When you want to provide automated workflows to upgrade to or erase-install macOS Big Sur, you can use the startosinstall
tool. You can find this tool inside the “Install macOS Big Sur” application at:
If your Mac is running macOS Big Sur, Catalina, or later, you can access all these hidden fonts and install them for free. It turns out that Apple obtained licenses for a slew of new fonts in macOS that can be used system-wide, but these fonts aren’t installed on the Mac by default. 1 -Create a USB bootable Use this tool and download Catalina or Big Sur from Apple servers. InstallScript1016fullapp.zip Credits: crazybirdy Copy Catalina / Big Sur installer to Applications folder, open terminal and run.
IBM SPSS 25 on macOS Catalina and Big Sur. At the end of the installation process you may be prompted to run the SPSS License Authorisation Wizard. I have Catalina running on a 16' MacBook Pro. I do not want to upgrade to Big Sur until next July. Is there a way to do that? Responding to BMike: Two days before Big Sur dropped I set Software Update as follows: On the day Big Sur dropped I got the update message and I told it to remind me tomorrow. Today I tried the sudo command and got this.
Note: Apple calls the “Install macOS *” application “InstallAssistant.” I find this a useful shorthand and will use it.
Before you can use startosinstall
, you need to somehow deploy the InstallAssitant on the client system. And since the “Install macOS Big Sur” application is huge (>12GB) it poses its own set of challenges.
Different management systems have different means of deploying software. If you are using Munki (or one of the management systems that has integrated Munki, like SimpleMDM or Workspace One) you can wrap the application in a dmg. Unfortunately, even though “app in a dmg” has been a means of distributing software on macOS for nearly 20 years, most management systems cannot deal with this and expect an installer package (pkg).
You can use pkgbuild
to build an installer package from an application, like this:
This works for all InstallAssistants up to and including Catalina. With a Big Sur installer application this command will start working, but then fail:
The reason for this failure is that the Big Sur installer application contains a single file Contents/SharedSupport/SharedSupport.dmg
which is larger than 8GB. While a pkg file can be larger than 8GB, there are limitations in the installer package format which preclude individual files in the pkg payload to be larger than that.
When you want to distribute the “Install macOS Big Sur” application to the clients in your fleet, either to upgrade or for an erase-and-install workflow, this limitation introduces some challenges.
You can use Composer with Jamf to create a Jamf dmg style deployment, but that will only work with Jamf Pro. You could further wrap and split the application in different containers, but that will increase the creation and deployment time.
There are a number of solutions. Each with their own advantages and downsides, some supported and recommended by Apple and some… less so. Different management and deployment styles will require different solutions and approaches.
App Deployment with MDM/VPP
When you have your MDM hooked up to Apple Business Manager or Apple School Manager, you can push applications “purchased” in the “Apps and Books” area with MDM commands. This was formerly known as “VPP” (Volume Purchase Program and I will continue to use that name, because “deploy with Apps and Books from Apple Business Manager or Apple School Manager” is just unwieldly and I don’t care what Apple Marketing wants us to call it.
Since the “Install macOS Big Sur” application is available for free on the Mac App Store, you can use VPP to push it to a client from your MDM/management system.
When you do this, the client will not get the full InstallAssistant application, but a ‘stub’ InstallAssistant. This stub is small in size (20-40MB).
The additional resouces required for the actual system upgrade or installation which are GigaBytes worth of data will be loaded when they are needed. It doesn’t matter whether the process is triggered by the user after opeing the application or by using the startosinstall
or createinstallmedia
tool. Either workflow will trigger the download of the additional resources.
This has the advantage of being a fast initial installation of the InstallAssistant, but then the actual upgrade or re-installation process will take so much longer, because of the large extra download before the actual installation can even begin. For certain deployment workflows, this is an acceptable or maybe even desireable trade-off.
The extra download will use a Caching Server. This approach is recommended and supported by Apple.
Mac App Store and/or System Preferences
For some user-driven deployment styles, having the user download the InstallAssistant themselves can be part of the workflow. This way, the user can control the timing of the large download and make sure they are on a “good” network and the download will not interfere with video conferences or other work.
