Resizing Boot Camp Partition

Is it possible to dynamically reduce the size of my Boot Camp partition to allow room to increase my OS X partition. I really don't want to delete Boot Camp and then reinstall everything from XP to the applications so was hoping I can painlessly take 5GB out of it.

Backup both - WinClone for Windows, SuperDuper or Disk Utility Restore for OS X.
Head over to Paragon Software and download CampTune and read the directions.
For 5GB???
As for OS X, it has a fit if it doesn't have 10-20% free space, less than 10% and it can belly-up, loss of btree directory.
Sounds like time for hard drive swap actually.

Similar Messages

  • Resized Boot Camp partition; now I have "disk0s4"

    OK so i was following this tutorial on how to increase your boot camp partition from this website.
    Following this blog post:
    http://blog.craigharvey.me/2012/09/02/resize-boot-camp-partition-for-free-window s-8/
    I resized my Boot Camp partition to give Windows 7 more space.  In Disk Utility on OS X ML, I reduced the size of my OS X partition. So then i clicked apply and now that partition says disk0s4. I tried to verfiy and repair it through disk utitlity but It wont let me as there are problems. I have reiszed my parition before and never had this problem before. What did I do wrong and will I be able to fix it?

    As you have found out, those instructions do not work, so.
    If you can you still boot to OSX, you can Use Boot Camp to remove the Windows partition and return the Mac to normal, then start agin.
    Next time you need to resize an NTFS partition use Paragon Camp Tune, which can do it without borking things.
    Do Not Ever use Disk Utility to do anything to a Windows partition, it will make the problem worse.

  • Windows disc does not update after resizing boot camp partition

    When I bought my iMac, it came with a 500 GB HDD. I used bootcamp to make a 200GB windows partition and a 300GB Mac partition. The other day I bought a 250GB SSD, and moved everything from my 300GB Mac partition onto the SSD.
    My plan was to use the whole 500GB HDD for windows. So, I deleted the 300GB Mac partition and made it free space on the drive. I then expanded the boot camp partition to take up the whole drive using Mini Tool on windows 7.
    Now, windows 7 shows that my drive is 465GB, but when I boot into mac, the bootcamp hard drive still reads 200GB and 300GB are "free space" even though I expanded the drive using Mini Tool.
    I tried to fix this by filling up the hard drive with an extra 120 GB so it exceeded the 200GB limit that windows shows. But when I booted back into OSX to see if it had worked, none of the files were showing up in the drive, making me believe that boot camp and OS X are not reading changes I am making to the bootcamp drive when I use Windows.
    How can I change this so Disk Utility shows the full size of the disc, like Mini Tool does?
    I will try to upload screenshots soon.

    Re-sizing Windows partitions is not supported on Bootcamp. It requires a clean install. The other option is using Winclone.
    Boot Camp 5.1: Frequently asked questions
    How can a Windows partition be resized after Windows is installed?
    You need to delete the Windows partition using the Boot Camp Assistant, and start over to change the size of the Windows partition. Back up your important Windows files first.

  • Can i resize Boot Camp Partition,what about a second partitiion?

    Ok
    i had 40 GB left on my macbook
    i boot camped a new Partition at 10 GB and put Windows XP SP2 on it
    i got 2 new questions
    1.Can i change the 10GB to 20 GB and if so HOW
    2.Can i do yet Another Partition so my macbook can have OS10/Xp/Vista in 3 seperate partitions?
    what about Linux
    is there a way to open Both Partitions at the same time to view OS10 and XP side by side on the same computer ?
    thanks in advance

    Sounds like you didn't plan enough space. Not w/o destroying (backup) your current partitioning to install each natively.
    Maybe Parallels would fit your needs.
    http://forums.parallels.com
    Triple boot
    http://macapper.com/forums/showthread.php?t=134

  • How do I create a Boot Camp partition with Windows & blank NTFS partitions?

