Boot camp partition/disc utility repairs problem

First post, so heres my what i'm running - Mac Book 2.16, OSX 10.5.2, 2 GB RAM and 111 GB Hard Drive
I've been messing around with Boot Camp the last couple of days and I finally got windows xp SP2 to running, however I ended up deleting the partition so I could make it bigger. When I tried to make the partition again boot camp told me to repair my drive with disc utility. I ended up doing it from the installation disc and did the repair from there no problems. When I get back to boot camp it tells me to run disc utility to repair? Any help would be great!

Backup to another drive. 'nuke your current partitions and use the Partition tab in Disk Utility to set as 1 Untitled (rather than "current") and you'll be fine.
BCA needs to find one large free unfragmented contiguous chunk. Also, drives reformatted with Leopard (fresh) do better than systems upgraded in some manner from Tiger to Leopard. Partition maps seem better.
Lots and lots and lots of threads that are 100% identical to yours floating around - daily occurrence. Everyone that 'cuts it short' and wants larger, cutting corners, not planning for growth.
Plan for SP3 which will be out eventually, sooner more than later.
If you don't need to run native Windows, then Fusion/Parallels is a lot less troublesome.

Similar Messages

  • Boot Camp partition won't mount in Disk Utility all of a sudden

    I used to have a Windows 7 Boot Camp partition set-up and working perfectly.
    Turned on my 2009 Mac Mini today and couldn't see it in the Finder. Opened Disk Utility, it was there, but grayed out. Right clicked and selected "Mount BOOTCAMP", got "mount failed"
    Tried verifying and repairing disk, but no joy. So I removed the boot camp partition using Boot Camp Assistant and started again. Went fine, installed Windows 7 fine.
    Booted back into Snow Leopard so I could unpair my bluetooth keyboard (I've found that I can only set-up the bluetooth keyboard in Windows 7 if I unpair it in OSX first). Again, Boot Camp partition doesn't show in the finder, and is grayed out in Disk Utility.
    I googled this problem, and found a few people mentioning that NTFS drivers in OSX (e.g. MacFUSE, paragon etc) can cause issues because they conflict with Snow Leopard's own NTFS driver. I did have MacFUSE installed, so I removed it, but it didn't seem to change anything.
    Any suggestions?

    solution!
    install NTFS-3G (http://macntfs-3g.blogspot.com/)
    open disk utility and mount your greyed out partition (NTFS-3G will mount it)
    unmount it
    open system preferences, go to tuxera NTFS pref, second tab (Volumes)
    make sure your windows 7 partition is selected from drop down menu then click "disable tuxera NTFS"
    at this point i rebooted into windows, then rebooted back into snow leopard. my windows partition was once again mounted and visible in Finder
    hope this works for you guys!
    Message was edited by: colmiak

  • 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.

  • Cannot read partition created by Boot Camp in Disk Utility

    Ok, so in trying to get a larger Boot Camp drive, I used disk utility to make a back up og my previous drive onto USB, and then removed the Boot Camp drive from OSX. This afternoon, I tried using Boot Camp Assistant to create a new partition to install windows onto, hoping to restore from the disk image on the USB drive.
    HOWEVER, when restarting the computer when Boot Camp Asst. told me to, and it booted to WInXP sp2 disk, I can see 3 partitions on my drive. 1 partition being most of the 160g drive, 2nd partition being 116g of the mac drive, and the 35g of the 3rd partition (what I asked Boot camp to make) However, it doesn't say boot camp partition. I cannot install XP onto any of the partitions I see in the startup disk.
    After spending nearly two hours on the phone with a very nice and helpful tech rep from Apple, my cell phone died, leaving us knowing that there is more space reportedly being used on my Mac HD than i have folders using space (only using about 73gigs of space before any of this partition work, now reports using 116 GB). I went back into the XP disk and deleted the 3rd partition, and now there is no gain in space on my Mac HD. We're re-verified and repaired disk permissions, and used the Leopard disk to repair the disk itself. Restored from Time Machine, and still no regained HD space.
    Essentially I'm missing 35G of hard drive space now, and I can't install Windows.
    I can only see the Mac HD partition on my hard drive. Anyone have a suggestion?!?!

