Sujet : Re: How do I check my SSD for damaged files?
De : burns (at) *nospam* nospam.com (J Burns)
Groupes : comp.sys.mac.systemDate : 12. Nov 2024, 17:00:38
Autres entêtes
Organisation : A noiseless patient Spider
Message-ID : <vgvu38$1lrrg$1@dont-email.me>
References : 1 2
User-Agent : Mozilla Thunderbird
On 11/11/24 4:30 PM, Your Name wrote:
On 2024-11-11 17:50:39 +0000, J Burns said:
>
I used WIFI to migrate from an M1 Mac to an M4, both running OS 15.1. Thunderbird still worked on the M1, but when I tried to launch it on the M4, the system said it was damaged and should be discarded.
That sounds like the usual MacOS Gatekeeper anti-malware system message. It usually means nothing (unless you're downloading dodgey pirate apps) and can be bypassed, although gets more difficult with every new version of MacOS.
Gatekeeper would check on the first run, find the certificate is no longer current or the app doesn't match the original install version, and so complains that the app might be dangerous, when in reality it isn't dangerous and isn't corrupt. Possibly the developer's certificate was fine when the app was first run on the old computer, but for some reason had been changed (e.g. renewed under a different name) by the time it was first run on the new computer. Some apps alter themselves after install for things like preference settings, auto-updates done via the internal check, etc.
Thank you! I wish Apple had made it clear.
>
Do I need a third-party utility?
Since the app almost certainly was not corrupt, I wouldn't waste your time.
I did waste 65 seconds running First Aid. I think the warning that it could take hours was hogwash, as was the recommendation that running it from Recovery would help. Sequoia isn't compatible with any Mac before 2018, and I guess the biggest internal drive is 1 TB SSD. How could it take hours?