    I'm trying to create this kind of setup:
    OS X partition
    Windows 7 partition
    blank NTFS partition (no OS)
    blank NTFS partition (no OS)
    This would be much easier if I created just the OS X partition and the Windows 7 partition with the Boot Camp Assistant tool (done this many times before successfully on other computers). The problem begins when I try to split the Boot Camp partition through the Windows 7 DVD partition manager during setup by deleting the Boot Camp partition, and recreating three partitions from the unallocated space. After installing Windows 7 on one of those new three partitions, I'm getting all kinds of startup errors when I try to install the Boot Camp drivers.
    What would the best way to achieve this setup?

    Yes, I researched many options for three partition dual boot set ups. After many trials and tribulations, there is a simple method that I have used on multiple MBPs.
    1. Run Boot Camp Assistant, as per the Boot Camp Installation and Setup Guide. Once you have Mac OS X and Windows 7 set up, check the partitions and back them up (with Time Machine, and Winclone).
    2. Get iPartition, and resize the Mac and Windows partitions to what you want, say 100GB each, and set up your other partitions to the size you want. I put mine "after" the Windows partition, at the end of the disk, and have had no problems. It takes a few minutes to create the bootable CD for iPartition, but you get everything you need to do so from Coriolis Systems. You will need your Mac OS X installl disc.
    3. Install Paragon's HFS+ for Windows and NTFS for Mac, and everybody can read and write everything.
    4. I have both Time Machine and Norton 360 back up the Data partitions, just in case -- to an external drive, of course.
    You can boot to either OS and access any partition.

  • Recover Deleted Boot Camp Partition

    Hello,
    A week ago I tried to delete Ubuntu from my Windows 8 Boot Camp partition on my MacBook. However, after the process I couldn't boot Mavericks anymore. When I finally got Mavericks to boot, my Windows partition became unbootable. After running the repair disk, I accidentally ran the "clean" command using Diskpart and COMPLETELY wiped my computer of everything - even my Mac OS X partition. The only way I could get my computer to become usable again was to add a partition using the Internet Recovery Disk Utility tools (there were 0 partitions) and fresh-install Lion.
    However, I had all of my important files and apps on my Windows partition and my last backup of it (using Winclone) was outdated. I am not very familiar with this sort of situation, so I was hoping for some help. Currently, I have not attempted to add another Boot Camp partition, but I'm not sure if adding the Lion partition (to make my Mac usable) would make the Windows partition unrecoverable. Also, should I update to Mavericks and then take further action?
    I would sincerely appreciate it if I could receive some assistance.
    MacBook Pro 13-inch, Late 2011
    Processor  2.4 GHz Intel Core i5
    Memory  4 GB 1333 MHz DDR3
    Software  Mac OS X Lion 10.7.5

    Sorry for the late reply!
    I've found the NTFS partition with the right size capacity, 136 GB. However, when I press "p" to list files, the only directory folders that show up are .Trashes and System Volume Information. The partition also appears to be resized (it may have accidentally happened?) because its size is shown as 146 GB/136 GB.
    How would I restore the NTFS partition so that I could fix it with a utility (because I think it's been accidentally resized)? As I'd said above, I deleted my Mac partition too and I had to install a new Lion partition. However, this new Lion partition takes up all of the partition space because there is currently only one, so would I have to re-partition it before I can restore the Windows partition?
    Thanks again!

  • Boot Camp partition data disappeared - No DVD drive

    Up until today my Boot Camp partition was working swimmingly.
    Today, I was greeted with the "bootmgr not found" error. After restarting into OSX, none of my files on the drive show up (I have Paragon NTFS) pictured below:
    It looks like the data is still there, but something in the partition tables/mbr is messed up. If possible, I'd like to salvage the existing data.
    To complicate things, I don't have a DVD drive on my MBP. Also, apparently I cannot boot from windows USB keys.
    This makes the usual windows boot repair difficult.
    My attempted solution, which worked to get windows installed in the first place was to make a new partition, and copy Windows install files to it, but I can't seem to get that to boot, either. I tried using Boot Camp Assistant to prepare the files, as well as unetbootin. I also tried formatting as both HFS and Fat, and copying the files from the windows install disk. I also installed rEFIt, but I just get errors when attempting to boot the install partition.
    My last ditch attempt was to rig something through VMware fusion to repair the drive by mounting it as a raw disk, 
    and loading my Windows 7 ISO to perform the repair, but raw disks don't seem to work well with partitions, and I didn't want to nuke all of my data.
    Does anyone have suggestions as to how I might fix this drive, to at least grab some files off of it?
    Any ideas are greatly appreciated.

