How I successfully Made an M1 External Boot Drive.

Several weeks ago I bought a new M1 Mac mini. One of the first things that I needed to do was to set-up a bootable external drive. I thought that this would be straight forward just like on an intel Mac, but it was not.


No matter what I tried to do I always ran into issues/errors, and upon doing a lot of research I quickly learned that I was not alone. Many other people, both here, and on other Apple forums were having the same frustrating  issues trying to make a M1 bootable external drive for their M1 also. 


After thinking about what might be going wrong, I decided today to take a different approach to the issue. Everyone was being told to copy over their data partition, either by using CCC or by using Migration Assistant, and then once that process was completed to go into Recovery and install a fresh new copy of 11.1 to their external drive. This always ended up with the above mentioned issues/errors. 


So today I decided to strip the process down so that I could learn what might be going wrong. My goal was to simply make a bootable drive, with no saved data on it. I simply wanted to externally boot into a fresh copy of 11.1. I figured that if I could get that far, then I could copy all of my old files over later. 


Well guess what? It worked!


Here’s how I did it, but keep in mind that you need to perform every step from your M1. First I formatted my external drive down to the bone. Then you need to log into Recovery by doing the  following;


Make sure that your Mac is turned off. If it is not off then click on the Apple logo (upper left corner or your screen) and choose Shut Down.


Next press the power button on your M1 and keep pressing the power button down until you see a message on your screen saying that it is loading Options. You can now let go of the power button. 


Next, click on Options (far right side) then click on Continue.


If asked, select a user, click on Next, and enter in your Administrator Password. 


You are now successfully logged into the M1’s Recovery mode.



Now choose Reinstall macOS Big Sur as shown above, and follow the prompts after you choose which external drive you want to boot from. It can take up to several hours for Mac Big Sur to install, but once it does it will reboot (several times) and then it will open up your desktop. Enter in your admin password and that’s it, you now have a bootable external M1 drive! 


From there I simply used CCC to copy over my data from my backup hard drive. All that is left is to use Migration Assistant to copy over your user account. That is were I am currently at. It keeps saying that I need to update before Migration Assistant can run, so I’m looking for a way to get around that, or I’ll just wait until 11.2 is released (see screenshot below).



For my external boot drive I am using an Inland Professional NVMe M.2 PCIe SSD, and it is crazy fast. For the SSD Enclosure I am using an Trebleet Thunderbolt 3 enclosure, which comes with a Thunderbolt 3 cable. BTW, I have tried using several top shelf Thunderbolt 3 cables with this same set-up, and they all seem to work great. I will post performance data later, but I already know it is extremely fast and buttery smooth. 


If anyone knows how to get around the Migration Assistant error mentioned above, please post. If you are successful making a M1 boot drive, please also share your success here with everyone. I sincerely hope that this helps others.


Mac mini, macOS 10.13

Posted on Dec 25, 2020 6:08 PM

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Posted on Dec 31, 2020 6:06 AM

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Dec 26, 2020 9:08 AM in response to MyApple8MyPC

Well, stranger things have happened I guess.


I went down to the nearby Wally World and picked up the $19 Apple

USB-C -> USB-A adapter. Did some drive "juggling" and put the drive

I intended to use for my external boot drive into a StarTech USB 3

portable enclosure (the aluminum one that's around $20-25 on

Amazon). I then plugged in the Apple adapter plug the drive in

and started through "the procedure". Well the install went along

much further than any previous attempt (as indicated by drive activity)

and then seemingly stopped for a very, very long time, however

never went to boot into the internal as before. So at that point I thought

it was another borked attempt. Turn off my M1 MBA, and though well

let's see if it boots anyway in recovery,


Guess what? Selected it to boot and low and behold I was presented

with the welcome screen! Went through all the usual setup steps

and I am currently migrating the Time Machine backup that I

made this morning. I have had similar. occurrences in days past

where it would seem an install or update would stall but upon reboot

things completed.


Whether this can be consistently bootable or not remains to be seen

but this the closest to success that I have had!


So, my combination for success (fingers crossed) was putting the

SanDisk 512 GB SSD into a StarTech enclosure:

https://www.amazon.com/StarTech-com-USB-C-Hard-Drive-Enclosure/dp/B00XLB0EOW/ref=sr_1_6?dchild=1&keywords=startech%2Busb%2Benclosure&qid=1609001246&sr=8-6&th=1

and then use the Apple USB-C -> USB-A adapter.


What did not work:

The same SSD, Seagate Thunderbolt "sled", Thunderbolt 2 to Thunderbolt 3

adapter.

The same SSD with a SATA->USB adapter through a USB-C dock.


So, next tests since it "seems" I can get a bootable drive with a TM

migration (will test a couple times to make sure of that), I will attempt

a CCC data clone and see if that messes things. If it does, I may try

the CCC method.


Dec 27, 2020 4:15 PM in response to MyApple8MyPC

Here is a list if what has been verified (so far) that we know works:


Apple M1 Verified External Boot Equipment:


NVMe M.2 SSD:

Inland Professional PCIe NVMe 2280 M.2

Inland Premium PCIe NVMe 2280 M.2

WD PCIe NVMe M.2 SN750


USB Hard Drives:

Sandisk Ultra 3D SATA

Samsung T5 V-NAND USB 3.1 External


NVMe Enclosures:

Trebleet Thunderbolt 3 NVMe PCIe M.2 (B07N67P39W)


USB Enclosures:

Startech USB 3.0 251BMU313


Adapters:

Apple USB-C to USB (MJ1M2AM/A)


Cables:

Apple Thunderbolt (0.8) (MQ4H2AM/A)

Apple Thunderbolt 3 Pro (2m) (MWP32AM/A)

Leirui Thunderbolt 3 (3 Feet) (B08561NV9H)

Trebleet Thunderbolt 3 100W (0.5) (B07XG2XXFH)


Supported macOS:

11.01 - No

11.1 - Yes

11.2 - Not tested


Dec 30, 2020 1:24 PM in response to gurman42

gurman42 wrote:
...
The current version of Bombich’s Carbon Copy Cloner is able to do this pretty much automagically.

Only the Data partition on M1 Macs. It will not create a fully bootable

clone on M1 Macs (it does work on Big Sur Intel Macs).


To quote Mike:

"Support for System volume cloning on Apple Silicon Macs is disabled for now because

 Apple's APFS replication utility does not currently work on that platform."


Which is why everyone with an M1 Mac is going through the installation/boot

circus until Apple gets its act together.

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How I successfully Made an M1 External Boot Drive.

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