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- 2017 27" iMac, 10.5" iPad Pro, iPhone 8, iPhone 11, iPhone 12 Mini, Numerous iPods, Monterey
There has been a great deal of discussion regarding the use of cloning software and whether or not it still works to create a bootable clone with the latest versions of macOS. The cloning software that is referred to are the two popular apps: Carbon Copy Cloner and SuperDuper.
I do not own a registered copy of SuperDuper although I have tested it, but rather will only refer to CCC which I do own the latest version. (6.0.5)
Below is a help request that I sent to CCC and their reply to me:
Hi Charles,
Greetings from Bombich Software! Rob from our Support team has looked at your request and responded. If you'd like to get in touch with us, you can reply to this email.
Rob C. (Bombich Software)
Dec 20, 2021, 9:39 AM EST
Hi Charles,
If you would like to make a bootable copy of your macOS 11 Big Sur (or newer OS) startup disk with CCC 6:
Creating legacy bootable backups of macOS Big Sur (and later OSes)
Looking at the logs, the task completed as expected and I would expect it to boot.
And I would like to draw your attention to this section in particular:
Things you should know before relying on an external macOS boot device
We welcome feedback on this functionality, but we cannot offer in-depth troubleshooting assistance for problems that Apple's replication utility encounters, nor can we offer any troubleshooting assistance for the bootability of the destination device beyond the suggestions offered in our External Boot Troubleshooting kbase article.
In general, we're planning to rely less and less on the bootability of the backup volume for recovery from hardware failure. You don't have to be able to boot your Mac from the CCC backup to restore data from it. You can restore individual files and folders using Finder or CCC while booted from your production volume, and you can also recover older versions of files from CCC snapshots. If you ever needed to restore everything from a non-bootable backup, you would install macOS via Recovery mode (e.g. onto a replacement disk), then migrate data from the CCC backup via Migration Assistant. CCC backups are compatible with Migration Assistant, and we support that configuration.
Best wishes,
Rob
Bombich Software, Inc.
Charles
Dec 18, 2021, 9:32 PM EST
Hi:
I have tried several times to make a bootable clone of my Monterey 12.1 macOS. I have selected “legacy backup” and allowed my external SSD (Samsung T5) to be completely erased.
The entire process finishes after some time. However, when trying to boot from the Samsung T5, the boot process hangs up about halfway through and then restarts to then boot from the Macintosh HD.
I should add that the bootable clone process was working with Catalina and Big Sur. (My version of CCC is 6.0.5 (7252)
I have tried using two different Samsung T5 SSDs which I know to be okay.
I guess I should ask…. Are bootable clones still possible when running Monterey?
My Mac is a 2017 27” 5K iMac.
Thanks.
This email is a service from Bombich Software. Delivered by Zendesk.
Quite frankly, I was disappointed with his reply to my request. Note that Mike stated "he expected it to boot". It did in fact seemed to boot but hung up about halfway through the process.
I might note that when I tested SuperDuper using the same external drives (Samsung T5s) that SuperDuper failed the same way that CCC did.
You need to draw your own conclusion when attempting to create a bootable clone from Monterey. Perhaps there is a problem with my system but the bootable clone creation was working well when I was using Big Sur.
Charlie
I do not own a registered copy of SuperDuper although I have tested it, but rather will only refer to CCC which I do own the latest version. (6.0.5)
Below is a help request that I sent to CCC and their reply to me:
Hi Charles,
Greetings from Bombich Software! Rob from our Support team has looked at your request and responded. If you'd like to get in touch with us, you can reply to this email.
Rob C. (Bombich Software)
Dec 20, 2021, 9:39 AM EST
Hi Charles,
If you would like to make a bootable copy of your macOS 11 Big Sur (or newer OS) startup disk with CCC 6:
- Choose your startup disk as the source
- Select a destination
- Click on the Destination selector again and choose "Legacy Bootable Backup Assistant"
- Choose the option to create a bootable backup, then run the task
Creating legacy bootable backups of macOS Big Sur (and later OSes)
Looking at the logs, the task completed as expected and I would expect it to boot.
And I would like to draw your attention to this section in particular:
Things you should know before relying on an external macOS boot device
We welcome feedback on this functionality, but we cannot offer in-depth troubleshooting assistance for problems that Apple's replication utility encounters, nor can we offer any troubleshooting assistance for the bootability of the destination device beyond the suggestions offered in our External Boot Troubleshooting kbase article.
In general, we're planning to rely less and less on the bootability of the backup volume for recovery from hardware failure. You don't have to be able to boot your Mac from the CCC backup to restore data from it. You can restore individual files and folders using Finder or CCC while booted from your production volume, and you can also recover older versions of files from CCC snapshots. If you ever needed to restore everything from a non-bootable backup, you would install macOS via Recovery mode (e.g. onto a replacement disk), then migrate data from the CCC backup via Migration Assistant. CCC backups are compatible with Migration Assistant, and we support that configuration.
Best wishes,
Rob
Bombich Software, Inc.
Charles
Dec 18, 2021, 9:32 PM EST
Hi:
I have tried several times to make a bootable clone of my Monterey 12.1 macOS. I have selected “legacy backup” and allowed my external SSD (Samsung T5) to be completely erased.
The entire process finishes after some time. However, when trying to boot from the Samsung T5, the boot process hangs up about halfway through and then restarts to then boot from the Macintosh HD.
I should add that the bootable clone process was working with Catalina and Big Sur. (My version of CCC is 6.0.5 (7252)
I have tried using two different Samsung T5 SSDs which I know to be okay.
I guess I should ask…. Are bootable clones still possible when running Monterey?
My Mac is a 2017 27” 5K iMac.
Thanks.
This email is a service from Bombich Software. Delivered by Zendesk.
Quite frankly, I was disappointed with his reply to my request. Note that Mike stated "he expected it to boot". It did in fact seemed to boot but hung up about halfway through the process.
I might note that when I tested SuperDuper using the same external drives (Samsung T5s) that SuperDuper failed the same way that CCC did.
You need to draw your own conclusion when attempting to create a bootable clone from Monterey. Perhaps there is a problem with my system but the bootable clone creation was working well when I was using Big Sur.
Charlie