I've been trying to consume as much info about SIP as I can so I can understand how it is going to affect my users and the apps they use. Correct me if I'm wrong, but if you have an app that installs into one of the protected areas (such as /sbin), you can disable SIP, install the app, then enable SIP and the installed files will remain where they were put? (and this process would not at all be scriptable or pushable via Casper) Obviously if an app tries to write to files in the protected locations as a matter of it's normal operation after SIP is enabled, then the app is probably going to fail.
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Also, if we wish to disable SIP 100% of the time, the SIP status is actually written to NVRAM and if the battery dies or we have to zap the PRAM to fix an issue, then the SIP status will return to a default of Enabled. Right?
I'm thinking of possible workarounds if some older mission critical apps we use aren't updated to work with SIP before the first OSX 10.11-only Macs ship.
I do understand that there's a lot more to SIP than just protected locations and there may not be any workarounds for those aspects of it.
That raises another question: Has anyone bought any brand new Macs that can't be downgraded to Yosemite yet?
