Disk Utility changing partition types on its own
Whenever I do an operation in Disk Utility the last day it seems that I end up with my APFS partitions set to an unknown partition type (FFFF
...)
This has happened three times now both after extending APFS partitions, and after splitting a HFS partition and creating a new APFS partition. Once it changed the partition type of an APFS partition that wasn't even involved in the resize operation.
Every time this happens I'm forced to manually change the partition type back using e.g. gdisk
to make the system bootable again.
Is this a generally known bug in the community, or what's going on here? Why is it insistent on breaking the system partition after a resize?
- It has happened with Disk Utility in macOS 10.14 Mojave and 10.15 Catalina
- The resize operations were initiated by simply selecting trailing "free space" and removing it.
The OS X and macOS Disk Utility applications has never been bug free with respect to resizing partitions. The diskutil
command has far more options than can be accessed by the Disk Utility application. Also, the diskutil
command is less prone to failure. This makes the diskutil
command far more versatile than the Disk Utility application. An Ask Different search for FFFF
currently results in at least 150 posts, with yours being the latest. The first being posted on August 19, 2012. You refer encountering the problem with Mojave and Catalina, however the problem was first posted when Lion was in use.
Here at Ask Different, the FFFFFFFF-FFFF-FFFF-FFFF-FFFFFFFFFFFF partition type is a known bug. I have no way of knowing for sure, but being this problem has existed for at least 8 years, I just assume the bug is known to Apple.
I best advice I can give you is that if the Disk Utility application is malfunctioning because of the procedure you are using, then you need to change the procedure. I would try to include an alternate procedure, however currently your question does not provide enough information about your current procedure and state of your Mac before applying such procedure.