Can I create a ntfs partition on my mac hd

I am new to the MBP community and so far, I like it.  It has taken some doing by I have it running my engineering software in a Parallels VM.  What I would like to do is partition my 1TB SSD into two drives.  One that stays my Mac OS drive and one that is formatted NTFS to be used as a data drive for my windows VM.  Can I do this or am I dreaming?
Thanks,
DAVE

You will need to install third party software on your Mac in order for it to write to NTFS.
NTFS is not native to Mac OS X and will cause problems with some application not being able to handles the storage on an NTFS formatted disk drive correctly.
My suggestion to format as HFS+ Extended with GUID portion mapping if it is only going to be used on the Mac.
If you wish to use on both then format as exFAT instead.
Instead of formatting one drive for both I suggest you get one drive for each platform. Format the Windows drive as NTFS and the Mac drive a HFS+ Extended with GUID partition mapping. That solution will cause you far fewer problems then any attempt to format a single drive for both platforms.

Similar Messages

  • Can I create a Bootcamp partition without installing Windows immediately?

    I have a clone of my bootcamp that contains Windows 7, but can't restore to the Clone without a Bootcamp partition.
    I am running Lion.
    Is there anyway to create the bootcamp partition without the Windows Install Disk?...if so, I could just restore my Cloned Bootcamp onto the Bootcamp Parition.
    Thank you,
    AK

    Wait...after I hit send, I realized you had cloned your boot camp parition with winclone.  My bad...well, you can always try putting the cloned partition on the exFAT partition, if possible.  I think what I had to do when I bought a new hard drive was to boot into the old had drive.  I then attached the new drive with a handy universal drive kit (http://eshop.macsales.com/item/NewerTech/U3NVSPATA/).  I think I used iPartition to create an NTFS partition on my new drive. I then copied my cloned Windows partition onto the new drive.

  • I have created a new partition on the Mac HD for Lion as I would like to dual boot. Do I need to install Snow Leopard on that partition before installing Lion? If so, can I use one of my Time Machine backups to do this?

    I have created a new partition on the Mac HD for Lion as I would like to dual boot. Do I need to install Snow Leopard on that partition before installing Lion? If so, can I use one of my Time Machine backups to do this?

    zoominnana wrote:
    Can I set up 2 different time capsule backups? one for the lion partition and one for the snow leopard partition?
    No, you can't partition a Time Capsule's internal HD.  Both partitions will back up to the same sparse bundle. keeping the backups for each partition separate.
    Time Machine will not take the two OSX partitions as two different computers, but for best results, exclude the Snow Leopard drive from backups on the Lion partition, and exclude the Lion partition from backups on the Snow Leopard partition.
    There may be some files on the Lion partition that Time Machine on Snow Leopard won't like, among other things.  See #10 in  Time Machine - Frequently Asked Questions for details.

  • How can I create a new partition to install Windows 7 by not using Bootcamp

    How can I create a new partition to install Windows 7 by not using Bootcamp?

    If you want to dualboot you have to use boot camp i think. I think you have already a full disc and cannot make another partition I'm I right?
    Your question seems a bit blurry so I'm giving you a general tip here.
    If you want to just try the beta you can always use Sun's "Virtualbox".

  • Can i create mcx for shut down properly mac when battery is less 5 %

    Hi hello
    Can i create mcx for shut down properly mac when battery is less 5 % ?
    Thanks for your reply

    You can create a mailing list by using the "Groups" feature of Address Book. Simply select "New Group" from the File menu. Name the group, and drag the contacts you need into the group.
    In Mail, open up Preferences (under the Mail menu), and click on "Composing". Then make sure that "When sending to a group, show all member addresses" is unchecked.
    The auto reply is a feature that is better done on your mail server, as you Mac can only send an auto reply when it is on, with the Mail application open. If you use dot Mac, you can set up a vacation responder through the web, and you can leave your computer switched off.
    If you really want to leave your Mac on when you are on holiday, you can set up a mail rule (Preferences, Rules).

  • Can't create boot camp partition on new macbook pro

    Hi all. Having an odd issue installing boot camp on my 2011 Macbook Pro. When I try and create a partition it gives me the following error message:
    "The disk cannot be partitioned because some files cannot be moved."
    It goes on to tell me that I need to reformat my drive and try again. Seems a little extreme and even worse, I'm wondering if this will work considering that I still have over 600GB of free space available on my drive. Thought I'd post here and see if anyone has had a similar issue before harassing support.

