If this solution can’t fix the Disk Utility stopped repairing (the name of your drive) issue, then use the next solution. If you see a line saying The volume (the name of your drive) could not be verified completely, it means FSCK tool can’t repair the disk. If the above method fails to fix your issue, try terminal to repair the logical damages in your Mac drive and get rid of the trouble. In the Disk Utility app on your Mac, choose. If Disk Utility tells you the disk is about to fail, back up your data and replace the disk you can’t repair it. The terminal is the built-in astonishing tool in the macOS, which is often used to perform minor tasks and operations on any HFS, HFS+, and APFS containers. To check and repair a disk, you need to run First Aid on each volume and container on the storage device in turn, then run it on the storage device itself. The order of repair in this example was Macintosh HD - Data, then Macintosh HD, then Container disk4, then APPLE SSD. Input Reboot and press Enter to restart your Mac. After disk utility comes to the terminal app. Keep moving up the list, running First Aid for each volume on the disk, then each container on the disk, then finally the disk itself.
If you're asked for a password to unlock the disk, enter your administrator password.Īfter Disk Utility is done checking the volume, select the next item above it in the sidebar, then run First Aid again.If the button is dimmed and you can't click it, skip this step for the disk, container, or volume you selected.
If there is no Run button, click the Repair Disk button instead.In this example, the last volume on the disk is Macintosh HD - Data.Ĭlick Run to begin checking the selected volume for errors. For each disk that you're repairing, start by selecting the last volume on that disk, then click the First Aid button or tab.