Cannot run Disk Utility, use terminal, or boot from CD, all HDs locked

I have a Mac Pro with 4 internal drives and 3 of them suddenly locked themselves. I can't run Disk Utility -- I get "underlying task reported failure on exit."
I can't boot from Disk Warrior CD. I hold down the C key til the Apple logo appears, and then the computer just restarts into my regular system on my hard drive.
I can run some apps from my startup drive, (obviously I can get on the internet). I downloaded Drive Genius but it will not install.
I cannot use the terminal to try any of those fancy tricks I read about here.
Here's what I get when I try Terminal:
login: PAM Error (line 396): System error
login: Could not determine audit condition
[Process completed]
And after that, I cannot type in the Terminal window.
Man, this is crazy. 2 of my other internal drives have backup systems on them, but they will not show up as choices in the startup disk section of my system preferences - cuz they are locked.
Any suggestions? I'm about to install a new drive and try and clone my working system on it and put Disk Warrior on it.

DJWillis wrote:
Wait, can I use Terminal from another computer in target mode?
yes, but do you mean you can boot it in target mode but not from a DVD? this is very strange. try booting fro a DVD in a different way. reboot and hold "option" at the chime. this should boot you into startup disk manager. normally you can insert the DVd at the point and choose to boot from it.

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    *** FILE SYSTEM WAS MODIFIED ***
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    ** Checking multi-linked files.
    ** Checking Catalog hierarchy.
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    If you're interested in UNIX-style command-line syntax, here's a look at how a couple of flags used in our instruction can influence fsck:
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    Macbook Pro 17" 7200 HD 1GB Powerbook G4 (15 inch FW 800)   Mac OS X (10.4.6)  
    Macbook Pro 17" 7200 HD 1GB Powerbook G4 (15 inch FW 800)   Mac OS X (10.4.6)  
    Macbook Pro 17" 7200 HD 1GB Powerbook G4 (15 inch FW 800)   Mac OS X (10.4.6)  

  • Need to run Disk Utility from OSX Disk to fix my hard drive.. help!

    I have a newish early 2010 Macbook Pro. The standard 10.6 DVD will NOT boot my computer and yet I need to boot to DVD to use Disk Utility..
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    Thanks,
    Ricardo

    Without your discs you're really out of luck. The 10.6 SL DVD contains too early a version to boot your computer. You would need a retail disc with a version of SL later than the one that came installed on it. If it came with 10.6.3 or earlier then the latest retail copies of SL should be 10.6.4 and would boot the computer.
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    If your computer is not functional then you can try this:
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  • [10.3] Is it necessary to run Disk Utility as a preventive measure

    I have here a small Mac environment of about 50 Mac's all running 10.3.9
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    1149/3595
    Hi Guru Evi,
    The only two things that are required for a healthy Mac OS X are:
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    - Enough free hard drive space on the boot volume (at least 10 or 15%)
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  • Anyone clean their mac using the disk utility using the repair disk permissions??

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    No. Threads don't hurt anything. If your computer is not functioning properly perhaps you need to try some basic maintenance. Let's start by having you do this:
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    Next, create a new user account. Log out of your account then log into the new account. Try using iPhoto and the publishing button. Do they work now?
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    Download and install Mac OS X 10.6.8 Update Combo v1.1.

  • Running Disk Utility off External Hard drive

    To run "repair disk" in disk utility on my internal hard drive I'm supposed to insert my Install DVD, restart my mac and run disk utility - however running this program off the disk is much slower than running it off my 800firewire external hard drive. I've tried a few different ways of going about this:
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    I'm not sure why you can't make a bootable copy of the installer DVD using Disk Utility but as Niel suggests, it is much better to install the OS on a partition on the external drive using the DVD & then use that instead of a 'clone' of the DVD as a boot source to run utilities. There are several reasons for this:
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    2. The version of Snow Leopard that runs from the DVD is a special one that among other things is optimized for read-only media. For instance, it doesn't write log files to the startup disk since it doesn't expect that to be possible.
    3. You can include other utilities on the external & easily customize it to your liking. For instance, configure it for automatic login to an admin user account, drop Disk Utility into that account's login items & it will automatically launch at the end of the boot process. You can do the same with shell scripts or Applescript applications for just about as much automation as your scripting skills & imagination can dream up.
    However, one thing to keep in mind: since a HD is not read-only but a DVD is, you can never be as certain that your external is as reliable as the DVD, since it is possible for something to change or corrupt files on the HD but short of physical damage the DVD is immutable.

  • Network Installer: Can't run Disk Utility

    Hi, all.
    Just created a net install image. SIU's log did not report anything out of the ordinary, however for some reason I can't run Disk Utility, and I need to as the automated installation options frequently don't work.
    I select Disk Utility from the Utilities menu and nothing happens.
    I run the Terminal and try hdiutil and get
    dyld: Library not loaded: /usr/lib/libbz2.1.0.dylib
    Referenced from: /System/Library/PrivateFrameworks/DiskImages.framework/Versions/A/DiskImages
    Reason: image not found
    Trace/BPT Trap
    Now, if we mount that image on a running Mac we can see the following
    bash$ ls -l /usr/lib/libbz*
    -rwxr-xr-x 1 root wheel 138436 Nov 1 11:33 /usr/lib/libbz2.1.0.2.dylib
    -rwxr-xr-x 1 root wheel 138444 Mar 4 10:19 /usr/lib/libbz2.1.0.3.dylib
    lrwxr-xr-x 1 root wheel 18 Nov 29 14:50 /usr/lib/libbz2.1.0.dylib -> libbz2.1.0.3.dylib
    lrwxr-xr-x 1 root wheel 18 Nov 29 14:50 /usr/lib/libbz2.dylib -> libbz2.1.0.3.dylib
    If we run the same command on the netbooted machine
    bash# ls -l /usr/lib/libbz*
    -rwxr-xr-x 1 root wheel 138436 Nov 1 11:33 /usr/lib/libbz2.1.0.2.dylib
    lrwxr-xr-x 1 root wheel 18 Nov 29 14:50 /usr/lib/libbz2.1.0.dylib -> libbz2.1.0.3.dylib
    lrwxr-xr-x 1 root wheel 18 Nov 29 14:50 /usr/lib/libbz2.dylib -> libbz2.1.0.3.dylib
    So it looks like libbz2.1.0.dylib is symlink'd to libbz2.1.0.3.dylib, except libbz2.1.0.3.dylib doesn't exist in the netbooted image. But it does exist in the image when it isn't netbooted! Yes, they are the same image!
    I also have two "Help" menus, just for kicks.
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    On the lighter side, this is the first time in nearly a year I haven't had to manually insert the CoreVideo.framework to get the image to boot!

    Ah, forget what I said about it being the same image. I didn't notice that my chroot hadn't worked when I was checking... I was checking the live system instead. Good thing, too, 'cause that was just TOO weird.
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  • Trying to run Disk utility on internal HD

    Okay, I'm trying to install BootCamp, and the utility says that there are problems with the hard drive, run Disk Utility. Which I do, it finds several problems, but can't fix them because it is the startup disk. It tells me to boot from the install DVD that came with the computer.
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    Welcome To  Discussions poptartsheart!
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    ali b

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    CentCorey wrote:
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