iPhone X (Global)

iOS 16.7.4 (20H240) for iPhone X (Global)

✗ This firmware is not signed. This means you cannot restore to it in iTunes.

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✗ This firmware is not signed. This means you cannot restore to it in iTunes. The instructions below are included for reference only.

Windows

  1. Install the latest version of iTunes from the Microsoft Store.
  2. Plug your iPhone X (Global) in to your PC.
  3. Open iTunes, and navigate to your iPhone X (Global).
  4. Hold the Shift key on your keyboard, and press "Restore".
  5. Select the iPhone10,3,iPhone10,6_16.7.4_20H240_Restore.ipsw file that you downloaded.
  6. Wait for the restore to complete, and the iPhone X (Global) to reboot.

macOS

  1. Plug your iPhone X (Global) in to your Mac.
  2. Navigate to your iPhone X (Global) in Finder.
  3. Hold the Option or Alt key on your keyboard, and press "Restore".
  4. Select the iPhone10,3,iPhone10,6_16.7.4_20H240_Restore.ipsw file that you downloaded.
  5. Wait for the restore to complete, and the iPhone X (Global) to reboot.

Linux

  1. Install idevicerestore.
  2. Plug your iPhone X (Global) 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 iPhone10,3,iPhone10,6_16.7.4_20H240_Restore.ipsw and press enter.
  5. Wait for the restore to complete, and the iPhone X (Global) to reboot.

Windows

  1. Open PowerShell, and navigate to the IPSW file that you downloaded, e.g. cd Downloads
  2. Type Get-FileHash iPhone10,3,iPhone10,6_16.7.4_20H240_Restore.ipsw -Algorithm SHA1
  3. The output of the command should match the following checksum: 77384d7ad7d1d1ef9a3658a5dc8dafaa34595688. 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 iPhone10,3,iPhone10,6_16.7.4_20H240_Restore.ipsw
  3. The output of the command should match the following checksum: 77384d7ad7d1d1ef9a3658a5dc8dafaa34595688. 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 iPhone10,3,iPhone10,6_16.7.4_20H240_Restore.ipsw
  3. The output of the command should match the following checksum: 77384d7ad7d1d1ef9a3658a5dc8dafaa34595688. If it doesn't, you may need to redownload the file.

Checksums

SHA256sum 1693c860b800294ba020fae47ac3abf5bb1112a43baa7ecd899cf55a36bea164
MD5sum 3ad80549d22ebac95f5e4c1e820f54d5
SHA1sum 77384d7ad7d1d1ef9a3658a5dc8dafaa34595688
Please note, the documentation below is supplied from Apple's update servers. We don't modify the contents of this documentation.

This update fixes an issue where built-in Apple apps that have been deleted may not reinstall.

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