![]() ![]() Would this change the uid of the original account back to 501 and magically keeping the ownership of the content of the data hdds? ![]() Delete the temporary account while keeping the data HDDs inside the Mac Pro.Now, the content of the data HDDs is owned by the original account, right? Put back the data HDDs into the Mac Pro. ![]() The original account would then get uid 502, right? Would this change the uid of the temporary account from 502 to 501? So, would the solution to the problem be changing the ownership of the content of the hdds from uid 502 to uid 501? What would be the safest prosedure for doing this without affecting the content of the data hdds by any other way? ![]() It has the same user name as the regular user in Yosemite but apparently different user id: the uid of the owner of the content of the data hdds is 502, while the uid of the user account in Mojave is 501. Now, with macOS Mojave, I have just one user account. The regular user was the owner of the content of the two data hard drives. When I had macOS Yosemite in my Mac Pro, I had two user accounts: one admin account and one regular account. I did not try it yet because I think I found the fundamental reason for the problem. ![]()
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