![]() Another option is to install rEFInd in a new small "Mac OS Extended (Journaled)" volume. ![]() I have Windows, Linux, and macOS 10.15 beta installed to an external drive, so my MacBook's internal drive just has macOS.īy default, rEFInd is installed in the EFI partition. dev/disk0 (internal, physical):Ģ: Apple_APFS Container disk1 121.1 GB disk0s2 Note that I cannot disable System Integrity Protection (which one of the solutions there requires) as I need to keep it enabled for the software development I do on this system.īelow is the output from the command diskutil list disk0. I have read the section of the rEFInd manual named "Recovering from a Coup Using MacOS" but I didn't find any information in there that was pertinent to my situation. Is there any better way to handle macOS updates? The only way I can bring rEFInd back is to boot up into recovery mode, manually mount my system partition with Disk Utility (as it is encrypted using FileVault), then open Terminal and reinstall rEFInd. Afterwards, if I hold the option key while booting up my mac, there is no boot option for rEFInd that I can select. ![]() Every time I update macOS, it ends up taking over the bootloader and resetting it to using the macOS operating system. I have rEFInd installed on the EFI partition of my 2015 MacBook Air.
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