    If you look at the pdf guide in Boot Camp Assistant, step one is to backup. Common sense before altering, installing new OS, and should be required of anyone even if just updating Mac OS.
    Now, having fragmented space: Apple never considers defragging free space and says Mac OS X defrags some files, and that having more than 25% free should not impact Mac OS performance.
    So I think that covers Apple support for their own OS.
    When you install updates, applications and such, the patches are compressed, expanded, space is fragmented, and some vendors often choose to write their updates to the far end of the drive in order to leave high access for other portions.
    the best and perhaps only way to move files is to boot from another hard drive, rather than pick yourself up by your own bootstraps and try to shuffle files.
    I would never recommend using only built in tools. I don't advise Apple DU First Aid as the sole utility for maintenance and repairs for Mac HFS file system. nor would I use TimeMachine alone. They are free and there and better than nothing.
    Create a bootable backup clone of Mac OS for one.
    Repair your internal drive.
    Try using Boot Camp Assistant; or iDefrag; or Paragon CampTune (yes, it can be used to install Windows partition as well as resize partitions now or later if needed). Does a better job.
    The use of x86 Intel cpus opened up new possibilities. Some unintended or not foreseen I guess too. A competition challenge to see who could install Windows on a Mac first and easiest took place in 2006. Apple came in later with their beta. but Boot Camp Assistant has always been a weak, lame, partitioning tool.
    Macs and users using gparted and other tools? and try to stop the hand-holding concept? unlikely.
    A better tool? there should be, and not only that, it really needs to just be rolled into Disk utilty as one more feature and tab along with other tools - so integrated and if you want to create, resize, remove an MBR slice and Windows partition, you can.
    Paragon lets you create a partition, and also they have their own NTFS driver so you don't need to format BOOTCAMP (MSDOS/FAT32) during the install phase later.
    Of course installing Windows in a VM doesn't have all the trouble of dual boot native install and given RAM and processor resources, can be more than functional enough for many.
    With Windows 7 you can install and have a Windows-only computer, remove all traces of Mac OS (and boot OS X off 2nd drive, either with two SSD + hard drive or eSATA or Intel 'Bolt' interface as well as FW800.

  • Can't write to NTFS partition [RESOLVED]

    I want to use an NTFS partition to contain all of my data.
    I created a directory in ~ and mounted the NTFS partition to that directory.
    I can read it but I can't write to it. 
    How do I get NTFS write support?  Do I have to manually load a kernel module or something like that?
    Last edited by Shagbag (2007-04-05 05:36:12)

    http://wiki.archlinux.org/index.php/NTFS_Write_Support

  • How can I erase NTFS partition on my Mac

    When I tried to install Windows XP on my Macmini BootCamp created NTFS partition. You know it was a bad idea because XP killed MacOS
    So I installed MacOS again and now I want to erase NTFS partition but Disk Utility can't do this
    Help!
    Mac mini   Mac OS X (10.4.6)  

    Hi Warder, Welcome to Apple Discussions.
    Disk Utility cannot unpartition a drive without erasing the entire drive. There are some utilities that can unpartition on the fly DriveGenius is one. (I'm not sure if it is Universal yet) Prosoft is a trusted software vendor but I would still do this "at your own risk".
    -mj
    [email protected]

