The connection alert now indicates when a connection was established via iCloud Private Relay (Private Relay is a new feature of macOS Monterey, which is currently in beta).Fixed a possible crash of Little Snitch Agent.Fixed a rare issue that could cause connections to be shown without a destination address in the connection alert.Fixed possible crash of the Little Snitch configuration app when System Extension configuration changed during display update.Fixed a possible crash of Network Monitor when connections dropped out of the available history time range.The command line tool created a code coverage file ( default.profraw) in the working directory.Fixed a bug in Network Monitor where a click on the disclosure icon of a connection did not reveal details.Fixed a bug in Network Monitor where clicks on map annotations did not work.Fixed incorrect display of keyboard shortcut in settings.When creating a manual rule backup, the last used backup location is now preserved (instead of always suggesting the home folder).If you prefer to perform these updates manually, you can choose the desired schedule in the rule group editor (right-click the group in the sidebar and choose “Edit” from the context menu). The default schedule for performing rule group updates has been changed to Daily.Improved presentation of Little Snitch background processes in System Settings > Login Items on macOS Ventura.Visual feedback when clicking connection endpoints on the map in Network Monitor.Improved opening of the map in Network Monitor to make sure the map is shown within the visible area of the screen, moving the window to the left if necessary.Option-click on the disclosure icon of a connection in Network Monitor now expands to all descending rows.Filtering connections in Network Monitor is faster.The Configuration app starts much faster, especially if there are lots of rules and large rule groups.Compression is preferred to swapping because it makes more room for memory and doesn’t slow down your Mac. These two parameters tell you how much active process data was swapped out to the startup drive or compressed to save space. Since Apple silicon Macs have an integrated system on a chip, your only option is to quit the app. You might need more RAM in the future but, before that, check out some common mistakes that slow down your Mac. As long as memory pressure is green, it shouldn’t be a concern. If Cached Files is consuming a lot of memory, don’t fret about it. But if another app needs RAM, macOS will dynamically remove cached data and allocate it to other apps. If you re-launch the Mail app, it’ll launch faster. For example, if you quit Apple Mail after using it for a while, its data will become part of the memory used by cached files. This tells you how much memory is presently used by apps, but is still available for other apps to take. Once the syncing completes, the %CPU should get reduced.Ĭached Files is another useful parameter. If you see a spike in CPU usage, this doesn’t indicate a problem.
0 Comments
Leave a Reply. |
AuthorWrite something about yourself. No need to be fancy, just an overview. ArchivesCategories |