![]() ![]() Not that it was a great surprise to see El Capitan didn't know what APFS was. It would if I clicked the option to partition the drive it was on, but it would only show the High Sierra partition as unknown. Not even Disk Utility in El Capitan would show High Sierra in the list of available drives. Just a bunch of messages noting each step, and a happy green check mark for Done!Īll seemed good except the High Sierra partition would not appear anywhere in El Capitan or older versions of the Mac OS I can boot to. ![]() Disk Utility made no mention of any errors. So to recovery mode I went and updated the High Sierra partition to APFS. Okay, I must have missed it, though I didn't remember seeing such a check box. The next thing I found was that for those users who were "in a hurry" and missed the check box, you could boot to recovery mode and update the drive/partition to APFS after the fact. The common answer that popped up was that you were supposed to check a box at the installer splash screen to do that as you installed High Sierra. Saw that it was still HFS+ and looked around to see why it wasn't APFS. ![]() I updated my Sierra partition to the High Sierra beta last week.
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