Steven, As far as I've been able to tell, you shouldn't have any problems restoring your apps and user documents. Here's what I know so far: APFS doesn't introduce any new filesystem types so everything that was supported before (the various file types, file metadata, extended attributes, compressed files, access control lists, and so on) remain the same. So you shouldn't have any problems using QRecall to capture, and later restore, any of your user-land files. The same is probably true for the system files, but this needs more testing. What I do know is that, as of today, Apple has made it clear that Apple's macOS installer is the only tool that can create a bootable APFS volume. In other words, you can format a new volume using APFS, you can convert an existing volume from HFS+ to APFS, and you can copy all of the system files to it, but you can't bless it and it will never boot. Apple has indicated they intend to correct this limitation. But until they do, the only way to restore a High Sierra startup volume is to format it using APFS, use QRecall (or any other utility) to copy all of the files back on it, and then run the macOS installer (either from a second volume or using the remote installer) to install the OS files over the files you recovered.
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