A recent Chrome update has been causing issues for some. For the past few days, video editors have been panicking as a data corruption issue struck their Macs (typically 2013 Mac Pros), preventing them from rebooting their systems properly. But what was the cause? Their Avid Media Composer editing suite? MacOS itself? No — it turns out their browser was likely to blame. Google has acknowledged that a recent Chrome update “may have shipped” with an updater bug that corrupts the file system on Macs that either have System Integrity Protection (SIP) turned off or don’t support it in the first place. As Avid Media Composer reportedly needs SIP turned off to get direct access to these Macs’ graphics systems (update: it doesn’t, read below), Chrome’s buggy updater is free to wreak havoc on the file system.
Chrome update prevents some Macs from rebooting
Google has stopped rolling out the flawed updater while it works on a permanent fix. In the meantime, those with affected systems can boot into macOS’ recovery mode and use a series of Terminal commands to both delete the offending updater and restore the damaged section of the file system. This only affects people who’ve deliberately turned off SIP or use an operating system before macOS Mavericks, so you’ll likely know if you’re affected.
Update 9/25 4:10PM ET: Avid says Media Composer doesn’t require turning off SIP, but did confirm that it’s Chrome’s updater causing the problem.
Source: engadget