"The selected source cannot be used for migration. This source is not
using a Case Sensitive filesystem, while your Mac system is."
Both Time Machines were encrypted and backed up recently with Mac OS X v10.8.5/Mountain Lion.
15" early-2008 MBP was just formatted and installed with a brand new El Capitan v10.11.(5&6).
From what I read this is normal
, but a pain to fix (e.g., reformat the
drive into the correct file system). Am I correct? :(
Thank you in advance. :)
"The selected source cannot be used for migration. This source is not
using a Case Sensitive filesystem, while your Mac system is."
Both Time Machines were encrypted and backed up recently with Mac OS X v10.8.5/Mountain Lion.
15" early-2008 MBP was just formatted and installed with a brand new El Capitan v10.11.(5&6).
From what I read this is normal, but a pain to fix (e.g., reformat the
drive into the correct file system). Am I correct? :(
Ant <ant@zimage.comANT> wrote:
"The selected source cannot be used for migration. This source is not
using a Case Sensitive filesystem, while your Mac system is."
Both Time Machines were encrypted and backed up recently with Mac OS X
v10.8.5/Mountain Lion.
15" early-2008 MBP was just formatted and installed with a brand new El
Capitan v10.11.(5&6).
From what I read this is normal
The problem is mostly explained by the error message, but the situation
which led to it is not "normal".
For some reason, you chose to format your drive as "Mac OS Extended
(Case Sensitive, Journaled)", then installed OS X El Capitan on it.
The Case Sensitive variant is NOT the normal choice. The vast majority
of Macs are using "Mac OS Extended (Journaled)", i.e. HFS+ with
journaling enabled, but not case sensitve (it does preserve case, like Windows file systems).
The only reason to choose the Case Sensitive option is if you have some obscure software (probably originating on other Unix or Linux systems)
which does not work properly unless the file system is case sensitive.
There are some Mac applications which don't work properly on case
sensitive file systems, e.g. some versions of Adobe Creative Suite (if I remember right, this is due to inconsistent case in filenames which are supposed to refer to the same file installed as part of the suite).
In message <jZmdnTk7M8hA1SzFnZ2dnUU7-TXNnZ2d@earthlink.com> Ant <ant@zimage.comANT> wrote:
"The selected source cannot be used for migration. This source is not
using a Case Sensitive filesystem, while your Mac system is."
Of course not. You must match the drive's case sensitivity.
Both Time Machines were encrypted and backed up recently with Mac OS X
v10.8.5/Mountain Lion.
15" early-2008 MBP was just formatted and installed with a brand new El
Capitan v10.11.(5&6).
From what I read this is normal, but a pain to fix (e.g., reformat the
drive into the correct file system). Am I correct? :(
Using a case-sensitive file system on a Mac is foolish.
There are some Mac applications which don't work properly on case
sensitive file systems, e.g. some versions of Adobe Creative Suite (if I
remember right, this is due to inconsistent case in filenames which are
supposed to refer to the same file installed as part of the suite).
There are many, and I think no version of Adobe CS works on a
case-sensitive file system as I just heard someone talking about this
within the last month.
As I recall, Steam also does not work and neither does World of
Warcraft, though that information might be old.
Ah, at least for Blizzard that is correct. The requirements for the
latest expansion list for Mac OS X
"Note: FileVault options and case-sensitive formatted volumes are not supported for installation of Blizzard games."
Not sure what "FileVault options" means.
In other news, someone has managed to boot 10.12 on a APFS volume.
On 2/25/2017 6:00 AM, Lewis wrote:
In message <jZmdnTk7M8hA1SzFnZ2dnUU7-TXNnZ2d@earthlink.com> Ant <ant@zimage.comANT> wrote:
"The selected source cannot be used for migration. This source is not
using a Case Sensitive filesystem, while your Mac system is."
Of course not. You must match the drive's case sensitivity.
Both Time Machines were encrypted and backed up recently with Mac OS X
v10.8.5/Mountain Lion.
15" early-2008 MBP was just formatted and installed with a brand new El
Capitan v10.11.(5&6).
From what I read this is normal, but a pain to fix (e.g., reformat the
drive into the correct file system). Am I correct? :(
Using a case-sensitive file system on a Mac is foolish.
Even with UNIX and Linux engine?
I always used case sensitive filenames in them.
Oh well, time to redo this old 2008 MBP. At least I am
practicing and learning at the same time. :/
On 2/25/2017 6:13 AM, Lewis wrote:
There are some Mac applications which don't work properly on case
sensitive file systems, e.g. some versions of Adobe Creative Suite (if I >>> remember right, this is due to inconsistent case in filenames which are
supposed to refer to the same file installed as part of the suite).
There are many, and I think no version of Adobe CS works on a
case-sensitive file system as I just heard someone talking about this
within the last month.
As I recall, Steam also does not work and neither does World of
Warcraft, though that information might be old.
Ah, at least for Blizzard that is correct. The requirements for the
latest expansion list for Mac OS X
"Note: FileVault options and case-sensitive formatted volumes are not
supported for installation of Blizzard games."
Not sure what "FileVault options" means.
In other news, someone has managed to boot 10.12 on a APFS volume.
Wow, that is crazy. I wonder if that is why I couldn't install 2008 Mac Office into it. Yeah, that is weird for FileVault not to be supported. I wonder what other limitations there are with Macs.