    Reinstall Leopard, but first use the Leopard install DVD Disk Utility to reformat the HD to one partition. See:
    http://docs.info.apple.com/article.html?path=Mac/10.4/en/mh14.html
    It's for Tiger, but applies for Leopard as well.
    WARNING, you must have your data saved somewhere else.
    Message was edited by: xnav

  • I had to replace my iMac due to hard drive and Logicboard failure, so I want to reinstall Windows 7 on a Boot Camp partition. Will there be a problem reactivating Windows 7 Home Premium?

    I had to replace my iMac due to HDD and Logicboard failure, so I want to reinstall Windows 7 on Boot Camp partition. Will there be a problem reactivating Windows 7 Home Premium?

    Hi,
    should be no problem.
    Best case is you can activate online via Internet.
    Worst case is you have to call Microsoft and explain that it is the same computer after a mainboard failure.
    Regards
    Stefan

  • Why is Winclone Needed? Can't Disk Utility Restore a Boot Camp Partition?

    Hi. Could we just use Disk Utility to create a backup the Boot Camp Partition running Windows 7 64-bit for example and then just use Disk Utility to restore it if you need to replace your Boot Camp partition?
    Why is Winclone the tool use to create an image of Boot Camp partition as well as to restore a Boot Camp partition? Thank you in advance.
    Gbu.

    Thanks for the reply. How about if you opt for the non compressed image, the DVD/CD Master option (Image Format) when you do the New Image in Disk Utility? Would choosing the DVD/CD Master option be cloning it instead of archiving it? If the images created by Disk Utility are not the exact copy or clone then, it won't be bootable I believe but how come when you create an image of a DVD (to back it up for example) and burn that image, it is bootable which mean it copies it exactly (clone it in effect)?
    What does WinClone do or copy exactly that Disk Utility can't?

  • My boot camp partition does not recognize inserted discs

    I am running OSX 10.5.8 and have a Boot Camp partition set up with Windows XP.  The Windows partition works fine, but no longer recognizes when a DVD or CD is inserted.  The disc does not appear in the My Computer folder, even though the drive is spinning.  The eject button does not function to eject the disc, and I have to shut down the Windows partition, boot up in the Mac partition to eject or see the disc contents.
    This prevents me from installing any software on the Windows partition.
    Any suggestions?

    Years ago there were issues with "Gear" software drivers preventing DVD/CD from working.

  • Repairing Boot Camp Partition

    I just installed VMware Fusion 3. Upon my first launch of it, it came back saying my Boot Camp partition (which I had installed a year or two ago to use with Parallels) was damaged. What do I do from here to repair my Boot Camp partition?

    Run chkdsk; boot from Windows DVD...<</div>
    Sorry, in English? What's chkdsk? Once I boot from the Windows DVD, what do I do then?

  • I deleted my Boot Camp partition with Disk Utility and now I cannot reclaim the freespace?

    I deleted my Boot Camp partition with Disk Utility and now I cannot reclaim the freespace?
    And when I try to add a partition to the free space, and try to apply I do this:
    I press apply and it does its thing for like a second, I switch tabs and I get this:
    No matter how many times I reboot it doesn't work. Please help

    diskutil list:
    diskutil mergePartitions:

  • Boot Camp Partition & Windows Vista - Disk format Problems

    When Boot camp partitions the disk (I chose 25gb) it automatically formatted it as FAT32. However, when installing Vista, it says that it requires the disk to be formatted as NTFS.
    The Boot camp instructions says I should be given the option which format to use, but no option came up. I don't want to partition more than 32gb.
    How do I get Boot camp to format the partition correctly?

    Read the instructions that come with Leopard Boot Camp. The partition is automatically formatted at FAT32. However, it's a) not bootable (Windows has to do that) and b) Vista requires NTFS. That means once you're in the Vista installer you need to REFORMAT the partition. Select the partition, and then click, umm, disk options I think. Then reformat the drive. If you do that you should be able to continue.
    100years wrote:
    When Boot camp partitions the disk (I chose 25gb) it automatically formatted it as FAT32. However, when installing Vista, it says that it requires the disk to be formatted as NTFS.
    The Boot camp instructions says I should be given the option which format to use, but no option came up. I don't want to partition more than 32gb.
    How do I get Boot camp to format the partition correctly?

  • 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.

  • Help with boot camp partition on leopard!

