

This is what my system info looks like and as you can see it's not loaded here either: Samsung SSD AppleDataSetManagement extension is not supposed to fully load (since it contains no executable binary), so the error message you're both seeing is the way it should be. * devices that don't properly handle queued TRIM commands */ comment on the issue - comments from the source code regarding drives known to have issues with trim under some conditions: But the risk (for apple, enabling it on non-certified devices and getting blamed for the data loss) is there. Yes, most modern drives probably do work with trim. So in summary: its not a joke, it is merely apple being very conservative with enabling features on third party hardware they do not provide, and getting blamed for the data corruption that may occur.Īpple's reputation is "it just works" and enabling third party hardware to potentially ruin that experience (data loss) for some small performance gain (again, on hardware they never supplied) would just be silly of them.

POST EL CAPITAN TRIM ENABLER PATCH
Apple do QA on their supplied SSDs (or possibly even patch OS X to ensure they don't run into any edge case problems with those particular drives) to ensure they behave properly. Hence Apple's warning when running trim force. So, interrogating the drive and asking "Do you support trim?" by the OS is BY NO MEANS a guarantee that it will work, and it can cause data corruption. you'd think, however Linus Torvalds (linux fame) has run into plenty of hardware which lies about support of features.