    To clarify, in Bootcamp the " This disk cannot be partitioned because some files cannot be moved" error is relating to my OSX boot drive - 128Gb SSD. It currently has ~30gb free. Is there a way I can clone this data, and restore it without a DVD drive, or some other bootable media?
    Not being able to create a second partition is on my second drive, 320Gb. Which has 64Gb free. Searching around the net, I saw that resizing a partition to it's smallest possible size is the easiest way to defrag free space in OSX. I did that, and the option to create a second windows partition is still greyed out.
    Even if I nuke the existing bootcamp partition, I need another working, bootable partition that I can boot the Win 7 disc from. Not sure what's changed since my initial install, but it seems even more difficult this time.
    I'll try using carbon copy cloner on my system partition, and test if it's bootable from USB. I'm running out of Ideas.

  • Copying a disk which has a boot camp partition

    Colleague has an iMac with a boot camp partition, and the disk has failed.  It won't boot off the mac partition, although the windows partition works fine.  He bought a new 1T disk and we are trying to copy his disk on to it, and will then install the new disk into the iMac.
    So it's booted up using the SnowLeopard install disk and I am running disk utility.  First I tried to partition the disk into something that looks like the partition scheme on the current disk -- big partition for os x, little partition for windows, although big & little are 750GB vs 250GB as opposed to the smaller version on the 260GB original.
    Then I tried to use the Restore to go from the old bootcamp partition to the new MS-DOS (fat) partition on the new drive.  This failed.  First it resized the fat partition down to an ever-so-slightly smaller partition than the NTFS original, and then generated an error because the partition is too small.
    How do we do this?

    Loner T wrote:
    1. Do you have a TM backup of the OSX which came from this "failed" disk? It may just be a matter of reinstalling OSX too work around bacd blocks?
    My boss tried that about a year ago, but it failed again after not too long.
    2. What is the failure when switching to OSX from Windows?
    Not sure.  Now when I option-boot the machine I can't see either partition -- I can see the installer dvd and the new drive in its external enclosure.
    3. Windows can be installed only on the internal disk, which is a Windows restriction that BC enforces. Apple allows OS to installed on external drives. Ask Gates/Ballmer/Nadella why?
    4. Yes, you can get data of the disk, not matter how it is connected, internal or external. It is tricky to take a Volume and move it. Can I suggest an investment in Winclone to backup and restore (http://www.twocanoes.com/products/mac/winclone) Windows?
    5. Yes, but I would recommend putting Bootcamp Windows back as BC/Windows, rather than virtualizing it using Parallels.
    Well moving the new disk in to the iMac is one of the tasks we need to accomplish, so we can do it now.  My plan was to use dd to move the data from the partition on the old drive to the partition on the new drive, once we can get Boot Camp Assistant to create it.  Winclone looks like a great product, but it's $29.  Parallels is only $79, and if a disk fails or you migrate to new hardware all of the Parallels vms come over effortlessly using Setup Assistant or Migration Assistant.

  • Boot Camp Partition too small

    I created a boot camp partition for Windows 7 a few months ago, but I didn't make it big enough. Now I'm getting a "not enough space" message when I try to update to boot camp 3.2. I seem to remember that if I need to resize, I need to reinstall boot camp again - is that right, because I can't find where I read that?
    I have a 2010 Macbook pro, 2.66 gHz, and my 32-bit windows partition was installed as 18 gb. I didn't think about having to run other software, like itunes, when I created the partition.
    I've not been able to change the trackpad such that I can tap rather than click (VERY difficult for me to work with), and I was hoping boot camp 3.2 might fix that.
    Any advice on all this would be gratefully received.