  • Windows 7 setup can't create or see partition

    Hi all, I am trying to install Windows 7 x64 SP1 on my late 13 MBP.  I used BC assistant to mount the iso on a 8gb usb.  I have used two different iso files, one from digital river and one from torrents (its not a 'cracked' one or anything, I just couldn't find how to get one from Microsoft.  This one is supposedly the same as the one from microsoft.)  I plan to get a license key from my university once I make sure I can install it. Anyway, I can mount the iso and download bootcamp files using the assistant.  I can make the partition using BC assistant as well, and I set aside 32gb for the Windows partition.  After it partitions, it reboots into the Windows setup.
    In windows setup, I pick windows 7 professional 64-bit from the list, hit next until I get to the part where you select the partition (of the four) on which to install Windows.  When I select the BOOTCAMP one, there is the same little dialog text at the bottom as if I had selected a mac partition, saying that it can't install and the partition must be formatted or something.  So I select the BOOTCAMP partition and press Format.  When I press Next, a message appears saying that "Setup was unable to create a new system partition or locate an existing system partition.  See the Setup log files for more information."  
    I have also tried:  unplugging all USB peripherals
    using the right instead of left USB port
    not formatting the drive and pressing 'next' only
    deleting the bpptcamp partition from within windows setup and then forming a new partition and then formatting that
    using both ISO images
    selecting each of the four editions I can choose from (home, home premium, pro, and ultimate)
    repairing/verifying the mac HD and permissions
    Note that every time I re-attempt, I am forced to remove the windows partition and recreate the partition using BC assistant.  In other words, if I quit windows setup and restart, hold down option, and select the windows USB to boot, a different windows setup starts up.  It is similar but has slightly different screens than before, and after I press "install now" (a button absent from the first setup) an error message pops up saying that a CD/DVD driver is missing and I must locate it.  When I try to locate the driver, which I would think would be in the bootcamp folder on the USB, it can't find the USB!  Under My Computer all I see are the C: drive (inaccessible from here) and X:, which I think is the windows partition because it has some of the windows system files on it.  I can't get past this stage of looking for a driver without completely removing the partition and then rebuilding the windows partition using BC assistant.
    What do I do?
    If it helps, in the mac os disk utility I can look at the Info for the windows partition, and in the properties it says "Owners Enabled: No, Can be Formatted: No, Bootable: No".  Does that matter?
    Thank you!

    I don't have a hub, I will try a usb 2.0 though when I get a chance.  Diskutil list gives:
    #:                       TYPE NAME                    SIZE       IDENTIFIER
       0:      GUID_partition_scheme                        *251.0 GB   disk0
       1:                        EFI EFI                     209.7 MB   disk0s1
       2:                  Apple_HFS Macintosh HD            218.1 GB   disk0s2
       3:                 Apple_Boot Recovery HD             650.0 MB   disk0s3
       4:       Microsoft Basic Data                         32.0 GB    disk0s4

  • Can i create a disk partition and install SL onto it from my disks I got with my iMac

    I want to start learning how to use the Terminal and how to start inputting and outputting data via the Terminal.  I thought that I could create a small partition on my hard drive and then install Snow Leopard onto that partition (so that while I was learning how to use Terminal commands I would not wreck anything.)
    It then occurred to me that by doing this I would also learn how to install OS X.
    Can I do this?
    Does the disks I got with my iMac have a limited number of installs?  Because if they do I don't want to use them up in case I have to reinstall at any point in the future.
    Do those disks have a full version of OS X Snow Leopard on them, or are they just for repairing the version on my system?
    If I was to create a partition, when I delete that partition will I automatically get back the space?
    Is what I want to do hard?
    Can someone please give me some guidance before I begin doing this?
    Many thanks
    Jason

    The OS X Install Disc that came with your computer is just that a full licensed copy of OS X for your system, it can be installed as many times as you would like but it will ONLY work on your machine. The only limitation to those discs that I'm aware of is they are machine specific.
    My suggestion would be to get an external HD and use the Install Disc to install OS X on the external. Don't get a cheap USB drive, get the fastest drive (at the moment that would be Firewire 800) you can get. Drives I'd recommend are Lacie Quadra d2 series, G-Tech G-Series and OWC (www.macsales.com) Mercury Elite Pro series. This would be a much wiser strategy than partitioning  your internal drive, that way if you real create a major mess it won't affect your internal HD.
    Roger

  • Can't create a new partition

    Hi,
    I want to create a new partition as I have done before a few times.
    Now, the problem is, that I get an error message, when I'm trying to create one.
    Unfortunetally the error message is in German, so I try to translate it:
    "Partitioning failed
    During partitioning is occurred an error:
    MediaKit reports: System has for the desired process not enough memory"
    You can see the screenshot under following link:
    http://www.apfeltalk.de/forum/partitionen-zusammenf-hren-t174556.html
    The point is: I have 2 GB RAM and more than 100 GB on my harddisc free!
    Probably this problem occured with Mac OS X 10.5.5.
    Does anybody know an solution?
    How can I contact Apple to inform them about this problem and get some help?!
    Best regards
    Stefano

