Macworld

Restore an unresponsi­ve Mac from another Mac

If your recent series Mac won’t boot, you can try to ‘revive’ or ‘restore’

- it. Glenn Fleishman reports

Despite our best efforts, sometimes a macos update goes wrong, such as the power going out in the middle of the process. Other glitches can occur, including ones that are undiagnosa­ble.

If your Intel Mac with a T2 security chip or any M1 Apple silicon Mac won’t start up normally or through recoveryos, you can try to revive it by fixing the firmware inside these chips that handles aspects of security and start-up management while preserving all your files. If that fails, you can opt to restore it, which wipes the machine clean, but will get it working again. Both processes are made for system administra­tors but can be used by anyone.

(You launch recoveryos by starting up or restarting an Intel Mac with Command-r held down, or shutting down your M1 Mac completely, then holding down the power button for about 10 seconds, until the Options

gear appears.) This revive or restore process works only for Intel Macs with the T2 chip, which includes all Intel models shipped starting in 2018 plus the 2017 imac Pro, and with the three M1-based Macs released in 2020. Of all those models, only the 2019 Mac Pro provides a visual indication that something’s wrong with its firmware or start-up process: its status light turn amber and flashes SOS in Morse Code (three short, three long, and three short) if it needs to be revived.

Apple provides complicate­d instructio­ns for applicable Intel

Macs and all M1-based Macs, which are aimed at school and business computer profession­als. It’s a lot to wade through for ‘civilian’ users, so here’s a simplified guide that should help you through it. You only need to consult Apple’s more exhaustive guide if you want to look up the Thunderbol­t port locator illustrati­ons described below.

First, you need to obtain Apple Configurat­or 2 (fave.co/3kd6weh), a free utility from Apple designed to deploy and manage Apple devices (requires macos Catalina or later).

Next, you need to make sure you have the right cables. Apple requires the Mac being revived be plugged into power, including laptops, and that power can’t be provided from another Mac over USB-C. However, you also need a USB-C data cable to connect the two Macs, and it has to be plain USB-C designed for USB 3.1 Gen 2 or later, not a Thunderbol­t 3 cable. Now you can set up the revival process.

REVIVE YOUR MAC

In none of the below cases will you see anything on screen until after Configurat­or gets to work. Follow these steps:

1. Install Configurat­or 2 onto the Mac you’re going to use to revive your unresponsi­ve computer.

2. Disconnect your unresponsi­ve

Mac from power, whether it’s an Ac-powered imac, imac Pro, or Mac mini, or a laptop plugged into a power adapter. On a laptop, hold down the power button for about five seconds to ensure it’s powered down. If it’s a Mac mini or imac Pro, make sure there’s a monitor attached so you can see progress later, during revival (or restoratio­n).

3. Connect the Mac that’s reviving the other via a particular port on the unresponsi­ve Mac. One Thunderbol­t port on every Mac covered by this technology is specially equipped to allow revival or restoratio­n. See the list at the bottom of this article to find yours.

4. Power up the unresponsi­ve Mac in a way that varies by model:

Intel Mac mini, imac or imac Pro: Hold down the power button, plug it into power, and keep holding down for three seconds.

Intel Mac laptop (any model): Hold down the power button and the left Control key, the left Option key, and the right Shift all at once for about three seconds.

M1 Mac mini: Making sure the power has been disconnect­ed for more than

10 seconds, hold down the power button, plug the computer into power, and release the button. Its status light should glow amber now.

M1 Macbook Air or 13in Macbook

Pro: This is similar to the Intel models, but note the difference­s. First press the power button, and then immediatel­y hold down the power button along with the left Control key, the left Option key, and the right Shift for about ten seconds. Release Control, Option and Shift, but keep holding down the power button until it appears in Configurat­or on the attached Mac.

Now you can attempt to revive the firmware, which keeps all your files intact:

1. On the Mac running Configurat­or, in its device window, your other Mac should appear if you have the cables connected correctly. Select the Mac you’re connected to, and then choose Actions > Advanced > Revive Device and click Revive.

2. The unresponsi­ve Mac will show an Apple logo intermitte­ntly during revival. If successful, it will reboot.

3. macos may still not be working correctly, even if the revive functions.

In that case, however, the Mac is now responsive and has recoveryos correctly installed. You can restart into recoveryos as described above, and then reinstall macos without erasing any of your files.

4. You can disconnect cables from the other Mac.

RESTORE YOUR MAC

If this process fails, you may be unable to recover any data from that Mac, and it requires a complete restoratio­n, which resets the Mac and erases its contents. It’s a last-ditch process, and if you have unique data not backed up on that Mac, you should determine whether there’s any other way to get data from it before proceeding.

To restore your Mac’s firmware, after ensuring you have made every effort to extract needed files:

1. On the Mac running Configurat­or, in its device window, select the Mac you’re connected to, and then choose Actions > Advanced > Restore and click Restore.

2. The unresponsi­ve Mac will show an Apple logo intermitte­ntly while restoratio­n proceeds. If successful, it will reboot.

3. With an Intel Mac: Now hold down Shift-option-command-r to install the version of macos that your Mac shipped with or the oldest version still available. After reinstalla­tion, you can upgrade to a later macos. With an M1-based Mac: macos Setup Assistant appears to guide you through installing Big Sur.

4. You can disconnect cables from the other Mac.

WHICH PORT TO USE

Apple snuck in a special feature on one Thunderbol­t port on every Mac covered by this revival and restoratio­n feature. Here’s the rundown, which you can also see in graphical form in the support document for Intel Macs (fave.co/2t6r2xk) and M1 Macs (fave.co/2vubfnu). In cases of left and right, you have the ports facing you directly so left and right are your left and right.

Intel Mac mini: Rightmost Thunderbol­t port.

Intel Mac laptops: When looking at the left side of the laptop, the Thunderbol­t port at right.

Intel 2020 imac or imac Pro: The rightmost Thunderbol­t port on the back of the unit, whether it’s four (imac Pro) or two (imac).

Intel 2019 imac Pro (tower): The Thunderbol­t port farther away from the power button on the top of the computer.

Intel 2019 imac Pro (rack mounted): The Thunderbol­t port closer to the power button.

M1 Mac mini: The Thunderbol­t port on the left, furthest from the HDMI port.

M1 Mac laptops: On the left side of the laptop, the Thunderbol­t port on the left (there are no Thunderbol­t on the other side of these models).

 ??  ??
 ??  ?? You can get Apple Configurat­or 2 in the App Store.
You can get Apple Configurat­or 2 in the App Store.
 ??  ?? On the Intel Mac mini, you’ll need to use the rightmost Thunderbol­t port.
On the Intel Mac mini, you’ll need to use the rightmost Thunderbol­t port.

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