    Thanks for the vote of confidence, Toocool4.
    Hatter, I always search for solutions before I ask - I come to forums as a last resort when I'm not confident about proceeding without some advice. If you don't like the questions I ask, you don't have to get involved and answer. I didn't ask anything about doing backups - I backup my data regularly to an external drive. I asked what "backup system image" meant because I hadn't heard that expression before and I thought it might have been something critical I needed to know before I reinstalled my partition.
    Before I moved over to Mac, I spent 9 years learning how to maintain my own pc, so I've got some idea of what I'm doing. But there are always things to learn, and I'm grateful to those who are willing to share their knowledge - I've used what I've learned to help those of my friends who are real novices, and at times I've even contributed to forums.
    Since I only use my Windows partition for music, I think it'll be simple enough for me to just recreate. The 15-20 percent rule sounds like a good one, Toocool4, and I wish I'd thought of it before! This time I'll build a partition factoring in the size of software, like itunes, as well, and I'll make it big enough to cover everything!
    If I've misunderstood the image-creating ideas, please set me straight; otherwise I'll assume just going thru the bootcamp instructions will serve me well again.
    And BTW, I'm a GIRL, not a guy.

  • Resizing Boot Camp

    Is there still no way to resize Boot Camp/Windows XP after a user has installed it? I need to grab about 20GB from my Boot Camp that's not being used for my Mac OS X. Is there any possible way? If I have to format...again, & again, & again... Silly right? I know I can "estimate" my storage, or use my estimate and add 10GB extra or something like that but when it all comes down to this, sooner or later, everyone is going to need to resize.

    CaliforniaBeachUSA wrote:
    Is there still no way to resize Boot Camp/Windows XP after a user has installed it? I need to grab about 20GB from my Boot Camp that's not being used for my Mac OS X. Is there any possible way? If I have to format...again, & again, & again... Silly right? I know I can "estimate" my storage, or use my estimate and add 10GB extra or something like that but when it all comes down to this, sooner or later, everyone is going to need to resize.
    The simplest way is to clone your Windows partition using Winclone and then run BCA.app and remove the BC partition and then make a new one the proper size.
    Then use the .dmg Windows image and restore your Windows system.
    Winclone is an OS-X app that creates a dmg image of your Windows filesystem, making the process quite simple.
    One caveat: before removing and recreating your BC partition, be sure to also backup your OS-X partiton.

  • Install a Boot Camp partition without access to OSX files.

    I Want to use a boot camp partition so that windows can use all my ram (windows 10 is really slow running alongside Yosemite in virtualbox). Is there software that I can install or something special I can do to install windows in a way that it won't be able to access the files on the Mac side? I don't want the security risks of windows getting through to the Mac bit. So, is there something that can out up a barrier between the two?

    Webmaster4o wrote:
    Is there software that I can install or something special I can do to install windows in a way that it won't be able to access the files on the Mac side? I don't want the security risks of windows getting through to the Mac bit. So, is there something that can out up a barrier between the two?
    The choice to install Windows is an invitation to security risks. It does not mean OS X does not have its own security risks. All OSes do. Windows has more widespread malware, viruses, etc. Windows has read-only access via Apple HFS+ driver to OS X volumes (this is installed as part of Bootcamp Drivers package).
    You have two choices,
    1. Install FileVault2 - OS X: About FileVault 2 - Apple Support.
    2. Convert your HFS+ volumes to CoreStorage. See the help about diskutil cs convert. Please also see https://developer.apple.com/library/mac/documentation/Darwin/Reference/ManPages/ man8/diskutil.8.html
    diskutil cs convert
    Usage:  diskutil coreStorage convert
            MountPoint|DiskIdentifier|DeviceNode
            [-stdinpassphrase | -passphrase [passphrase]]
    Convert a regular JHFS+ partition into a CoreStorage logical volume.
    The file system must be mounted and resizable (i.e. Journaled HFS+).
    Ownership of the affected disk is required.
    Either method removes read-only access to OS X side.

  • How can I get Lion to recognize my boot camp partition.

    Yesterday morning I found my mac suffered from a b-tree failure and was unable to access OS X 10.6. I ended up booting into my Boot camp partition of Windows XP and backed it up then reinstalled Snow leopard. Then I upgraded to Lion, saw it fail due to a partitioning issue, created a 2gb partition called Mac HD 2 (by shrinking mac hd), saw i could install but not full install. So I created another partition and installed Lion successfully. Got into Lion and shrunk my 2x 2GB partitions into one 4GB partition. My Windows XP hard drive boot camp partition was still on my desktop. I can access all the files but I can not boot into it. When I hold down the option key there is only Mac HD or Recovery partition.
    Is there any way to get the boot camp partition to work?
    I did notice that when I was looking through the settings I could choose which HD was the default boot option. Mac hd with 10.7 and a folder called Windows XP were both available.

