iPadOS 17.5.1 (21F90) for iPad (WiFi, 10th generation)

iPad (WiFi, 10th generation)

✗ This firmware is not signed. This means you cannot restore to it in Finder, the Apple Devices app, iTunes, or idevicerestore.

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This firmware is not signed. This means you cannot restore to it in Finder, the Apple Devices app, iTunes, or idevicerestore. The instructions below are included for reference only.

Windows

  1. Install the latest version of Apple Devices from the Microsoft Store.
  2. Plug your iPad (WiFi, 10th generation) in to your PC.
  3. Open Apple Devices, and navigate to your iPad (WiFi, 10th generation).
  4. Hold the Shift key on your keyboard, and press "Restore".
  5. Select the iPad_Fall_2022_17.5.1_21F90_Restore.ipsw file that you downloaded.
  6. Wait for the restore to complete, and the iPad (WiFi, 10th generation) to reboot.

macOS

  1. Plug your iPad (WiFi, 10th generation) in to your Mac.
  2. Navigate to your iPad (WiFi, 10th generation) in Finder.
  3. Hold the Option or Alt key on your keyboard, and press "Restore".
  4. Select the iPad_Fall_2022_17.5.1_21F90_Restore.ipsw file that you downloaded.
  5. Wait for the restore to complete, and the iPad (WiFi, 10th generation) to reboot.

Linux

  1. Install idevicerestore.
  2. Plug your iPad (WiFi, 10th generation) in to your PC.
  3. Open a terminal, and navigate to the IPSW file that you downloaded, e.g. cd ~/Downloads
  4. To perform a full erase restore, type idevicerestore -e iPad_Fall_2022_17.5.1_21F90_Restore.ipsw and press enter.
  5. Wait for the restore to complete, and the iPad (WiFi, 10th generation) to reboot.

Windows

  1. Open PowerShell, and navigate to the IPSW file that you downloaded, e.g. cd Downloads
  2. Type Get-FileHash iPad_Fall_2022_17.5.1_21F90_Restore.ipsw -Algorithm SHA1
  3. The output of the command should match the following checksum: 24b8412660402b3a2c9ce1ead4657d8ec0dfafea. If it doesn't, you may need to redownload the file.

macOS

  1. Open a terminal, and navigate to the IPSW file that you downloaded, e.g. cd ~/Downloads
  2. Type openssl sha1 iPad_Fall_2022_17.5.1_21F90_Restore.ipsw
  3. The output of the command should match the following checksum: 24b8412660402b3a2c9ce1ead4657d8ec0dfafea. If it doesn't, you may need to redownload the file.

Linux

  1. Open a terminal, and navigate to the IPSW file that you downloaded, e.g. cd ~/Downloads
  2. Type openssl sha1 iPad_Fall_2022_17.5.1_21F90_Restore.ipsw
  3. The output of the command should match the following checksum: 24b8412660402b3a2c9ce1ead4657d8ec0dfafea. If it doesn't, you may need to redownload the file.

Checksums

SHA256sum6085bbf5a781fc1a4b69578531edc744d16163ec54f2b4bba3fa63c78cee0b66
MD5sum6085bbf5a781fc1a4b69578531edc744d16163ec54f2b4bba3fa63c78cee0b66
SHA1sum24b8412660402b3a2c9ce1ead4657d8ec0dfafea
Please note, the documentation below is supplied from Apple's update servers. We don't modify the contents of this documentation.

This update provides important bug fixes and addresses a rare issue where photos that experienced database corruption could reappear in the Photos library even if they were deleted.

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