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Forum Discussion
Jon C.10
2 years agoCollaborator | Level 8
Disaster: Dropbox removing external disk support for Mac users :(
In case anyone's unaware... if you're a Mac user storing your Dropbox on an external drive, you'll shortly lose that ability. https://talk.tidbits.com/t/dropbox-drops-support-for-storing-files-on...
- 4 months agoHi Everybody,We’re excited to share that external drive support for Dropbox for macOS on File Provider is now available for testing as a beta feature. This is available to some users today and will be available to additional users on a rolling basis. In order to be eligible to test this feature, please follow the instructions in this Help Center article.Keep in mind that participation in beta programs is subject to the certain terms and conditions. There are certain additional participation requirements:
- This beta is only available to US-based users
- You must be on macOS 15 beta
- You must have an external drive that is APFS formatted and encrypted
Please let me know if you have any further questions!
Richard Schletty
Collaborator | Level 8
EDIT: My procedure below worked for me because I had unwittingly upgraded to "Dropbox for macOS on File Provider" several months ago – before Dropbox finally stopped prompting certain Dropbox users to upgrade. The advice below is a way to "downgrade" and allow storage on an external drive.
I found the way to downgrade from "Dropbox for macOS on File Provider" at https://help.dropbox.com/installs/dropbox-for-macos-support. I logged out and back into Dropbox on my MacBook Pro (500 GB boot drive) running macOS Monterey. I was able to opt out of "Dropbox for macOS on File Provider" and select an external SSD drive as my Dropbox location. My Dropbox files synced up selectively, exactly as I had previously configured.
Here is an excerpt from the above page:
If you’ve updated to Dropbox for macOS on File Provider but want to change the location of your Dropbox folder back to your external drive, you can do so by following the instructions below.
To log out of your account:
- Click the Dropbox icon in the menu bar.
- Click your profile picture or initials.
- Click Preferences.
- Click Account.
- Click Sign out.
You’ll then be prompted to re-enter your account information.
To log back in to your account:
- Click Sign in with Dropbox.
- Select how you want to store your files (local or online-only).
- Click Next.
- Click Advanced settings when you see “You're almost finished.”
- Under Dropbox location, select a folder location.
- You can choose to store the Dropbox folder on your external drive from this screen.
- Click Done.
Note: Changing the location of your Dropbox folder may cause issues opening online-only files in third-party applications. These files may need to be re-linked.
Duncan Macintyre
2 years agoHelpful | Level 6
Hey Richard Schletty
Thanks for the information on the workaround.
Apologies if my question has already been asked and answered, but is this really just a temporary solution? Eventually, we'll need to upgrade Dropbox to maintain current functionality, right? Or are you planning on sticking with the current version?
(Like many in this thread, I'm in video, and the use of external file storage is mission-critical.)
Duncan Macintyre
- jaesm2 years agoHelpful | Level 6
Lot's of you are talking about file provider and keeping old versions and workarounds. Are you talking about an enterprise version? I run a small music studio and I just downloaded the latest home version of Dropbox; I'm on the latest macos and I haven't had to do anything special. It just has the option to pick an external drive now. I really wish an employee would chime in but since crowdsourcing is their idea of customer service, I won't hold my breath. Haha.
- ms252 years agoHelpful | Level 7
I believe the installer is not using Apple File Provider by default now. If it asks you to update, don't do it. Still not a real fix, to the best of my knowledge... just using the old kernel extensions still, which Apple will drop with an update at some unknown date.
- Richard Schletty2 years agoCollaborator | Level 8
My procedure (posted above) worked for me because I had unwittingly upgraded to "Dropbox for macOS on File Provider" several months ago – before Dropbox finally stopped prompting certain Dropbox users to upgrade. The advice I gave is a way to "downgrade" and allow storage on an external drive.
If you visit the link I gave in my above post, you will see an explanation from Dropbox:
https://help.dropbox.com/installs/dropbox-for-macos-support
Notes:
- We’re working directly with a small subset of macOS users with complex configurations to ensure their migration is as seamless as possible.
- Some macOS users with complex configurations—like those storing their Dropbox folder on an external drive—won’t be migrated at this time. These users will continue on their existing Dropbox experience.
- psalcal2 years agoCollaborator | Level 10If anyone knows they aren’t telling. I think the last official announcements were apple needs to fix it and then there was a follow up later that said Dropbox was looking for a solution and people could use the other version which allows external drives for the time being.
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