    We also cannot get Robohelp to recognize our FrameMaker installation. 
    We are using Robohelp 9  and Framemaker 11.
    We are in the process of moving all of our Robohelp content to Framemaker, but our project team still needs CHM files for the next release or so.  So we figured we could move our content to Frame 11, then import the Frame content into Robohelp when we needed to generate the CHM files.
    The process works great when we use RH 10 and Frame 11, but we get the following error when we use RH 9:
    "This operation cannot be completed without FrameMaker.  Install FrameMaker and try again."
    I have uninstalled and reinstalled Frame 11 and RH 9, but am still getting the same error.  Buying a set of new Robohelp 10 licenses probably isn't an option.
    Any other suggestions?
    Thanks,
    Sue

  • Boot Camp partition not showing in startup disk or when holding alt key

    I've read countless discussions about similar questions to this one, however, I still haven't been able to find any solution.
    I have an old 2006 MacBook that has just been fully updated and reformatted. I'm running OSX 10.7.5 and Boot Camp 4.
    I went through the Boot Camp installation from an Windows ISO image in my usb drive, where it succesfully downloaded all files needed, and prompted me to make the partition, after which it restarted and was supposed to take me to the installation manager in the Windows partition. I first got the "No bootable driver" error, to which I read I was supposed to restart the computer, hold the alt key, and choose the boot camp partition. However, it does not show up. I only get Mac and Recover drivers.
    I went into the Mac's startup disk, and only the Mac driver is showing, no Boot Camp driver, however, when I go into Disk Utilities, I can see that the BootCamp driver there.
    I read somewhere that I should zap pram and reset SMC, which I did with their instructions. It didn't change anything, I still only get the Mac driver and Recovery when hitting the alt key.
    Does it have something to do with my MacBook being older? That's the only reason I can think that would not allow me to do this.
    Let me know what other info I can give you so that you can please help me!! Thanks in advance!

    In last resort I solved my missing BOOTCAMP partition problem using a program called: iPartition from coriolis systems located in the United Kingdom http://www.coriolis-systems.com/iPartition.php it took me a coupleof days to figure out the credit card system they have Hint: use your 9 digit zip code to find your credit card address and call your bank if you have an overseas hold on the card!!!! The program found my missing BOOTCAMP partition and restored it. It did take a couple of e-mails to learn to use their program. Let me know how you turn out!

  • How do I make a clone of the Boot camp partition?

    My MacBook Air (10.6.8) is having problems and I need to send it away for repairs. Before I do that I want to make a clone of everything and put it on my new MacBook Pro (10.7.2)
    I am making a clone of the Mac partition using Carbon Copy Cloner. That has worked well as a backup for me.
    The only problem is I need to make a clone of the Boot camp partition (Windows partition) and I don't know how.
    I want to make an exact clone so it has all the operating system, files and everything.
    The other question is when should I make a Bootcamp partition?
    Should I migrate the clone to the new mac using Migration Assistant, and then make a boot camp partition? And then what are the exact steps putting the clone onto the boot camp partition?
    Thanks for any help.

