Is that a clean install or a native upgrade within mac os?
That's a regular update.
Is that a clean install or a native upgrade within mac os?
maybe this will work ????
I am not sure but I think if you use the dosdude's MacOS High Sierra Patcher I think there is an option to force rebuild caches then hit reboot that might workI tried installing this but I'm not sure how to rebuild the kext cache in High Sierra on a genuine Mac
I am not sure but I think if you use the dosdude's MacOS High Sierra Patcher I think there is an option to force rebuild caches then hit reboot that might work
Could not create a Preboot Volume for APFS install
The problem was running the patcher on macOS Mojave.Hello,
I'm trying to use dosdude's tool but when patching/creating the bootable USB, I get a lot of errors about not being able to copy the files.
The FAQ says to reformat or to use another USB which I tried but I get all the time those errors. Any ideas how to fix it?
cheers
I'd recommend a GeForce GTX680. Best flashable nVidia GPU that doesn't require web drivers.
thanks so much .... i just want to confirm before purchasing will this one work?
https://www.evga.com/products/specs/gpu.aspx?pn=5e58e11b-7c49-44c0-9348-bd7be168bd1b
I purposely made it NOT automatically convert to APFS. You can format a disk as APFS and install to that if you want an APFS based install. Without the post-install patches applied, the resulting install is 100% stock.
Installing using HFS, it should work then.High Sierra failed to install correctly on an SSD on my Mac Pro 3,1. Prior to installation I formatted the drive as APFS, following the precautions here: http://dosdude1.com/highsierra/
The installation runs quickly (12 minutes ). The post-install completes normally. The result at boot time is "This version of Mac OS X is not supported on this platform! Reason: Mac-F42C88C8".
Mac Pro (Early 2008)
2 x 2.8 GHz Quad Core Intel Xeon
Memory 12 GB
ATI Radeon HD 5770 1024 MB
Apple SSD TS256C
No, it should work in OS X 10.7 Lion and later. Verify that SIP is disabled, reboot, and then try it again.Hey dosdude, does ROMTool require High Sierra?
I was trying to dump my 5,1's system ROM from 10.12.6, I disabled SIP successfully but when I went to dump the ROM, it gave me the error 'DirectHW.kext was not loaded.'
Do I need to upgrade to HS first? Or reboot in Firmware Flash mode?
High Sierra failed to install correctly on an SSD on my Mac Pro 3,1. Prior to installation I formatted the drive as APFS, following the precautions here: http://dosdude1.com/highsierra/
The installation runs quickly (12 minutes ). The post-install completes normally. The result at boot time is "This version of Mac OS X is not supported on this platform! Reason: Mac-F42C88C8".
Mac Pro (Early 2008)
2 x 2.8 GHz Quad Core Intel Xeon
Memory 12 GB
ATI Radeon HD 5770 1024 MB
Apple SSD TS256C
Hello,
I read all the posts since page 145, but still not clear as to what the best way of upgrading to 10.13.5 is. I'm happily using 10.13.4 on a MacBook 5,1 formatted as HFS+. I was hoping that the patch updater app would get an update and I can simply use the App Store to upgrade without worrying. But that doesn't seem to be the case.
Ideally, I would like to keep my recovery partition, and I would rather not do a clean install from scratch due to time constraints. Is this possible? How?
From what I read, if I do a clean install from scratch, all will be fine and there will be recovery partition, but it's the longest option since one will need to setup the system with their preferences, software and restoring their files from backup. On the other end of the spectrum, one can just run the App Store update, but there will be no recovery partition, and according to some posts here, there is a chance that it may not work at all and a clean install will be required.
I would be really grateful if someone could list all the options to upgrade with their drawbacks, what is involved and how much time it takes.
Thanks in advance!
I'll be the guinea pig. Downloading the 13.6 update from MAS now for my iMac 9,1. Will report back.Well... 10.13.6 is out. So now we can see what it fixes and breaks.
Will do my iMac 9,1 when I get time.