

You have a second issue which I think is also going to mess you up. Lets jump a bit here and come back to the OS install.
RENAME SANDISK SSD MAC HOW TO
I would first create an OS installer USB thumb drive following this guide: How to create a bootable macOS Sierra installer drive Then using it to launch Disk Utility first to wipe the drive and start again with the OS install process. Then wipe the SSD drive down and this time lets install the older Sierra OS. If its not to late I would recommend you save your data onto a new external HDD drive (just so we don't alter your internal HDD you've pulled from your system) with anything it doesn't have. I've altered them a few times in the Beta system and still haven't seen any improvements. I've seen issues with it running on older SATA based systems as its got some issues with queueing within Finder Apple seems to be side stepping. It still has some issues which maybe whats hitting you with the length of the file name and the language. The first is unlike Sierra, High Sierra uses a new file system GUID/APFS vs GUID/macOS Extended (Journaled) which in truth is a version of HPS+ Apple File System FAQ: How APFS works with older Macs, encryption, external drives, and other questions. Also open the Name & Extension tab and take a snapshot of the name.įollow the instructions here on how to add your files: Adding images to an existing question Now open one of the files in question on your HDD, and do the same. Now I need you to supply me a snapshot of the file dialog box of one of the files on your SSD open up text edit and create a new file, save it, then within the OS Right click on this file, open Sharing & Permissions take a snapshot of the dialog box within the tabed section.
RENAME SANDISK SSD MAC MAC OS

What is the Mac OS your system is using? Go to About this Mac where it tells you.I understand your problem but I need to know these things to help you. Let's try again: Focus on my questions here. $ cp -av /Volumes/"1TB Macintosh HD"/FolderA/badName.xxx /Volumes/XXXX/FolderB/goodName.xxxįollow these steps for each of the 3 folders that you want to copy over. Then, you can individually copy each bad name file while reassigning it a good name. Hopefully, this will copy the bulk of your files over, and leave you with only a few of the files where "its name is too long or includes some characters that are invalid in the destination volume" - let's call them bad name files. Here is an article explaining the process. If you provide the -av option, it will continue copying even if errors are detected, and keep a log of the errors and of the files that were successfully copied. You can find this out by typing the command "ls /Volumes"

Note: Substitute "XXXX" for the name of your SSD drive or some other backup drive. $ cp -av /Volumes/"1TB Macintosh HD"/FolderA/* /Volumes/XXXX/FolderB Have you tried the "cp" command from the command line?. > I’ve installed the Operative System through the Recovery Mode and the the that Operative System from the Apple Servers. How did you setup the SSD ? Did you use the Mac OS installer or clone your drive ?Īnswer: On the New Hard Drive ( The one I’ve already installed into my Laptop ), I’ve installed.Note ::: This old one is also 1TB, but not SSD.Īnswer: The Old Hard Drive ( The one I’ve took from the Laptop ), On the ( 2nd ) Second Partition, it has installed. What is the Mac OS your system is using ? Go to About this Mac where it tells you.Īnswer: The Old Hard Drive ( The one I’ve took from the Laptop ), On the ( 1st ) First Partition, it has installed.Down here I am answering to you the questions you've sent to me and also, I am sending the ScreenShots you've suggested also. Hi Dan, I've already wrote this current message on a comment, bur for some reason it doesn't appear on the history :/ But, well.
