There should be a grey Allow button in the right lower area. Before the reboot for finishing the driver installation open System Preferences, Security & Privacy, tab General. Continue with -> Security Policy -> Reduced Security -> Allow user management of kernel extensions from identified developers.
Roland jd xi driver mac 10.13 drivers#
Select the system where the RME drivers will be installed In the top menu go to Utilities -> Startup Security Utility. Boot the M1 computer in Recovery mode (turn it on with the power button pressed until the screen shows the startup options are loaded) We also noticed a difference to earlier OS: the 'Allow' process around Security & Privacy has to be repeated after every driver update! After that the procedure is the same as under High Sierra - after the driver installation it has to be 'allowed' in the dialog that comes up automatically, or if not then manually in Security & Privacy. To enable their usage one has to boot the computer into Recovery mode and allow the use of those extensions per partition.
With M1 computers (Apple Silicon) Apple has globally disabled the use of third party kernel extensions. The whole driver package is a universal binary to support Intel and ARM natively. !!!This driver only supports macOS 11 (Big Sur)!!! *See below, 3.24 is available on our website. Notes on public beta driver version 3.23* USB 3 / 2.0 Driver for macOS 11 Big Sur, Intel / M1 (Apple Silicon) So don't get confused if you still read about 'public preview', 'beta driver' or USB only - all the drivers are officially released meanwhile. Since then this thread has been the sole resource for all the updates and further development, including the other driver platforms. Info: RME offered a public preview of its USB series driver for macOS 11 Big Sur, Intel and M1 (Apple Silicon), already in October 2020.