Catch To Unlock Mac OS
Resetting the system preferences (deselecting the unlock with Apple watch) and rebooting my Mac and Watch and turning on the allow watch to unlock Mac did not help for opening Notes. Everything else seems to work and allows the watch to unlock so figuring it is an issue with Big Sur. There was a bug under Mac OS 9 (and maybe Mac OS 8 too?) that, under a special circumstance, prevented some files to be locked, unlocked or even deleted. They would sit there in your trash forever and prevent you to empty it even when the OPTION KEY is held down. Rebuilding the desktop does NOT resolve the issue. On your Mac, open System Preferences → Security & Privacy. By default, you’ll be on the General tab. If you’re not, click on General and then uncheck the box beside Allow Apple Watch to unlock your Mac. Wait a few seconds, and then toggle it on again.
Catch To Unlock Mac Os X
This is a non-rebooting workaround for the situation where your login screen gets locked up because you mis-entered your login password three times while trying to log into an account on a Mac that has set a master password for FileVault (it does not matter if the account uses FileVault or not). The login box displays the error 'Type the master password to reset this user's password and to unlock FileVault. Master Password hint: ...', with no ability to log in as the correct user with the correct password, or to log in as another user or back out of the FileVault password.Catch To Unlock Mac Os Catalina
Requirements:
- ssh enabled on the locked-up Mac.
- Administrator user name and password known for the locked-out computer.
- Both computers on the network.
Here's how to unlock the stuck Mac without a reboot:
- Determine the IP address of the locked out Macintosh. You can do this by clicking multiple times on the grey text just under 'Mac OS X' in the login window.
- Launch the Terminal application on the other Mac.
- In that Terminal window, type ssh -l admin_name 1.2.3.4, where admin_name is the name of the admin user on the locked-up Mac, and 1.2.3.4 is the IP address you found above.
- Enter in the administrator's password when prompted, then press Enter.
- Type in ps -aux grep loginwindow.app and press Return. The results will look something like this:
- Locate the process ID (PID; the second column) for root's instance of loginwindow. There may be multiple entries due to multiple users being enabled, and someone else being logged in. In the example above, root's PID is 801.
- Type sudo kill PID#, where PID# is the number you just found, then press Return.
- Enter the administrator's password when prompted and press Return.
[robg adds: It seems much simpler to me to just restart the locked-up Mac, but perhaps there are multiple users logged in, and you'd rather not lose their work. I haven't tested this one.]