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When macOS High Sierra is released to the public next week, the new Apple File System (APFS) feature will be limited to Macs with all-flash built-in storage, which means it won't work with iMacs and Mac minis that include Fusion Drives.

Macs with Fusion Drives were converted to APFS during the beta testing process in the first macOS High Sierra beta, but support was removed in subsequent betas and not reimplemented.

With the release of the Golden Master version of the software, Apple has confirmed APFS will not be available for Fusion Drives and has provided instructions for converting from APFS back to the standard HFS+ format.

macoshighsierra-800x464.jpg

Public Beta testers who had a Mac with a Fusion Drive converted to APFS will need to follow a long list of instructions to convert back to HFS+, including making a Time Machine Backup, creating a bootable installer, and using Disk Utility to reformat their Macs and reinstall macOS High Sierra.

Apple on September 5 published a support document confirming compatibility. When customers with an all-flash machine upgrade to macOS High Sierra install the update next week, their drives will be converted to AFPS. Apple explicitly says "Fusion Drives and hard disk drives aren't converted."

Apple says APFS will not be supported on Fusion Drives "in the initial release of macOS High Sierra," which suggests support could be added for Fusion Drives at a later date after lingering bugs are worked out.

Apple File System is a more modern file system than HFS+ and is optimized for solid state drives. It is safe and secure, offering crash protection, safe document saves, stable snapshots, simplified backups, and strong native encryption.

appleapfs-800x245.jpg

It's also more responsive than HFS+ with features like instant file and directory cloning, fast directory sizing, high performance parallelized metadata operations, and sparse file writes.

Apple plans to release macOS High Sierra on Monday, September 25.

Article Link: New Apple File System Coming in macOS High Sierra Won't Work With Fusion Drives
 

NervousFish2

macrumors 6502
Mar 23, 2014
336
623
Oh man, I hope this is coming (soon!). I literally just bought a new iMac with a 2TB fusion drive and 32 megs (EDIT: gigs, oops!) of RAM on the premise that this was going to be a feature. I would have gone for an all-SSD internal drive and got the rest as an external drive if I'd have know...
 
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dannys1

macrumors 68040
Sep 19, 2007
3,649
6,758
UK
Shame I thought they'd ironed these kinks out during the beta phase - they've had over a year now to get it work with Fusion Drives and hard drives.

Which begs the question what other CoreStorage volumes can't be converted. How about Apple Raid arrays? External drives? What about my iMac which has an internal Apple SSD and then 4x Samsung 850 SSD's in Raid 0 in a ThunderBay 4 Mini connected via Thunderbolt 2 and configured as a single CoreStorage volume...

...Looks like it'll be "fun" testing.
 
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