    So I wanted to increase my partition disc size, because I ran out of space. So I restored it and started the whole process over again, using like 75 out of the 102 gigs of free space. This time, something went wrong. I window came up and said:
    "The disk cannot be partitioned because some files cannot be moved. Back up the disk and use the disk utility to format it as a single Mac OS Extended(journaled) volume. Restore your information to the disk and try using Boot Camp Assistant again."
    All I want to do is repartition it... I need help plz, thanks. Oh and I assumed the big files were obstacles so I deleted some 1-6 gig stuff I used to use not anymore(not any system stuff either) but that didn't work. Help!

    I bought a new MacBook today with Leopard. I tried to install Windows XP (with service pack 2). I chose 32GB for windows. When I clicked start installation the screen went white, the windows CD was ejected and nothing else happened.
    I had to switch it off manually and then I tried to restart the MacBook. The screen was just black.
    I just read this:
    +This means that the Windows partition is not bootable, usually because of a formatting problem. The Boot Camp Setup Assistant creates the Boot Camp partition, but the Windows installer must format it. Boot back into Mac OS X and re run the Boot Camp Setup Assistant. Remove the partition and re create it. Then install Windows again, this time allowing Windows to format the partition. Refer to the "Boot Camp Installation & Setup Guide" PDF document for more detail on installing Boot Camp.+
    I couldn't reboot it into the Mac OS X so I went back to PC World and created merry ****.
    They blamed me and I blamed them and said there was a formatting problem. I left the MacBook with them and they said they would try and install windows XP for me. I collect it today.
    What do I do if they can't get windows on there as I don't really understand what I read above so will need something a bit clearer....step-by-step.
    Can anyone help me please?

  • Boot Camp partition not listed in Windows Setup

    I am trying to install Windows 7 with DVD and I used the Boot Camp assistant 5 run in OS X Mavericks (10.9.1). Everything was copied with  latest drivers, created Boot Camp partition. After that Mac restarted  and booted into the windows installation. I run install process and it  says something like: "Any media were not found." No drive found here. So in this stage my  install journey ends. If I going back to OS X  and check Disk Utility, the Boot Camp partition is there. So I don't  understand why the installation can't find any partitions even drives.
    any solution for case this ?

    you need to install windows support software on a usb 2 flashdrive. more simply, start over in bootcamp, insert your usb drive as well as the dvd, check all 3 options. bootcamp will do the rest.
    or it could be a problem with the install disc, why not download win 7 iso from here;
    http://techverse.net/download-windows-7-iso-x86-x64-microsofts-official-servers/
    and go with this, its perfectly legal to use your activation code during instalation.

  • Creating and restoring a Boot Camp partition using Paragon

    I am trying to restore a clone of the Boot Camp partition that's on my MacBook Air (Snow Leopard) to My MacBook Pro (Lion).
    I was told I could do this without requiring the Windows 7 installation disk by using Paragon Hard Disk Manager.
    I downloaded the Paragon Hard Disk Manager on the MacBook Air in the Windows partition and followed the steps the Wizard told me. I chose back up. I successfully backed up the Boot Camp partition but noticed that the amount of disk space on the back up external drive was about 8GB, but the amount used up by Boot Camp was 16 GB.
    When I went into the new computer and tried to create a Boot Camp partition, I am not able to do this without installing Windows software.
    When I plugged in the external drive which had the back up on it, it just has some files and no Wizard I can use to restore the Windows partition.
    So I think I've done it wrongly.
    When I first started the wizard, there was a choice of making an image. I did choose this initially and a message came up and said I had done this but there was nothing else - no information about where this image was and what I should do with it. So I chose "Back up" and that is where I am.
    Even if I do manage to create an image that contains everything, the operating system and the files, how can I restore that to the newly created Boot Camp partition on the other computer if in order to create the Boot Camp partition I need to install a Windows 7 disk?
    It's not that I don't have a valid Windows 7 installation disk, I do but I have to call telephone support to install it because the activation is tied to the first laptop which has issues and needs to be repaired and that's why I am doing the migration of the data. And it's inconvenient to do the telephone thing because it's after hours now and I want to get the clone of the Windows partition before I send off the computer for repairs which I am supposed to do tomorrow morning.
    Plus, I am not sure by using the Windows 7 installation disk and migration of data method that I will have the partition looking exactly the same as before, and that's very important for me because I do internet banking with a foreign bank and it took ages for them to set up the internet banking on my computer, and I am worried that internet banking won't work if I do not have an exact clone of the Windows partition.
    I can go back again and try making an image disk but I still have the problem of using the Paragon program which is a Windows program on the Mac operating system, which I have to use when I am creating the Windows partition. Is there other software from Paragon that I am supposed to get?

