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Security Update 2018-001 High Sierra or Security Update 2018-002 High Sierra

  • October 31, 2018
  • 53 replies
  • 327 views

sdagley
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Anybody else experiencing issues with these updates? https://support.apple.com/en-us/HT209193 talks about Security Update 2018-001 High Sierra that dropped yesterday, but this morning Security Update 2018-002 High Sierra is showing as available when I run softwareupdate --list. More troubling, I had two users report that they turned on their Macs this morning they got a "The macOS installation couldn't be completed" message with an Installation Log window in the background. Unfortunately I did not get a chance to troubleshoot the machines, but I'm guessing Security Update 2018-001 High Sierra was responsible.

53 replies

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  • Honored Contributor
  • October 31, 2018

I have seen the same, but in both cases users are able to boot back into the OS. I applied it to about four other machines without issue however, and from what I could see the log files basically state that the MacOS HD that was booted into was empty.

correction:

The main OS Installer distribution (/Volumes/Macintosh HD/Library/Updates/AtomicUpdates/041-18191/041-18191.English.dist) did not load with error: The file doesn’t exist.

sdagley
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  • Author
  • Jamf Heroes
  • October 31, 2018

@andrew.nicholas Thanks for the confirmation. Was it necessary to re-select the Startup Disk to boot into the OS, or something else? And it's really annoying that Apple still hasn't updated the "About the security content..." document for this yet. What a lovely Trick for Halloween.


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  • New Contributor
  • November 1, 2018

I had the same issue with 2018-002 10.13.6 i was able to boot normally selecting the "Startup Disk"
My only concern is if during the "update process" corrupted some sys files or it just rollback the update.
Now everything looks normal.


AVmcclint
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  • Esteemed Contributor
  • November 1, 2018

I'm seeing weirdness here too. Some machines that I know for a fact installed High Sierra 2018-001 update do not see the 002 update no matter what I do. so now I've got multiple build numbers to keep track of. 17G65 for 002 and 17G3025 for 001 (I think - I have completely lost track now)


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  • Contributor
  • November 1, 2018

We've seen it widespread as well, but I'm still waiting for techs to handoff some logs.


AVmcclint
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  • Esteemed Contributor
  • November 1, 2018

Whoa.... I'm starting to see evidence that the 2018-002 update is installing automatically even when automatic updates are disabled. Even on my Mac Mini at home (unmanaged) I ran softwareupdate -d -a to ONLY download the updates, but it installed it anyway!


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  • Honored Contributor
  • November 1, 2018

@sdagley It hasn't been in all cases but some have required it.


sdagley
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  • Author
  • Jamf Heroes
  • November 1, 2018

@AVmcclint 17G65 was the build number for the original High Sierra 10.13.6 release. I just installed Security Update 2018-002 (High Sierra) and ended up with build 17G3025 so if 2018-001 reported the same Apple didn't bother to roll the version number between the two. Even more annoying, the Security Update 2018-002 (High Sierra) download from support.apple.com is a .pkg named SecUpd2018-002Sierra.pkg


sdagley
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  • Author
  • Jamf Heroes
  • November 1, 2018

@andrew.nicholas Thanks. The field techs that have run into the problem here are reporting that re-setting the Startup Disk seems to be a reliable "fix".


Forum|alt.badge.img+9
  • Contributor
  • November 2, 2018

FWIW we've opened an enterprise case with Apple: 20000034091928.

Seeing the same error Andrew is reporting.

Nov  2 13:08:57 Computer OSInstaller[546]: The main OS Installer distribution (/Volumes/Macintosh HD/Library/Updates/AtomicUpdates/041-18191/041-18191.English.dist) did not load with error: The file doesn’t exist.
Nov  2 13:08:57 ComputerLanguage Chooser[528]: Child process exited 11
Nov  2 13:08:57 Computer storagekitd[547]: Removing client connection <SKDaemonConnection: 0x7f99a9c026d0>
Nov  2 13:08:57 Computer storagekitd[547]: No more connections, storagekitd will exit...
Nov  2 13:08:57 Computer Unknown[552]: Launching the Installer Crash Log Viewer

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  • New Contributor
  • November 2, 2018

Also having this issue. I'd like to just add this update to the softwareupdate --ignore list but I'm having trouble nailing down the label for this update. Anyone have any ideas?


