Keka 1 1 25

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Trusted Mac download keka 1.2.10. Virus-free and 100% clean download. Get keka alternative downloads. Keka Beka Keka Beka- A Jolly comedy padam from our team flick cloud. From the makers of Kurangu (7th annual Vijay awards nominee - Best shortfilm), Repellenc. Keka can create files in these formats: 7Z ZIP TAR GZIP BZIP2 XZ LZIP DMG ISO And extract all of these formats: 7Z ZIP RAR TAR GZIP BZIP2 XZ LZIP DMG ISO LZMA EXE CAB WIM PAX JAR APK APPX CPGZ CPIO. Download: Keka 1.2.11. Old Versions: Keka 1.2.9 Keka 1.2.7 Keka 1.2.5 Keka 1.2.5 Keka 1.2.4 Keka 1.2.3 Keka 1.2.2 Keka 1.2.0 Keka 1.1.30.

Keka
Keka is a simple program to compress or decompress any file, regardless of format and the platform on which it was created and with zero hassle.
The program can compress files in 7Z, ZIP, TAR, GZIP, BZIP, DMG, and ISO formats, and likewise can extract content from any of the following container files: RAR, 7Z, LZMA, ZIP, TAR, GZIP, BZIP2, ISO, EXE, CAB, PAX, and ACE (PPC).
With this program, you can choose from different run speeds, from ultra-fast to very slow, the latter of which will prevent excessive resource consumption and is a great option for less powerful computers. You can also use it to split any file into parts of varying size and even password-protect them.
Another really useful feature on Keka is the ability to delete the file after compressing it to avoid wasting space on your hard drive. You can also exclude files hidden from Mac or compress files separately.
Hi,
First off, thanks for writing Keka. Of the 2-3 7zip compression tools available for OSX, Keka is by far one of the better ones.
Secondly, I have a few questions regarding Keka v0.1.4.2 working with files on a MacbookPro3,1 (Core 2 Duo 2.4GHz/6GB RAM) + OSX v10.5.8:
  • Is it normal for Keka to not use any CPU at all?
    When I began decompressing and testing (t option) a 32 x 1GB (-m0) spanned archive on an NTFS v5 volume, it consistently only uses 1-3% of the CPU [1] even though the rest of the machine is idle. Normally if I were multitasking this would be a good thing but it'd be nice if the application used more resources if the machine was just sitting there idle.
    I looked into using 'renice' and bumped up Keka, keka7z (and even ntfs-3g)'s priority to '51' [2], but it didn't seem to make any difference at all when I observed the CPU usage for keka* in Activity Monitor.app. I've heard priority control via (re)nice is broken in OSX v10.5.8+ though. If so, how can I speed up Keka?
  • Any idea when Leopard support will be added for v >= 1?
    I know we're up to Snow Leopard and now even Lion, but a lot of things (ex: rEFIt) break so I don't think I can upgrade at the moment. I ask because I've read that v1+ will now show you estimates of how long a compression / decompression ( / test?) run will take VS just the total elapsed time in the progress bar .
Thanks for any help you can provide.

Keka 1 1 25 New King James Version


Regards,

Keka 1 1 25 Niv


-B

1&1 Deutschland


[1] Actually, Keka.app used up to 3% CPU and keka7z would normally only use ~1%, even after re-niceing
[2] I'm assuming higher values = higher priority based on the fact that things like daemons and SystemUIServer have values > 31, but I tried going in both directions anyway with no visible performance changes.




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