Running 2012 with ML. There was the gray status bar running across on reboot, indicating some firmware is updating. I don't recall seeing it in Software Update, nor can I find any record of it afterward. Any idea what it could have been?
Running 2012 with ML. There was the gray status bar running across on reboot, indicating some firmware is updating. I don't recall seeing it in Software Update, nor can I find any record of it afterward. Any idea what it could have been?
That does sound like a firmware update, but there have not been any release real recently. Could you have downloaded it when it came out and just never restarted so it could install?
The only thing I can think of is that I installed Windows 7 on a partition and it stuck in a reboot loop after I installed Boot Camp drivers because of a software raid in OS X. Perhaps all that rebooting set a dirty shutdown flag and it was doing a fsck.
You are correct.
Whenever fsck is ran, a progress bar is displayed to let the user know that "something is happening" (rather then stalling the boot process for what could be several minutes). This is the same progress bar (graphically) that the EFI updates use, so it's easy to get the two mixed up.
Bootcamp includes drivers to read HFS+ partitions, so it is likely that Windows 7 managed to mount the volume right before it crashed, marking the volume as dirty.
-SC
On a different note, how do you like the Apple RAID card that you have listed in your signature?
I love it, because it never bothers me.
I'm told that Areca or Highpoint offer cheaper cards that run faster, but this requires all sorts of hardware hacks with interposer boards and custom carriers, plus the foolery with various firmware versions for the card (depending on what you want to do) and kernel extensions under OS X.
The Apple card stays out of my way, and that's what I value.
The only other thing is that the card isn't supported under Bootcamp at all. This used to be a bit of a niggle for me, but these days Windows 8 boots off a USB drive just fine so it doesn't really matter anymore (the RAID controller is recognized under Windows as an unknown device and sits idle).
-SC
I love it, because it never bothers me.
I'm told that Areca or Highpoint offer cheaper cards that run faster, but this requires all sorts of hardware hacks with interposer boards and custom carriers, plus the foolery with various firmware versions for the card (depending on what you want to do) and kernel extensions under OS X.
The Apple card stays out of my way, and that's what I value.
The only other thing is that the card isn't supported under Bootcamp at all. This used to be a bit of a niggle for me, but these days Windows 8 boots off a USB drive just fine so it doesn't really matter anymore (the RAID controller is recognized under Windows as an unknown device and sits idle).
-SC