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  • Contributor
  • November 2, 2018

I've tested this across the board in our environment and on clean OS installs with mixed outcomes. Some machines install and are stuck in a boot look. Some machines install fine and others fail to install all together. I opened a case with Apple and they are aware of the issue. Hope this is patched soon because we have Firmware PW and Remote Users are out of luck with no boots on the ground. :(


sdagley
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  • Author
  • Jamf Heroes
  • November 2, 2018

@luke.mccubbins This is what worked for me: sudo softwareupdate --ignore "Security Update 2018-002"


Forum|alt.badge.img
  • New Contributor
  • November 7, 2018

Seeing this issue on multiple sites. My gear: 2017 MPB 14,3. macOS 10.13.6. My experience yesterday: Used App Store updates to update to Safari 12.0.1 and Security Update 2018-002. Downloaded 1.88Gb. Then multiple update bars with multiple on/off screens. Then as described above "The macOS installation couldn't be completed" message with an Installation Log window in the background. The window had a retry button, tried twice to no avail (brought me back to the same error) then was able to save the Update log. Then tried Startup Disk button which brought me to my start up disk and was able to reboot (whew). Noticed that Safari had updated but App Store update was still showing the Security Update 2018-002. So tried to download again and after multiple progress bar back and forth movements among many black screens... finally booted to 10.13.6 (17G3025). This is the first time in 20 years I have had this kind of almost brick issue with updates. Nothing from Apple support, but did send them the Update crash log. I had a prolonged update issue once with High Sierra but no update crash. BUT what I am finding out is that both of these issues have occurred when Apple decides to package a firmware update with the software update. I don't know what my Boot ROM Version was before but now it is: 185.0.0.0.0. And you can see they have completely changed the numerology of the version number. I did a Terminal EFI verification and came up with EFI Version: MBP143.88Z.F000.B00.1809280842. I think this used to match the Boot ROM Version. Also, as others have noted the Apple Security Updates pages still have Security Update 2018-001 listed on their site, not 002??? Also I found the Security Update 2018-002 (there is no 001) download page and noticed the size was 421.1 Gb. WHY is the download from the App Sore more than 4 times as large?? Any ideas on this?


coachdnadel
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  • Jamf Heroes
  • November 8, 2018

This is happening in my environment, too. I’ve also noticed that the installer log actually shows up after the machine is restarted post update. Basically, the security update installs and the machine seems to be working. If the machine is restarted, it boots to the installer log. I also put a ticket in with Apple.


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  • Contributor
  • November 8, 2018

If you download the misnamed SecUpd2018-002Sierra.pkg (for 10.13.6 High Sierra) from Apple's download site:

Apple Support Downloads

If you use it instead of allowing the Appstore to install it, you may encounter far fewer problems. I've had to manually restart a few Macs even though Casper Remote took care of the initial restart, but so far have not run into the numerous boot problems or failure to update. This update process has become very tenuous.


Forum|alt.badge.img+5
  • Contributor
  • November 11, 2018

Seeing the same issue. Confirmed same log entries in installer log which would seem to indicate that the UPDATE package itself, or a related file is missing when the update is attempted. File missing - update fails - crash log viewer initiates.

