Robert Garven wrote:
Unfortunately, I somehow split up the fusion drive and the solution in the link above does not work. I erased my operating system so I'm starting it up in Internet recovery mode and and I'm trying to install a new Monterey OS. It wouldn't let me put it on the smaller SSD drive, (operation failed) so now I'm trying to install it on the 3 TB media drive, and that just failed. Any suggestions?
The best thing would be to recreate the Fusion Drive using the instructions in the Apple article I linked previously. You will need to first use Disk Utility to unmount both the internal SSD and the internal Hard Drive before you can use the commands in the Terminal. I'm not sure the Apple article mentions this part.
so I wiped both drive and hope I can get it back to factory settings.
I tried erasing and reformatting the drives neither would take APFS, only journaled/guild. Now I can't restore the OS both failed.
The APFS option will only be available when booting into macOS 10.13+ (High Sierra and later). Plus you must erase the whole physical drive as opposed to just a volume/partition on the drive. The partition type must also be GUID.
If you recreate the Fusion Drive, then only the "Fusion Drive" item is what you need to erase. However, I think the Fusion Drive creation process will automatically format the Fusion Drive properly for the OS installer you have booted & will install.
If you are booting macOS 10.10 to 10.12, then you can only select MacOS Extended (Journaled) file system.
With macOS 10.13 to 10.15 the file system can be either MacOS Extended (Journaled) or APFS (top option) since the installers will convert the file system automatically to APFS.
With macOS 11.x+, the file system must be APFS (top option) since those installers will no longer automatically convert the file system, although they may allow the first copy phase to complete, then fail when rebooting to phase 2 which performs the actual installation.
With macOS 10.13+, within Disk Utility you may need to click "View" and select "Show All Devices" before the physical drives and "Fusion Drive" items to appear on the left pane of Disk Utility.
There are two common ways of accessing Internet Recovery Mode (assuming internal drives erased):
- Command + R -- Should boot into the online installer for the last OS installed before it was erased
- Command + Option + R -- Should boot into the most recent online installer compatible with the Mac (for a Late-2015 iMac that should be macOS 12.x Monterey)
However, some Macs may only boot into the online installer for the version of macOS which originally shipped on the Mac from the factory (which should be macOS 10.11 El Capitan) regardless of the keys used for booting.