To exit the macOS recovery, select the Shut Down option from the Apple menu. Wait till you see the macOS utility tab appear then select your preferred course of action. If you also use SSH key authentication to remove the need to enter passwords manually, this becomes a nice way to automate file transfers. above, long press the Command + R key combination on your keyboard until the spinning globe or the Apple logo appears. Unlike ZMODEM, you don't need an active terminal connection to the remote host to transfer files: scp will make its own SSH connection for the file transfer.
If you add the -r option, you can copy entire directories. Finally, some users report success by updating their DNS Servers to add the following DNS entries to 208.67.220.220 and 208.67.222.222. The remote directory names can be either absolute (starting with /) or relative to your home directory on the remote host. OS 10.8 was the first OS to Feature Dictation so there’s been a lot of improvements in these past years and macOS and OS X versions. If the local and remote usernames are the same, you can omit the part. From any app, use pulldown Edit -> Emoji & Symbols. I found you the following workaround that you may already know. You can both "push" files into the remote server: scp local-filename or "pull" files from the remote server if you know the remote filename: scp local-directory-or-filename The ctrl+cmnd+space works for me on Catalina 10.15.3. But the ZMODEM protocol is almost completely obsolete, because with SSH connections, you can use something better: the MacOS command line includes the OpenSSH scp command which can be used to transfer files over the SSH protocol. In principle, the ZMODEM protocol could be used on any terminal-style connection. Now you will see the recovery utility screen.
#MACBOOK OS X COMMAND R DOESNT WORK MAC#
2) Press Command + R immediately to boot your Mac computer to recovery drive. Follow the steps below: 1) Start your Mac computer by pressing the Power button.
#MACBOOK OS X COMMAND R DOESNT WORK MAC OS X#
That's useful at the remote end, but on the local end you would need a terminal emulator program that can either support ZMODEM natively or pipe the incoming data to another program and the program's output back to the remote server that would allow you to use the equivalents of sz and rz also locally on your Mac to provide ZMODEM support. Mac OS X has inbuilt password recovery utility that you can use to reset the password. The rz and sz commands use the ZMODEM protocol in their standard input/output streams.
Unfortunately, iterm2 doesn't seem to support the ZMODEM protocol, and so the rz command at the remote end will wait until it times out. After the rz command, the connection is not actually hanging - the rz command has sent the ZMODEM protocol start-up message to your iterm2 and is waiting for it to give a valid ZMODEM response.