Oh well, time to redo this old 2008 MBP. At least I am
practicing and learning at the same time. :/
That you actually charge people for Mac support is rather scary. : /
This very old MBP is just for testing and practice too for the future.
I'm repeating what I did yesterday, but with the correct El Capitan installer's version and encrypted journal HFS+ (no case sensitive).
For some reason, my install is stuck with a second left. Hmm.
On 2/25/2017 10:16 AM, Jolly Roger wrote:
...
Oh well, time to redo this old 2008 MBP. At least I am
practicing and learning at the same time. :/
That you actually charge people for Mac support is rather scary. : /
I am doing it for free.
Ant <ant@zimage.comANT> wrote:
On 2/25/2017 10:16 AM, Jolly Roger wrote:
...
Oh well, time to redo this old 2008 MBP. At least I am
practicing and learning at the same time. :/
That you actually charge people for Mac support is rather scary. : /
I am doing it for free.
Good, but still scary! : /
In message <1n20y9f.dbw0cx1p98fevN%dempson@actrix.gen.nz> David Empson <dempson@actrix.gen.nz> wrote:
There are some Mac applications which don't work properly on case
sensitive file systems, e.g. some versions of Adobe Creative Suite (if I remember right, this is due to inconsistent case in filenames which are supposed to refer to the same file installed as part of the suite).
There are many, and I think no version of Adobe CS works on a
case-sensitive file system as I just heard someone talking about this
within the last month.
As I recall, Steam also does not work and neither does World of
Warcraft, though that information might be old.
Ah, at least for Blizzard that is correct. The requirements for the
latest expansion list for Mac OS X
"Note: FileVault options and case-sensitive formatted volumes are not supported for installation of Blizzard games."
Not sure what "FileVault options" means.
In other news, someone has managed to boot 10.12 on a APFS volume.
In article <SuidncYhSMsQcizFnZ2dnUU7-cmdnZ2d@earthlink.com>, Ant <ant@zimage.comANT> wrote:
This very old MBP is just for testing and practice too for the future.
I'm repeating what I did yesterday, but with the correct El Capitan
installer's version and encrypted journal HFS+ (no case sensitive).
you do *not* want an encrypted format on a 2008 mac because there is no hardware support for encryption, which means there will be a rather significant speed hit for all disk i/o.
looks like you get to reformat it one more time.
For some reason, my install is stuck with a second left. Hmm.
the time estimates are never correct.
On 2/25/2017 1:00 PM, nospam wrote:
In article <SuidncYhSMsQcizFnZ2dnUU7-cmdnZ2d@earthlink.com>, Ant <ant@zimage.comANT> wrote:
This very old MBP is just for testing and practice too for the future.
I'm repeating what I did yesterday, but with the correct El Capitan
installer's version and encrypted journal HFS+ (no case sensitive).
you do *not* want an encrypted format on a 2008 mac because there is no hardware support for encryption, which means there will be a rather significant speed hit for all disk i/o.
looks like you get to reformat it one more time.
Really? Dang it.
FileVault > Turn Off FileVault (after authenticating with your adminaccount).
On 2/25/2017 6:00 AM, Lewis wrote:
In message <jZmdnTk7M8hA1SzFnZ2dnUU7-TXNnZ2d@earthlink.com> Ant <ant@zimage.comANT> wrote:
"The selected source cannot be used for migration. This source is not
using a Case Sensitive filesystem, while your Mac system is."
Of course not. You must match the drive's case sensitivity.
Both Time Machines were encrypted and backed up recently with Mac OS X
v10.8.5/Mountain Lion.
15" early-2008 MBP was just formatted and installed with a brand new El
Capitan v10.11.(5&6).
From what I read this is normal, but a pain to fix (e.g., reformat the
drive into the correct file system). Am I correct? :(
Using a case-sensitive file system on a Mac is foolish.
Even with UNIX and Linux engine?
Ant <ant@zimage.comANT> wrote:
On 2/25/2017 1:00 PM, nospam wrote:
In article <SuidncYhSMsQcizFnZ2dnUU7-cmdnZ2d@earthlink.com>, Ant
<ant@zimage.comANT> wrote:
This very old MBP is just for testing and practice too for the future.
I'm repeating what I did yesterday, but with the correct El Capitan
installer's version and encrypted journal HFS+ (no case sensitive).
you do *not* want an encrypted format on a 2008 mac because there is no
hardware support for encryption, which means there will be a rather
significant speed hit for all disk i/o.
looks like you get to reformat it one more time.
Really? Dang it.
Not really. First, test the performance yourself and decide whether it
is a problem.
Second, you can turn off encryption without having to wipe and reinstall everything.
Lewis <g.kreme@gmail.com.dontsendmecopies> wrote:
"Note: FileVault options and case-sensitive formatted volumes are not
supported for installation of Blizzard games."
Not sure what "FileVault options" means.
I've had FileVault 2 (full disk encryption) enabled for a while, and StarCraft 2 continued to work fine afer I enabled FileVault.
I have no experience with original FileVault (home folder in an
encrypted disk image) and Blizzard games, and my other Blizzard games
are old enough to not work after Snow Leopard.
In other news, someone has managed to boot 10.12 on a APFS volume.
Sweet. Despite iOS 10.3 switching to APFS, I'm inclined to think Apple
is holding back mainstream use of APFS on macOS until the next major
version in September. There will be more complex bits to test, e.g. Time Machine support. It would be nice to see feature improvements in the pre-release APFS before then.
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