Become a MacRumors Supporter for $50/year with no ads, ability to filter front page stories, and private forums.

R2FX

macrumors regular
Original poster
Mar 25, 2010
236
399
Quick question if someone can help - would NVMe drive work with OS X 10.9 in Mac Pro 2013? Assuming machine is running latest firmware.

I’m contemplating to get 2TB SSD for it, but plan to downgrade it later (after getting M2 Mac in the future).

Thanks in advance!
 

R2FX

macrumors regular
Original poster
Mar 25, 2010
236
399
you would need a physical adapter as the drive slot in the 2013 Mac Pro is not a standard NVMe connector.
see This thread
That’s not what I’m asking kwikdeth. Let’s assume I’ve got original Apple SSD (SSPOLARIS)
 

JustAnExpat

macrumors 65816
Nov 27, 2019
1,009
1,012
Not exactly sure what's being asked:

1. Is the physical connection compatible between the NVMe drive and the Mac Pro 2013? If it is, then it'll work.
2. Can you take an NVMe drive formatting for data only (not as a start-up disk) in Mac OS X 10,9 and put it in an M2? Yes, it should work.
 

R2FX

macrumors regular
Original poster
Mar 25, 2010
236
399
Neither. SSPOLARIS type of SSD is the last removable SSD Apple made but it needed firmware update in Mac Pro 2013. I’m thinking of getting 2TB version but I plan to downgrade to Mavericks.

My layman question is - since there were no NVMe drives around in 2013, will OS recognize the drive? Or once the firmware on the Mac is updated any older system will “see” the drive?
 

R2FX

macrumors regular
Original poster
Mar 25, 2010
236
399
That confirms it then. Thank you Mikas!
 

tsialex

Contributor
Jun 13, 2016
13,454
13,601
Neither. SSPOLARIS type of SSD is the last removable SSD Apple made but it needed firmware update in Mac Pro 2013. I’m thinking of getting 2TB version but I plan to downgrade to Mavericks.

My layman question is - since there were no NVMe drives around in 2013, will OS recognize the drive?
No, NVMe drives also need OS support. For Mac Pros, support of NVMe drives start with Sierra (for Apple OEM drives and 3rd party drives that support 4096 bytes/sector).
Or once the firmware on the Mac is updated any older system will “see” the drive?
Nope, while the firmware is aware of the drive, without macOS support won't work.
 
  • Like
Reactions: R2FX

joevt

macrumors 604
Jun 21, 2012
6,967
4,262
Use AHCI instead of NVMe for old macOS versions. Or create a NVMe driver for old macOS.
 
  • Like
Reactions: R2FX

Dayo

macrumors 68020
Dec 21, 2018
2,257
1,279
From what I can gather, NMVe support was first added in Mac OS 10.10 (Yosemite):

This appeared to only work on new units (Laptops etc) and excluded Mac Pros.
It became possible to use on such units as from Mac OS 10.11 (El Capitan) by applying RehabMan's patch:

The patch was also needed for Mac OS 10.12 (Sierra), but was largely made unneccesary as from Mac OS 10.13 (High Sierra)
 
Last edited:
  • Like
Reactions: R2FX

R2FX

macrumors regular
Original poster
Mar 25, 2010
236
399
Thank you all! Saved decent amount of headaches and $$$ 😀
 
Register on MacRumors! This sidebar will go away, and you'll see fewer ads.