You can direct then to the Big Sur entry in the Mac App Store with a link. You cannot search for older versions of macOS Installers in the Mac App Store, but Apple has a kbase article with direct links.
You can also use a link that leads a user directly to the Software Update pane in System Preferences and prompts the user to start the download:
When the InstallAssistant is already installed, this link will open the application. When the Mac is already running a newer version of macOS or doesn’t support the version given, it will display an error.
You can use these links from a script with the open
command:
The downloads initiated this way will use a Caching Server. Linking to the Mac App Store is supported and recommended by Apple. The x-apple.systempreferences
links are undocumented.
softwareupdate command
Catalina introduced the --fetch-full-installer
option for the softwareupdate
command. You can add the --full-installer-version
option to get a specific version of the installer, for example 10.15.7
.
You can run this command from a managed script on the clients to install the application. The download will use a Caching Server.
This would be a really useful method to automate deployment the InstallAssistant on a client, if it were reliable. However, in my experience and that of many MacAdmins, this command is very fragile and will fail in many circumstances. As of this writing, I have not been able to reliably download a Big Sur InstallAssistant with this command. Most of the time I get
This approach is often recommended by Apple employees, however it will have to be much more reliable before I will join their recommendation.
Please, use Feedback Assistant, preferably with an AppleSeed for IT account, to communicate your experience with this tool with Apple. If this command were reliable, then it would be my recommended solution for nearly all kinds of deployments.
InstallAssistant pkg
With these solutions so far, we have actually avoided creating an installer package, because we moved the download of the InstallAssistant to the client. A caching server can help with the network load. Nevertheless for some styles of deployments, like schools and universities, using the local management infrastucture (like repositories or distribution points) has great advantages. For this, we need a package installer for the InstallAssistant.
A “magic” download link has been shared frequently in the MacAdmins Slack that downloads an installation package from an Apple URL which installs the Big Sur InstallAssistant.
This pkg from Apple avoids the file size limit for the package payload by not having the big file in the payload and then moving it in the postinstall script. Smart hack.. er… solution!
The URL is a download link from a software update catalog. You can easily find the link for the current version with the SUS Inspector tool.
But it would be really tedious to do this on every update. You, the regular reader, know the “tedious” is a trigger word for me to write a script. In this case it was less writing a script than looting one. Greg Neagle’s installinstallmacos.py
had most of the pieces needed to find the InstallAssistant.pkg
in the software update catalog and download it. I merely had to put the pieces together somewhat differently.
Nevertheless, I “made” a script that downloads the latest InstallAssistant.pkg for macOS Big Sur. You can then upload this pkg to your management system and distribute it like any other installation package.
- GitHub: scriptingosx/fetch-installer-pkg
It works very much like installinstallmacos.py
.
When you start the script it will download a lot of data into a content
folder in the current working directory, parse through it and determine the Big Sur Installers in the catalog. When it finds more than one installers, it will list them and you can choose one. When it finds only one Installer, it will start downloading that immediately.
You can add the --help
option for some extra options (all inherited from installinstallmacos.py
.
We will have to wait for the 11.1 release to be sure this actually works as expected, but I am confident we can make it work.
Install Catalina On Big Sur Mac
This approach is very likely not supported by Apple. But neither was re-packaging the InstallAssitant from disk in Catalina. This deployment method is likely closer to the supported deployment workflows than some common existing methods.
Install Catalina On Big Sur Free
The download does not use a Caching Server, but since the goal is to obtain a pkg that you can upload to your management server, this is not a big downside.
Big Sur signature verification check
You may have noticed that when you launch the Big Sur InstallAssistant on Big Sur for the first time, it will take a long time to “think” before it actually launches. This is due to a new security feature in Big Sur that verifies the application signature and integrity on first launch. Since this is a “big” application this check takes a while. Unfortunately Big Sur shows no progress bar or other indication. This check occurs when the user double-clicks the app to open it and when you start an upgrade or installation with the startosinstall
command.
There does not seem to be a way to skip or bypass this check. You can run startosinstall --usage
from a script right after installing the InstallAssistant. This will do nothing really, but force the check to happen. Subsequent launches, either from Finder or with startosinstall
will be immediate.