![]() I also should add to my previous comment that yet another thing I did yesterday, after finally installing Big Sur, was to change from what has been the new default system user shell in macOS since Catalina, and so now also in Big Sur, called “zsh”, back to my preferred one, “bash”, that was the default one since October of 2003, when “Panther” was introduced as the 10.3 version of OS X (later renamed macOS), and for sixteen years remained the default shell all the way through Mojave. Well, the answer now seems rather more likely to be “Yes” than “No”, after the experience I had going directly from Mojave to Big Sur yesterday. I had been asking a closely related question myself before making the upgrade from Mojave: do I need to upgrade first to Catalina (that I was skipping because it was repeatedly commented as being rather flaky) to make things ready for Big Sur? Although the three were of the same size, so that might be an argument against it. Pmcjr6142: That is a very good question and your reasoning might just explain the second and third downloads I had of the system, not the first one that failed. ![]() So: not exactly “I started the download, then installed Big Sur, logged in and everything worked.” Then, with the compilers working, I started testing various applications I use frequently and consequently need them to work. The other needed to have a script modified using something I found, again, looking around in the Web. Then I tried running the two compilers to compile some source files, as a test. That took another half hour, between figuring out what to do and doing it. It worked, only it took over an hour to get all that done, but first I had to create several directories that were missing for the Homebrew upgrade’s install to work. I did that, then tried again to use xcode and then to upgrade Homebrew. ![]() Looking around in the web, I decided to install missing tools with “xcode”, but first I had to install some other missing, or in Big Sur obsolete, versions of command tools. So I thought, maybe if I used “Homebrew” to install them again I may get their Big Sur compatible versions, if there are such things?īut it turned out that also did not work. Once back in business, I started by testing the things I most needed to use, my compilers. and then started to install and took some 50 minutes doing that. I tried again, and once the third full download ended, magically, the installer asked me if I wanted to proceed to install, I clicked affirmatively, It asked me to accept the EULA, I did, etc. I click a “go ahead” button (by some other name).Īnd it started to download again the 12.44 GB for another hour! This time it downloaded everything again for another hour and at the end the installer asked me if I wanted to install. The first time ended with an error code that some application was missing. Mac Studio (2022 and later), iMac (2019 and later), Mac Pro (2019 and later), Mac mini (2018 and later), MacBook Air (2018 and later), MacBook Pro (2018 and later), and iMac Pro (2017)Īpple Watch Series 3, Series 4, Series 5, Series 6, Series 7, and SEI have tried to upgrade macOS Mojave to Big Sur three successive times last night and each attempt took one hour because it was a full download. IPhone 6s (all models), iPhone 7 (all models), iPhone SE (1st generation), iPad Air 2, iPad mini (4th generation), and iPod touch (7th generation)Īpple Watch Series 9 and Apple Watch Ultra 2 IPhone 8 and later, iPad Pro (all models), iPad Air 3rd generation and later, iPad 5th generation and later, and iPad mini 5th generation and later MacBook Pro (2021 and later) and iMac (2023) IPhone XS and later, iPad Pro 12.9-inch 2nd generation and later, iPad Pro 10.5-inch, iPad Pro 11-inch 1st generation and later, iPad Air 3rd generation and later, iPad 6th generation and later, and iPad mini 5th generation and later IPhone 8, iPhone 8 Plus, iPhone X, iPad 5th generation, iPad Pro 9.7-inch, and iPad Pro 12.9-inch 1st generation This update has no published CVE entries.
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