![]() When you look at the downloaded file in the Terminal, you see an after the file mode which tells us this file has additional extended attributes: $ ls -l ~/Downloads/Firefox\ 1 armin staff 51137761 Aug 30 15:11 /Users/armin/Downloads/Firefox 55.0.3.dmg For example, when you download a file in Safari, it stores when a file was downloaded and which website and download URL was used.Īs an example, I downloaded the latest Firefox disk image. ![]() MacOS and Finder use extended attributes to store plenty of extra information about files. ![]() For more info on plutil and everything property list related read my book: ‘Property Lists, Preferences and Profiles for Apple Administrators’
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