Updating to DiskWarrior 5.2 and DiskWarrior Recovery Maker 1.3.ġ) A free updater is available for owners of DiskWarrior 5.0 and 5.1.Ģ) The updater will replace the DW partition on the DiskWarrior flash drive.
Click here to learn how to identify an APFS disk.ĥ) In Mojave, Time Machine disks must now be rebuilt from macOS Recovery or the DiskWarrior Recovery Flash drive.Ħ) The next major release of DiskWarrior will include the ability to rebuild APFS disks.
Notice: Creation of, or start up from, a DiskWarrior recovery flash drive will fail if the above steps are not taken.ĭidn't read all of the above? At least read this summary:ġ) DiskWarrior 5.2 is compatible with High Sierra and Mojave when rebuilding external disks.Ģ) Your Mac OS Extended external drives can be rebuilt as before.ģ) The internal drives of Macs are converted to APFS when upgrading to macOS 10.14 Mojave or macOS 10.13 High Sierra.Ĥ) APFS disks are not able to be rebuilt. Please follow the instructions found on Apple's web site using the following link to make the needed changes.
Additionally, the External Boot setting will need to be changed to Allow booting from external media. The Secure Boot setting will need to be changed to Medium Security or No Security. To create and use a DiskWarrior Recovery disk for Macs with Secure Boot, it will be necessary to change the default Secure Boot and External Boot settings using the Startup Security Utility. Also by default, Secure Boot prevents the creation of a macOS startup disk except for those created using Apple's Installer. By default, Secure Boot does not allow starting up from an external disk such as a DiskWarrior recovery flash drive. Those 4 Macs are equipped with Secure Boot. Creating a 10.14 recovery flash drive will not allow DiskWarrior to rebuild APFS disks.Ģ) You need to take an extra step to create a DiskWarrior startup recovery flash drive on an iMac Pro, a mid-2018 MacBook Pro, late-2018 MacBook Air or a late-2018 Mac mini. You will need DiskWarrior 5.2 to run DiskWarrior from a recovery flash drive created while running macOS 10.14 Mojave.
Our developers are now using that documentation to update DiskWarrior to be able to safely rebuild APFS disks.ġ) DiskWarrior Recovery Maker 1.3 is compatible with macOS 10.14 Mojave. Apple has recently released the APFS format documentation. The next major release of DiskWarrior will include the ability to rebuild APFS disks. Quit DiskWarrior, reboot your Mac and launch DiskWarrior again. Open the Security & Privacy System Preference and click the lock and then click the Allow button.
You will only need to allow the system extension once.įollow the instructions in the System Extension Blocked message to allow the DiskWarrior system extension software to be loaded. The first time you launch DiskWarrior 5.2, the system extension might be blocked. The following applies only when running an installed copy of DiskWarrior and not when booted from the DiskWarrior flash drive or macOS Recovery.ġ0) Due to the ever enhancing security of macOS you might need to first "Allow" the system extension portion of DiskWarrior to be loaded on your Mac. Click here to learn how to identify an APFS disk.Ħ) DiskWarrior 5.2 now runs within macOS 10.14 Mojave Recovery.ħ) The Preview application in DiskWarrior can now copy files to APFS disks when recovering data from a failing Mac OS Extended (HFS Plus) disk.Ĩ) Numerous minor updates were made to accommodate additional security measures in macOS 10.14 Mojave.ĩ) In Mojave, Time Machine disks must now be rebuilt from macOS Recovery or the DiskWarrior Recovery flash drive.
Your Mac OS Extended external drives can be rebuilt as before.ĥ) Apple File System (APFS) disks are recognized by DiskWarrior 5.2 but are not able to be rebuilt. Only internal SSD drives are converted to APFS by macOS 10.13 High Sierra.Ĥ) External drives are not automatically converted to Apple File System (APFS).