stderr too so you can easily see your output no matter how you've launched your application. If you'd like that functionality but want to use asl
or syslog
directly then you'll want to look in to the ASL_OPT_STDERR
option to asl_open
, and the LOG_PERROR
option to openlog
respectively.
If you have an old app and want to see stdout or stderr, open the app from Terminal. You can wind your way to the executable and open it from the command line, like in the normal, old world: type the program name. Then the messages will appear on the terminal.
This is not a repudiation of any of the other, better suggestions. It is just a way to get the output without altering the (old) program.