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Three days ago for some damn reason I decided Snow Leopard wasn't good for my Mac Pro 1,1 anymore. I decided to embark on the quest of updating it to El Capitan.

So using the Pikify and downloaded the software it took me 3 days but yesterday I finally managed to boot it up and it was working okish... bit slow and had some issues with Final Cut but it was working. This morning I decided to run updates and well... shit gets serious...

When I boot it up, I get the  logo and the bar starts filling up it gets to half way and it switches to my second screen and starts again (this time slower) reaches half, all screens go grey and I get the Language selection. Once I select the Language I'm stuck at a Utilities window where I can choose to restore from a backup (which I don't have) choose to reinstall OS X (done that but nothing changed) find help online or start Disk Utility up to try and repair damaged disks (tried that but all disks are working fine)...

I have 3 drives mounted on my computer:

  • 500gb - 6 GB free space (OS installed here)
  • 500gb - 293,51 GB free space
  • 1TB - 217 GB free space (Windows 7 installed here)

12 GB RAM - 2,66 processor - 5070HD ATI

If anyone needs any more info please let me know...

PS: I tried booting in Safe Mode, which doesn't work. I tried resetting VRAM by pressing cmdaltPR, but nothing changes.

Another big issue is the fact when I try to open Terminal I'm logged in as bash-3.2 not as User.

klanomath
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  • I am just guessing here, but you may have trashed you EFI. Have a look at this post: Where is the EFI stored on the macbook and is it possible to restore a previous EFI firmware version? – Allan Aug 07 '16 at 14:11
  • Don't know how you actually updated your MacPro1,1 to run El Capitan as the hardware is capped at Mac OS X 10.7.5 (Lion). Is there a typo in your question? – IconDaemon Aug 07 '16 at 15:07
  • @IconDaemon - it's a 'known tweak' but is a) not easy & b) easy to break. I have a friend [qualified Mac tech] eventually just gave up & bought a 5,1 rather than keep fixing it :/ ...so I definitely feel for the OP but can't offer any actual help, I'm afraid. – Tetsujin Aug 07 '16 at 15:15
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    As @Tetsujin said above, the unsupported tweak can break easily. The only thing I can say is maybe only having 6GB of space on your Startup Disk isn't a smart idea, as OS X needs extra space while running. – At0micMutex Aug 07 '16 at 16:11
  • @IronCraftMan - for sure, that will not be helping in the slightest, less than 15% free HD space... not a good idea. 20% for an SSD – Tetsujin Aug 07 '16 at 16:14
  • @IronCraftMan I actually had 14 gigs free at the beginning but when i tried to reinstall the OS, but what i was wondering cuz you might be right and it might be cuz of the low disk space, is there a way to moove files around from the Windows OS? Cuz I have no idea how to find the drives in windows, I can only see the windows disk the OS is installed on... – Tancredi Capucci Aug 07 '16 at 16:18
  • @Allan i'll read the article and let you know – Tancredi Capucci Aug 07 '16 at 16:18
  • @Allan I can't seem to be able to use terminal because it loggs me in as Bash3.2 not as user... – Tancredi Capucci Aug 07 '16 at 16:42
  • @TancrediCapucci I linked "Pikify" to some site. Is the link correct? – klanomath Aug 07 '16 at 17:15
  • @TancrediCapucci BTW bash-3.2 doesn't indicate a user bash-3.2 but the root user and its shell in a recovery mode. You can use it as usual (with the restrictions set by the recovery mode environment). – klanomath Aug 07 '16 at 17:23
  • I have the same machine and i did the hack so i am now running El Capitan on it. I made the mistake of updating ONCE, i had to do a complete restore from a time machine back up and i have not done an update again. I seem to remember that there is a terminal command that one can implement in order to continue to do updates with out loosing the modified EFI. – Alaska Man Aug 02 '18 at 18:13

2 Answers2

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With a machine that old, I'd probably use a different Mac to download a clean OS installer and then try installing to a totally new drive (USB or FireWire) to ensure you have working hardware that can run an install.

Installs exercise a lot of functionality that only runs at install time. A marginal machine can keep running for a long time past when it can actually pull off an install let alone an install/upgrade in one pass.

The benefit of this is you keep your data safe (assuming you don't have a backup) and don't have to wait hours/days for migration of settings and data to know if the simple OS install worked or not.

bmike
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Why don't you apply for membership of the MacProUpgrade Facebook group ? I did that and you'll receive good advice.

Jacques
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