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nomore

macrumors member
Original poster
Feb 11, 2005
92
0
I've tried doing a clean install of Sierra multiple times, and every time, the installer gets to the end and then shows the message "The installer payload failed signature check". This leaves the computer without a bootable version of macOS.

I have tried recreating the installer USB stick with a fresh download.

So, Apple support guy said to do an internet recovery. The problem there is it tries to install El Capitan, but never completes. The count-down timer gets to 0, then goes back up to ~30 minutes. It just keeps doing that for hours and hours.

The second Apple support guy I talked to said to do a regular restore (CMD+R), but it always goes to internet recovery. I'm guessing there's no restore partition.

The computer does have Windows 10 installed on to a Bootcamp partition, and that seems to work fine. I just cannot get macOS installed.

The computer is a mid-2015 15" MacBook Pro. I use the installer Disk Utility to format the Macintosh HD partition. I have used the El Capitan installer terminal set the correct system time. I have tried installing using a different USB port.

I would greatly appreciate any help.

Video of El Capitan Internet recovery issue:

Screenshot of Sierra install issue: http://imgur.com/k79us9q/
 

harmo

macrumors newbie
Oct 23, 2016
1
2
Canberra
I've tried doing a clean install of Sierra multiple times, and every time, the installer gets to the end and then shows the message "The installer payload failed signature check". This leaves the computer without a bootable version of macOS.

I have tried recreating the installer USB stick with a fresh download.

So, Apple support guy said to do an internet recovery. The problem there is it tries to install El Capitan, but never completes. The count-down timer gets to 0, then goes back up to ~30 minutes. It just keeps doing that for hours and hours.

The second Apple support guy I talked to said to do a regular restore (CMD+R), but it always goes to internet recovery. I'm guessing there's no restore partition.

The computer does have Windows 10 installed on to a Bootcamp partition, and that seems to work fine. I just cannot get macOS installed.

The computer is a mid-2015 15" MacBook Pro. I use the installer Disk Utility to format the Macintosh HD partition. I have used the El Capitan installer terminal set the correct system time. I have tried installing using a different USB port.

I would greatly appreciate any help.

Video of El Capitan Internet recovery issue:

Screenshot of Sierra install issue: http://imgur.com/k79us9q/




Hi there,



I found that if time date/time is (very) wrong on your mac, you get this error. To make your life more difficult, booting from an Sierra OS X installer disk/USB drive doesn't necessarily show a clock in the top-right corner of the screen. So if you have the same experience as I did.. it took me a while to notice this discrepancy.



For me, I disconnected the battery while installing a new hard disk, so my clock was set back to the Apple default (which is years ago)... to fix the time/date I:

1. Connected to the nearest Wi-Fi/Network connection.
2. Used the terminal utility in the recovery system (Utility Menu > Terminal) to update the clock using the ntpdate command and specifying an appropriate time server. If you're connected to the internet, you can use the command below, and then restart the OS X installer.

ntpdate -u time.apple.com

If you have no internet, another approach is to set the date manually from the command line by using the “date” command string, where date is in the [mm][dd][HH][MM][yy] format, which is Month Date Hour Minute Year without any separation. This looks something like:

date 0712122318

Once you've set the time again, you can start the installer again. From experience, I can safely say that it worked fine for me.

I really hope this helps you (and anyone else who comes across this page).


Good luck!

Hamish
 

rkhasda

macrumors newbie
Dec 17, 2016
1
0
Hi there,



I found that if time date/time is (very) wrong on your mac, you get this error. To make your life more difficult, booting from an Sierra OS X installer disk/USB drive doesn't necessarily show a clock in the top-right corner of the screen. So if you have the same experience as I did.. it took me a while to notice this discrepancy.



For me, I disconnected the battery while installing a new hard disk, so my clock was set back to the Apple default (which is years ago)... to fix the time/date I:

1. Connected to the nearest Wi-Fi/Network connection.
2. Used the terminal utility in the recovery system (Utility Menu > Terminal) to update the clock using the ntpdate command and specifying an appropriate time server. If you're connected to the internet, you can use the command below, and then restart the OS X installer.

ntpdate -u time.apple.com

If you have no internet, another approach is to set the date manually from the command line by using the “date” command string, where date is in the [mm][dd][HH][MM][yy] format, which is Month Date Hour Minute Year without any separation. This looks something like:

date 0712122318

Once you've set the time again, you can start the installer again. From experience, I can safely say that it worked fine for me.

I really hope this helps you (and anyone else who comes across this page).


Good luck!

Hamish

Hi Hamish,

I was trying to encrypt my mac which caused error in the system. Whenever I was trying to charge my mac, it would hang due to the encryption process. I found a technique in the internet to stop the encryption process through terminal, but I was not sucessful.

So next, I tried to reinstall os through the recovery partition, but sometimes the Internal Apple SSD showed up and sometime not. So, I installed the OS in my external hdd which removed the recovery partition. After installing I created a USB bootable installer and tried to reinstall the OS in my Apple Internal SSD. Now, I am having the same problem as Nomore. I tried your technique but it still shows up the error. Do you know what other problems can cause this error ? And how to come over it ?

Thanks in Advance,
rkhasda
 

Glee217

macrumors member
Jun 20, 2016
78
12
Hi there,



I found that if time date/time is (very) wrong on your mac, you get this error. To make your life more difficult, booting from an Sierra OS X installer disk/USB drive doesn't necessarily show a clock in the top-right corner of the screen. So if you have the same experience as I did.. it took me a while to notice this discrepancy.



