I want to hot swap SATA drives but unsure what command to run so macOS Mojave can recognize the new drive. Thanks
"FeaturesYou can't. The Mac Pro's SATA controller doesn't support hot swapping.
"Features
The Tempo SATA Pro Plus supports hot-swapping of external drives under OS X, and supports booting from attached drives under OS X"
https://no-trouble.com/hardware/585-tempo-ssd-pro-plus.html
"Features
The Tempo SATA Pro Plus supports hot-swapping of external drives under OS X, and supports booting from attached drives under OS X"
https://no-trouble.com/hardware/585-tempo-ssd-pro-plus.html
Don't do that. The Mac Pro's drives are not intended to be hot swappable, and you're going to cause yourself some problems by trying to do so.I want to hot swap SATA drives but unsure what command to run so macOS Mojave can recognize the new drive. Thanks
I’m wondering. Somebody made a program that makes external drives appear as internal.Don't do that. The Mac Pro's drives are not intended to be hot swappable, and you're going to cause yourself some problems by trying to do so.
No, this is about the SATA controller itself. Hot swappable drives were considered for the Mac Pro but in the end were not included in production computers.I’m won
I’m wondering. Somebody made a program that makes external drives appear as internal.
Now just a maybe......
Maybe the reverse can be done and when finished with a drive you eject it and remove?
Exactly. It is possible to totally screw up a SATA SSD to the point where you hope that it's still under warranty.No, this is about the SATA controller itself.
Actually, the drives are hot swappable - but not when installed on a cMP internal SATA port.The Mac Pro's drives are not intended to be hot swappable
A rather semantic point, but yes, that's correct. The Mac Pro's SATA controller does not support hot swapping of disks; not even Apple's Mac Pro RAID card supported it. Presumably, Apple wanted buyers to steer toward the Xserve for that functionality.Actually, the drives are hot swappable - but not when installed on a cMP internal SATA port.
The fault is with the cMP, not with the drives.
Presumably, Apple wanted buyers to steer toward the Xserve for that functionality.
Looking for a schematic of the 4,1/5,1 - is the SATA controller in the PCH/NorthBridge, or is it a separate chip?The Mac Pro's SATA controller does not support hot swapping of disks;
pch/northbridgeLooking for a schematic of the 4,1/5,1 - is the SATA controller in the PCH/NorthBridge, or is it a separate chip?
The PCH supports hot-swapping SATA.
Looking for a schematic of the 4,1/5,1 - is the SATA controller in the PCH/NorthBridge, or is it a separate chip?
The PCH supports hot-swapping SATA.
pch/northbridge
Thanks. I notice, however, that hot-swap is supported on other motherboards of that era (e.g. https://www.newegg.com/sr2600urbrpna-dual-intel-xeon-5500-series/p/N82E16816117123), so I assume that it was a chipset feature.Mac Pro SATA controller are part of the southbridge and don't have a hot-swap support circuit, just a SAS/SATA mux.
Thanks. I notice, however, that hot-swap is supported on other motherboards of that era (e.g. https://www.newegg.com/sr2600urbrpna-dual-intel-xeon-5500-series/p/N82E16816117123), so I assume that it was a chipset feature.
Thanks.There are 4 distinct versions of ICH10 chipset, two consumer (ICH10 and ICH10R) and two corporate (ICH10D and ICH10DO):
View attachment 847182
Only the ICH10R and ICH10DO have RAID/hot plug support:
View attachment 847191
View attachment 847184
Mac Pro ICH10 version is 82801JIB, no RAID or hot plug support:
View attachment 847188
Apple was selling a real hardware SAS RAID card as an option to be used with slot-4, with a SAS mux in the backplane, probably this is the motive why they chose the simplest ICH10 version (to make a cheaper BOM).
Btw, to have hot plug support some discrete components are needed, Mac Pro don't have it, but some of the Xserve boards have them.