• Replacing Recovery Partition

    From Ed Norton@21:1/5 to All on Wed Aug 11 06:17:54 2021
    XPost: uk.comp.sys.mac

    Is there any simple way to replace the OS version on the recovery
    partition? I have obtained a Mac Mini 2012 that apparently shipped
    with Mountain Lion and no matter what version of the OS I update to the recovery partition remains Mountain Lion.

    I want to do an clean, internet restore to at least Mojave. On another
    machine running High Sierra I notice that the recovery partition offers
    3 options for restoring over the internet: restore latest compatible
    system, restore last loaded system, and restore the system originally
    shipped. The Mountain Lion version only offers to restore Mountain
    Lion over the net.

    I am aware that I can download updates from the Apple Store, use USB
    sticks, etc, etc. but it's much simpler to just do an internet restore
    on a reformatted disk.

    --
    Ed

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  • From Percival John Hackworth@21:1/5 to Ed Norton on Wed Aug 11 11:34:52 2021
    XPost: uk.comp.sys.mac

    On 11-Aug-2021 at 3:17:54AM PDT, "Ed Norton" <norton@nowhere.com> wrote:

    Is there any simple way to replace the OS version on the recovery
    partition? I have obtained a Mac Mini 2012 that apparently shipped
    with Mountain Lion and no matter what version of the OS I update to the recovery partition remains Mountain Lion.

    I want to do an clean, internet restore to at least Mojave. On another machine running High Sierra I notice that the recovery partition offers
    3 options for restoring over the internet: restore latest compatible
    system, restore last loaded system, and restore the system originally shipped. The Mountain Lion version only offers to restore Mountain
    Lion over the net.

    I am aware that I can download updates from the Apple Store, use USB
    sticks, etc, etc. but it's much simpler to just do an internet restore
    on a reformatted disk.

    When I upgraded from 10.10 to 10.13, I did a new install on a new wiped drive. Then I migrated from my old drive to the newly installed 10.13 system. That gave
    me a APFS system with a 10.13 recovery volume.

    AFAIK, just upgrading a 10.8 system to 10.13 or higher won't upgrade the filesystem
    to APFS on a SSD. Of the three backup solutions I use, Carbon Copy Cloner
    won't
    upgrade the recovery volume unless you're cloning the old system to a new drive.
    Then it asks for the "Install MacOS" app to extract the recovery partition on the new
    drive. SuperDuper! doesn't do this but it's good for cloning existing drives
    to backups
    for my daily.

    So to do your install, on a blank drive, install a new copy of 10.11 and do a migration
    from your old drive. That should give you a current recovery volume and a APFS system drive.
    --
    DeeDee, don't press that button! DeeDee! NO! Dee...

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  • From nospam@21:1/5 to Norton on Wed Aug 11 10:49:07 2021
    XPost: uk.comp.sys.mac

    In article <0001HW.DD391C12029073C8B02919BF@news.astraweb.com>, Ed
    Norton <norton@nowhere.com> wrote:

    Is there any simple way to replace the OS version on the recovery
    partition? I have obtained a Mac Mini 2012 that apparently shipped
    with Mountain Lion and no matter what version of the OS I update to the recovery partition remains Mountain Lion.

    it automatically updates when the main system is updated.

    download whatever version you want and install it. done.

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From super70s@21:1/5 to Ed Norton on Fri Aug 13 15:54:43 2021
    XPost: uk.comp.sys.mac

    In article <0001HW.DD391C12029073C8B02919BF@news.astraweb.com>,
    Ed Norton <norton@nowhere.com> wrote:

    Is there any simple way to replace the OS version on the recovery
    partition? I have obtained a Mac Mini 2012 that apparently shipped
    with Mountain Lion and no matter what version of the OS I update to the recovery partition remains Mountain Lion.

    I want to do an clean, internet restore to at least Mojave. On another machine running High Sierra I notice that the recovery partition offers
    3 options for restoring over the internet: restore latest compatible
    system, restore last loaded system, and restore the system originally shipped. The Mountain Lion version only offers to restore Mountain
    Lion over the net.

    I am aware that I can download updates from the Apple Store, use USB
    sticks, etc, etc. but it's much simpler to just do an internet restore
    on a reformatted disk.

    There's a utility out there called "Recovery Partition Creator." I
    probably have two or three recovery partitions on my drive that aren't functional at all after several Carbon Copy clones but I never used
    Recovery Partition Creator out of fear it might screw everything up. I
    decided if I needed to do any kind of recovering I can just boot up from
    the system on my second external SSD.

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From Percival John Hackworth@21:1/5 to super70s@super70s.invalid on Sat Aug 14 11:49:18 2021
    XPost: uk.comp.sys.mac

    On 13-Aug-2021 at 1:54:43PM PDT, "super70s" <super70s@super70s.invalid> wrote:

    In article <0001HW.DD391C12029073C8B02919BF@news.astraweb.com>,
    Ed Norton <norton@nowhere.com> wrote:

    Is there any simple way to replace the OS version on the recovery
    partition? I have obtained a Mac Mini 2012 that apparently shipped
    with Mountain Lion and no matter what version of the OS I update to the
    recovery partition remains Mountain Lion.

    I want to do an clean, internet restore to at least Mojave. On another
    machine running High Sierra I notice that the recovery partition offers
    3 options for restoring over the internet: restore latest compatible
    system, restore last loaded system, and restore the system originally
    shipped. The Mountain Lion version only offers to restore Mountain
    Lion over the net.

    I am aware that I can download updates from the Apple Store, use USB
    sticks, etc, etc. but it's much simpler to just do an internet restore
    on a reformatted disk.

    There's a utility out there called "Recovery Partition Creator." I
    probably have two or three recovery partitions on my drive that aren't functional at all after several Carbon Copy clones but I never used
    Recovery Partition Creator out of fear it might screw everything up. I decided if I needed to do any kind of recovering I can just boot up from
    the system on my second external SSD.

    Note that this tool works for disks that are formatted as HFS+ to create another partition but don't work for APFS formatted drives. The OP wanted a
    way to create a Recovery Partition on High Sierra which, if installed on a blank SSD drive, will be APFS. If they upgrade an existing system (e.g. Mountain Lion -> Hight Sierra) I don't know if it will touch the existing recovery partition. Cloning the old drive running High Sierra to a new one
    with Carbon Copy Cloner will also offer to create a Recovery Partition if the "Install MacOS" application is around.

    --
    DeeDee, don't press that button! DeeDee! NO! Dee...

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)