    Paragon didn't work for me and their support is quite lousy. I think I just threw $50 away.
    I didn't need another activation key to install Windows 7 on the second computer (MBP). The boot camp installation went smoothly. Once in Windows, I downloaded the software again, Paragon Hard Disk Manager, and then chose "restore". It didn't recognize the archive I had made on the external hard drive no matter what I did. I had to give up after a few tries.
    So I went to the Paragon website to look for answers in the support section.
    They do not respond to emailed support questions for up to three days after you send in the question even if you are a new customer.
    I am tempted to ask for a refund because they have false advertising claiming that their product works when it doesn't.
    The steps are not that hard to follow if you use their Wizard and the Wizard told me that I had done everything right and that I had created an archive and I named it and everything.
    When I went to restore it, nothing. I couldn't even eject the volume. Very strange.
    Their FAQ on Support site is unhelpful and full of technical terminology. Nothing pertains to my problem.
    I really don't want the headache. Besides if all I wanted was to do a backup I could have used the free back up and restore utility in Windows 7 which is meant to be excellent.
    Another Apple Support Discussion member  said they had a similar problem, a problem with the archives, and that even after working with Paragon for seven months, it was still not resolved.
    After a certain period of time after you've bought the product, you have to pay $50 to get support. It's not worth the bother.
    It's a German company and German companies in general are not big into service. I can tell that this is true with this company.
    So having been burned, I really do not want to keep going down this path. I really just want my money back.

  • All files on Boot Camp partition mysteriously erased after 10.5.3 update

    My wife's MBP 2.4 was running 10.5.2 with a Boot Camp installation of Windows XP. The other night she upgraded to 10.5.3 and everything on her Boot Camp partition was erased somehow.
    She spent most of the day working in Windows. During the day someone gave her a usb key with some photos on it that when she plugged it in to her computer something came up in Turkish (she is presently in Turkey) that her friend said she should just close the window and she did. She shut down and switched over to the 10.5.2 install, repaired permissions, and then ran software update to go to 10.5.3. I believe her Boot Camp is updated to the most recent version on the PC side. After the update completed she went to go back into Windows and could not start up in it. It turned out somehow everything on the Boot Camp partition was gone. The partition name was the same as it had been previously and it shouls as all of the space available. None of the material was in the Trash on the Mac side and she had quite a build up in the Trash folder - so it wasn't put in the Trash and then the Trash emptied. It was as if someone had reformatted the partition.
    I would chalk this up to user error when she was in disk utility maybe or someone in her studio screwing around with her computer but the same thing apparently happened to one of her classmates shortly before leaving for Turkey. Anyone heard of this happening or have any thoughts?
    I had her saving all data to the Mac partition so luckily no data was lost - we just need to reinstall the programs to the Windows partition.
    Thanks!

    Nope, that didn't happen. The mbp has been loaded directly with Leopard since release day, and had few problems. I've done all the updates from 10.5.0 without any issues. But it was definitely something in the 10.5.3 update that hosed my video (or just a really, really strange coincidence and/or bad timing).
    It's not just an OS driver, either. This is lower level than that, because I get NO video from a complete startup. There's no grey screen with the apple logo-- it stays completely blank. This almost surely means that the low-level firmware got corrupted or flashed incorrectly. The fact that the OS detects it as something completely different (Intel GMA X3100) supports this idea.
    Thinking back, I did do the update with my laptop screen closed and using a 20" Apple Cinema Display, which is how I use the laptop 90% of the time. And in each of the previous updates, I'm certain they were installed similarly. I mention this, because someone else mentioned having the same issue as me, and noted that the update was done with an external display. Perhaps the firmware update is bugged so that if it doesn't detect the native display, it gets hosed...
    I saw some other suggestions in another thread that sounded interesting. For instance, you can create a self booting CD on another Mac that reflashes the EFI (low level bios) to a factory setting. This could potentially fix it, and I would be willing to try it, if I still had my laptop.
    In the future, just because things like this make me paranoid, I'll probably reboot the mbp and use only the native display before I do any updates...
    Rich

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