    Here are some previous coments made on this forun regarding backup of a Boot Camp  partition. I use Paragon HDMSuite 2011.
    Casper 6 does seem to work;
    WinClone was handy for XP users but doesn't for instance check for errors during the backup only during restore.  Winclone was discontinued at 2.2, all 2.3 versions are hacks (removal of the OS check seems to be the main thing) There has been no deveoplment or support for a while now.
    Acronis 2011 w/ plus pak, didn't work well previously
    Ghost 15 - probably not
    Casper 6 works for Windows on Boot Camp only
    CopyCatX is more lengthy and sector copy so takes the longest.
    Paragon Hard Drive Suite 2011 because it works great
    and they have CampTune
    Windows 7 system backup and restore - Apple's goofy HFS read-only interferes with system and file backup.
    I have also used Casper, Clonezilla and Paragon but less regularly, Casper failed a few times, I stopped using it, Clonezilla worked but took forever (for me) Paragon (which I have only used twice) was the best but my sample is limited.
    I have restored from DU, CCC, SuperDuper and TM, they all worked, TM was slower but not a lot, you can boot from the others, which I prefer.
    HDM 2011 can do either offline or online backups, the difference is that with an offline backup, the entire partition (or disk) is unallocated. In an online backup, the backup utility is running against a partition that may be making changes to itself. When you run CCC or SD! in OS X, you're running an online backup. However, I would recommend (at least for the first backup) that you boot from the HDM recovery CD to do an offline backup. This will ensure that you have an *exact* copy of the parition/disk.
    Since this is you first time backing up your partition, I would suggest using one of the Backup Wizards. They'll guide you through the backup process and keep you from doing something wrong  Similarly, use the Restore Wizard to restore your partition/drive.
    HDMS 2011-  back up a dual-boot Mac to an external USB drive, do:
    1) Boot from the Recovery Disk (I'm assuming that the backup hard drive is attached before you reboot)
    2) Select Paragon Hard Disk Manager
    3) Launch the Backup Wizard by selecting Wizards > Backup Wizard
    4) Select the Mac hard disk (not the partition) where it asks "what to backup"
    5) On the Backup Destination page, select "Save data to any local drive or a network share"
    6) Hit the radio button for the "Save to local drive option" (unless you got a boatload of DVD's  )
    7) Select the external USB drive as the backup destination
    8) Look over and correct the name and comments
    9) Hit Next to start the backup
    When it's done, you have an entire copy of your Mac's HD saved to external media.
    If you need to recover your HD, just run the Recovery Wizard and reverse the process.

  • How do I write to my boot camp partition with Paragon NTFS that comes with Mountain Lion?  Or how do I get my boot camp partition to show up in Paragon's "Available NTFS partitions:" panel like my external hard drive does?

    I've just set up boot camp on my MacBookPro with a freshly installed Mountain Lion and Windows 7. 
    I would like to read and write in both directions from drive to drive if possible.  I've hunted around quite a bit to try and work this out, and so far I understand that one can write to or transfer files from one drive to the other with Paragon NTFS among other softwares. 
    I noticed when I looked in my system preferences the utility "Paragon NTFS for Mac OS X" came with Mountain Lion and it will recognize an external hard drive when I have one plugged in under "Available NTFS partitions:".  However, it does not automatically recognize my NTFS boot camp partition nor does it automatically give me write access. 
    Is the Paragon NTFS that comes with Mountain Lion limited in some way? 
    Do I still need to purchase and download the software of the same name from Paragon to get the full write privilidges I want or is there something I can do to get the version of Paragon on my MAC to recognize and give me write priviledges to my boot camp partition?
    I'm open to all suggestions to get the read / write access between partitions in my boot camped drive.
    MacFUSE is also listed in the System Preferences of my machine (it also came with Mountain Lion), if that helps.  I'm still working out exactly what each of these is supposed to do and how I can use it to accomplish the task at hand.
    My boot camp drive does appear normally in other contexts and in disk utility it indicates that the drive is mounted.
    Thank you for any guidance you can give me. 

    Interesting. Comes with? you didn't have either before? Paragon is commercial and is now v. 10.0, they were the only one keeping updated and was supporting 10.7.4. I would not enable more than one.
    For writing to HFS Paragon has theirs but probably give the nod to MacDrive there.
    I never do an upgrade to a new OS over the old system, I backup (clone) and format the drive with the new OS and do the install so whatever is there I know is clean and also to keep from carrying around leftovers from years and systems past.
    I would assme Paragon is limited. Try their site and knowledge base?
    MacDrive
    http://www.mediafour.com/updates/macdrive
    Paragon HFS
    http://www.paragon-software.com/home/hfs-windows/
    Paragon NTFS
    http://www.macupdate.com/app/mac/26288/ntfs-for-mac-os-x
    http://www.paragon-software.com/home/ntfs-mac/

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