![]() DiskWarrior site says that as long as you can move the mouse cursor, and as long as the numbers keep changing, it is working and not frozen. CCC seems more the respected candidate for that. It has been 'rebuilding the directory' for about 4 hours with a message that reads 'Speed reduced by Disk Malfunction' followed by ever increasing numbers. using Chronosync, but don’t use CS to make bootable backups. I wonder how well CCC deals with weekly external disc swops when making incrementally updated bootable backups - so that a pretty recent working OS installation is always available off-site? So, is our fallback for this awful failure to boot situations now perhaps:-ġ: A time machine backup - then clean install OSX and migrate?Ģ: maybe a better solution - daily CCC incremental bootable backup and in an emergency you can A: boot and get some work done ![]() Wonder if that’s right?Įven if so, plainly that’s cumbersome - and its not a quick get out of jail emergency “not booting situation” 30 minute fix that DW was. Defender antimalware runs an excessive amount of time and takes up 100 of disk so I cannot really use the computer most of the time. Activation Code allows you to monitor and. Speed reduced by disk malfunction: 339,474, er make that 340,239, er make that 341,327. while DiskWarrior would try to fix it, but on. Back up as many of your files as possible, reformat the disk, and restore your backed-up files. I did see a hypothesis that - using, say CCC to clone off then back to the internal HD would defragment the drive and at the same time rearrange the directory. Re: Colleen Thompson The slowed by disk malfunction message from DW always means it has encountered bad blocks. Error: Disk Utility can t repair this disk. Because I needed to log in another user, I finally aborted this attempt. The first time, it ran for 2 days, showing this message: 'Speed reduced by disk malfunction: 10215' (of course, the number was growing). ![]() In a last resort (my friend needs the data), Ive tried with DiskWarrior. So, how to “clean up” the startup disk directory now? The disk is clearly dead (up to some point). Hi all, I was very pleased to come across this discussion, sadly, though, no relief for that slight feeling of despair - Diskwarrior’s APFS incompatibility seems like a very sad loss - that almost magical app that seemed to do just one thing when rebuilding the startup disk directory really really well. If the malfunction is serious enough, the only way to retrieve the data on the drive is through an expensive data recovery service. ![]()
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