Nov 11 22:11:13 MacBook-Pro OSInstaller[546]: The main OS Installer distribution (/Volumes/Macintosh HD/Library/Updates/AtomicUpdates/041-18191/041-18191.English.dist) did not load with error: The file doesn’t exist.
Nov 11 22:11:13 MacBook-Pro Language Chooser[527]: Child process exited 11
Nov 11 22:11:13 MacBook-Pro storagekitd[547]: Removing client connection <SKDaemonConnection: 0x7f9674d01940>
Nov 11 22:11:13 MacBook-Pro storagekitd[547]: No more connections, storagekitd will exit...
Nov 11 22:11:13 MacBook-Pro Unknown[551]: Launching the Installer Crash Log Viewer

As to solutions, for one user they were able to just restart, and OS started fine, for others the sequence would repeat. For the latter - selected startup disk and this solved the issue. Have put in place an software ignore as per @sdagley suggestion above AND also modified the RESTRICTIONS profile that is pushed to all users to now DEFER UPDATES FOR 90 days. Usually can rely upon Apple Security updates and rollout shortly after release with minimal risk to the fleet. Not so much anymore. Poor form Apple! Hope they fix soon.


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  • Valued Contributor
  • November 12, 2018

@rhill
I noticed on my internal SUS there are newer pkgs released 06/11 (both high sierra and sierra sec. updates)
Perhaps they changed something and also wondering if the pkgs available to download on Apple website had changed too


stevewood
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  • Hall of Fame
  • November 12, 2018

We have had reports of machines failing with the log file showing, as reported above, and we've also had reports of FileVault enabled Macs not completing the restart process and requiring the selection of Startup Disk. On the FV Macs, I noticed the following in the policy log that called softwareupdate:

Downloaded Safari Downloaded Security Update 2018-002 Installing Safari, Security Update 2018-002 Done with Safari Done. To install these updates, your computer must shut down. Your computer will automatically start up to finish installation. Installation will not complete successfully if you choose to restart your computer instead of shutting down. Please call halt(8) or select Shut Down from the Apple menu. To automate the shutdown process with softwareupdate(8), use --restart. A reboot was required with one or more of the installed updates. Software update finished. Reboot is required. Blessing i386 macOS System on /... Creating Reboot Script...

If you look, the log is saying

Installation will not complete successfully if you choose to restart your computer instead of shutting down.

I have never seen a Mac update require a shutdown. I'm wondering if shutting down instead of restarting will "fix" this issue. I have one of our local IT guys that will attempt a shutdown the next time he has a user come up with a "bricked" Mac.

Anyone else seeing this?


AVmcclint
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  • Esteemed Contributor
  • November 12, 2018

I have discovered if I download the confusingly-named SecUpd2018-002Sierra.dmg, mount it and copy the .pkg to the desktop of any Mac that needs the update and run it from there it is guaranteed to fail every time. It runs, it reboots, says Installing Update.... then goes to a black screen with a spinning gear. That's it. it NEVER completes the update process. If I put the pkg into Self Service, it basically does the same thing. If I copy the .dmg to a applicable Mac and run the .pkg directly from the mounted .dmg, then it works - EVERY TIME. WTF, Apple? This has been out for how long and they still haven't addressed the numerous problems?

I'm STILL observing that maybe 20% of applicable Macs can actually see the update in the Mac App Store or via softwareupdate command. I've seen some Macs will show it in MAS, but if I quit and relaunch, it disappears.


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  • New Contributor
  • November 12, 2018

@stevewood I've seen that message in the logs a handful of times. As far as I can tell its only happening with the 2018 T2 chip MacBook Pro's in our environment. I haven't been able to test shutting down instead of restart though. All the ones I've seen have been past that stage and re-running the update installs it. I've also seen the requirement of selecting the startup disk and also the Mac needs to be connected to the internet to complete the install


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  • Honored Contributor
  • November 12, 2018

I've had two machines attempt install of these automatically and get stuck in a boot loop. And we have Auto-update disabled here. Glad it;s only 2 so far, but that is VERY worrying.


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  • Honored Contributor
  • November 12, 2018

Make that 6 machines. This update is a nightmare. We block auto-updates to protect against this kind of thing and Apple still finds a way to ruin my day.


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  • Contributor
  • November 13, 2018

+1 have come across the issue in our company and have pulled the update (for the time being) from our software update server until Apple fix this.


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  • Honored Contributor
  • November 13, 2018

Setting the startup disk only worked for 1 of the 6 machines. the others were all rebuilds. I hope there aren't more of these in my environment we haven't found yet.