![]() If you need to run First Aid on an APFS Time Machine backup disk, the only methods available are to use Disk Utility or apfs_fsck in Recovery Mode. ![]() Ironically, the only exceptions to this are HFS+ volumes, which can still be checked fully when on a disk containing an APFS backup volume.Įach time, the error message reports that the container holding the backup volume remains mounted, even though all volumes have been successfully unmounted, and Disk Utility also considers the container to be unmounted. macOS 12.4 now blocks all attempts to run First Aid on any volume or container on a disk containing an APFS backup volume, and the command tool fsck_apfs also refuses to oblige. In the past, a variety of errors have been blamed for this failure, but it has also been possible to work around it by manually ejecting the volume or container you want to check. This problem persists, although currently it now seems confined to APFS backup volumes. The most serious problem with Disk Utility remains its manifest inability to run First Aid on some volumes and containers, in particular Time Machine backup stores. ![]() ![]() This article considers where Disk Utility has got in those six months, and whether it’s less frustrating and more useful, less than a month before Apple announces macOS 13. Earlier this week, we updated to 12.4, which is getting close to the end of this cycle. ![]() It’s exactly six months since I last looked at the many problems plaguing Monterey’s Disk Utility. ![]()
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