![]() ![]() I would probably make a new os install (wipe the drive after you backup or install on to an external drive) then only install your Illustrator. You may be trying to hard with sudo and all the attempts. Either way, the production volume stays on the old system that is known to work. We have Illustrator CS6, 2014, 2015, 2015.3, 2017 running on clean installs of Sierra that we update to 10.12.6 and then run the Adobe installers. I'll either find a spare hard drive and install the new system on that, or partition my Mac drive into two volumes so that the new release can be tested on the second volume. There are times when I do need to document or test the new OS even though my production Mac isn't on it yet. ![]() Those who can't wait don't have to upgrade their production system. Adobe isn’t testing the Creative Suite versions of Photoshop, InDesign, Illustrator, and its other design apps for macOS High Sierra compatibility and warns CS4 users should expect issues. During that 6 months I keep an eye on ongoing issues that I don't want to deal with (with both Apple and non-Apple software), and by the time those issues get fixed macOS is usually about at its 10.1x.3 or. ![]() I seem to average about 6 months or so after a new macOS comes out before I actually switch my production Mac over to it. If you cannot wait (for whatever reason), be sure to make a Time Machine (or other) backup of your current stable system, in case you run into problems. Personally I would wait untill the OS has been proven stable and your applications work as expected. ![]()
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