For me, I disconnected the battery while installing a new hard disk, so my clock was set back to the Apple default (which is years ago)... to fix the time/date I:

1. Connected to the nearest Wi-Fi/Network connection.
2. Used the terminal utility in the recovery system (Utility Menu > Terminal) to update the clock using the ntpdate command and specifying an appropriate time server. If you're connected to the internet, you can use the command below, and then restart the OS X installer.

ntpdate -u time.apple.com

If you have no internet, another approach is to set the date manually from the command line by using the “date” command string, where date is in the [mm][dd][HH][MM][yy] format, which is Month Date Hour Minute Year without any separation. This looks something like:

date 0712122318

Once you've set the time again, you can start the installer again. From experience, I can safely say that it worked fine for me.

I really hope this helps you (and anyone else who comes across this page).


Good luck!

Hamish


Wow it works!!! now I have 10.12.5 thanks! I actually unplugged the battery from my early 2015 mbp 13" and I typed ntpdate -u time.apple.com on the terminal and reinstalled the OS using the usb drive. Thanks to you or where ever you got the info from!!!!
 

mauriciojornalista

macrumors newbie
Oct 7, 2017
2
0
Hi there,



I found that if time date/time is (very) wrong on your mac, you get this error. To make your life more difficult, booting from an Sierra OS X installer disk/USB drive doesn't necessarily show a clock in the top-right corner of the screen. So if you have the same experience as I did.. it took me a while to notice this discrepancy.



For me, I disconnected the battery while installing a new hard disk, so my clock was set back to the Apple default (which is years ago)... to fix the time/date I:

1. Connected to the nearest Wi-Fi/Network connection.
2. Used the terminal utility in the recovery system (Utility Menu > Terminal) to update the clock using the ntpdate command and specifying an appropriate time server. If you're connected to the internet, you can use the command below, and then restart the OS X installer.

ntpdate -u time.apple.com

If you have no internet, another approach is to set the date manually from the command line by using the “date” command string, where date is in the [mm][dd][HH][MM][yy] format, which is Month Date Hour Minute Year without any separation. This looks something like:

date 0712122318

Once you've set the time again, you can start the installer again. From experience, I can safely say that it worked fine for me.

I really hope this helps you (and anyone else who comes across this page).


Good luck!

Hamish
 

mauriciojornalista

macrumors newbie
Oct 7, 2017
2
0
Hi there,



I found that if time date/time is (very) wrong on your mac, you get this error. To make your life more difficult, booting from an Sierra OS X installer disk/USB drive doesn't necessarily show a clock in the top-right corner of the screen. So if you have the same experience as I did.. it took me a while to notice this discrepancy.



For me, I disconnected the battery while installing a new hard disk, so my clock was set back to the Apple default (which is years ago)... to fix the time/date I:

1. Connected to the nearest Wi-Fi/Network connection.
2. Used the terminal utility in the recovery system (Utility Menu > Terminal) to update the clock using the ntpdate command and specifying an appropriate time server. If you're connected to the internet, you can use the command below, and then restart the OS X installer.

ntpdate -u time.apple.com

If you have no internet, another approach is to set the date manually from the command line by using the “date” command string, where date is in the [mm][dd][HH][MM][yy] format, which is Month Date Hour Minute Year without any separation. This looks something like:

date 0712122318

Once you've set the time again, you can start the installer again. From experience, I can safely say that it worked fine for me.

I really hope this helps you (and anyone else who comes across this page).


Good luck!

Hamish


Thaks!!!! Solve my problem!
 

simone31

macrumors newbie
Nov 3, 2017
1
0
If the date solution does not work, it is maybe because some file on your bootable usb drive has not been correctly copied.
Here are all the steps for a clean install from a usb drive. The solution concerning the bad file on the usb drive can be found at the end of step 4. Installation :

First be careful, the new macOS versions erase the installer once installed.
=> Copy the installer somewhere else than Applications before launching the install!

Steps:

1.Download Sierra from the Purshase tab in the Apple Store. Quit the installer. Copy the installer somewhere else.

2. Create a bootable usb device
Format the usb device (needs to be at least 8Go) with a GUID partition
then, type in a terminal window:
sudo /Applications/Install\ macOS\ Sierra.app/Contents/Resources/createinstallmedia --volume /Volumes/SierraInstaller --applicationpath /Applications/Install\ macOS\ Sierra.app --nointeraction &&say Done
=> your bootable key is set.

3. Formatting your mac hard-drive:
Before your format your hard-drive, make sure that you have copied/backup it on another device! and especially that you have copied the sierra installer on another accessible computer in case installation fails.
start your mac when pressing cmd R or cmd alt R
go the disk utility
choose your hard-drive and erase

4. Installation:
shut down your mac.
insert your bootable usb device
start your mac and concurrently press alt to be able to boot on the usb device
in the utility menu open the terminal
to check the date, type: date
if not up to date, change it to the day when you downloaded sierra with the following format (month day hour minutes year), type: date MMDDhhmmYY
quit the terminal
choose sierra installation
=> if the signature problem still appears:
shut down everything
recheck your bootable usb device on your other computer where you kept the sierra installer, by typing in a terminal window:
diff /Applications/Install\ macOS\ Sierra.app/Contents/SharedSupport/InstallESD.dmg /Volumes/Install\ macOS\ Sierra/Install\ macOS\ Sierra.app/Contents/SharedSupport/InstallESD.dmg
if files are different, copy the file again by typing:
sudo cp /Applications/Install\ macOS\ Sierra.app/Contents/SharedSupport/InstallESD.dmg /Volumes/Install\ macOS\ Sierra/Install\ macOS\ Sierra.app/Contents/SharedSupport/InstallESD.dmg
now you can restart all the steps detailed in 4. Installation. The signature problem should not appear again!
 
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