    Your translation is probably a little off and rather than meaning there's not enough RAM it means there's not enough contiguous hard drive space to make a partition of that size. I'm assuming that you are trying to partition a drive that already has data on it. If I am right, before the drive can be partitioned, it has to be defragmented so that the drive has no data in a group of tracks equal to the size you requested. It is possible to request a partition size that looks like it should fit but there's one or more files that cannot be moved out to make space for it. That, is what I think has happened to you.
    If I am right you can try defragging your hard drive with a program dedicated to defragmenting and optimizing. Some people have had success doing this and others have used such a program and still couldn't partition their drive. You can clone the drive to another hard drive (SuperDuper! and CarbonCopyCloner are two good cloning programs) and then turn around and clone right back to original. This will work because as the files are copied to the target drive they will all be placed in contiguous sectors so the drive will be completely defragmented. Or you can try making a smaller partition.

  • Can't create a 3rd partition in Disk Utility

    Long story short I have used Boot Camp to get Windows, so I have 2 partitions. But, I need to create another partition to install another copy of Windows on it, but Disk Utility has grayed out the '+' to allow me to create a new partition. All I can do is delete the 'BOOTCAMP' partition which I don't want to do. I tried another way by going into Boot Camp Assistant and installing Windows through there. I have a bootable USB drive and I know how to install it, all that's stopping me is the partition issue.
    Any ideas?
    If it helps, I'm using a Late 2013 MacBook Pro with a 15" Retina Display, 2.5 GHz, 512 GB SSD, 16 GB RAM and a NVIDIA GT 750 M.
    Thank you for your help

    Good thing to mention that, I forgot to do that.
    Unfortunately it did not help.. The screen to remove the existing Boot Camp partition does not pop up, it just tries to create the new Boot Camp partition.
    The partition I'm trying to create it 150GB. The 50GB mentioned above was on the stock Fujitsu 250GB disk.
    Edit:
    I'm actually trying to avoid using Boot Camp Assistant.. I became to dislike the utility due to problems creating a partition on my previous HD.
    I would like to create a partition using Disk Utility and then install Windows 7 by selecting that DVD to boot from.
    Thank you for the tip though, I'll post it there as well!

  • How can I create a recovery partition to use Find my Mac?

    I want to activate Find my Mac on my MBP.  The iCloud system preference says I don't have a recovery partition that's required for it.  It apparently didn't install when I upgraded to Mountain Lion.
    How can I retroactively create a recovery partition?  There are no other partitions on the drive (other than the Macintosh HD, of course).
    Thanks.
    Rob

    FIRST, assuming you do not have another Mac of the same model with a working restore, I would suggest using your Lion, mountaint lion or Maverick install to create a bootable system on a flash drive.  You will need a DMG image created with Disk Utility from that stick to recreate the restore partition on your mac.
    Once you create the bootable USB stick, Use it to log in and follow the below process to back up the restore partition.  Then, save the DMG back up anywhere and finish the walk through on your normal operating partition.
    Close Disk Utility if it is open.
    Open Terminal
    Enter the command below
    defaults write com.apple.DiskUtility DUDebugMenuEnabled -bool true
    Now open Disk Utility and pull down the Debug menu
    Click Show Every Partition
    Now, select the Recovery Partition and create a new image.
    NOTE: The Recovery Partition will need to be made in Read Only format if you wish to restore the image normally with disk utility or by software such as Deploy Studio.  If you take an image with Deploy Studio and want it to restore the Recovery Drive normally, you will need to adjust the Work Flow for Image Capture to use the Read Only format.  It will slow things down.  If you dont use the read only format, the .dmg will not scan properly. This is most likely because the recovery drive already hosts compressed files. That said, this guide WILL restore from even a compressed .dmg image.  HERE IS THE WALK THROUGH FOR RESTORING A SCANNED READ ONLY FORMATTED .DMG.
    Copy the Recover HD.DMG image to a flash drive
    The following must be on an Administrator account
    Next, Log on to the admin account of the computer you wish to restore the MLTI Recovery Partition.
    Copy the Recovery HD.DMG from your Flash drive to the HD
    Enter the following command in terminal
    diskutil list
    If there is no partition for the restore drive listed, then use Disk Utility to create a GUID Partition keeping in mind the size of the original restore partition. (19 gigs for the MLTI Version of the restore drive)
    Open Terminal and enter the following command
    sudo asr -noverify -source (PATH FOR DMG IMAGE HERE) -target (PATH FOR RECOVERY HD PARTITION HERE) -erase -noprompt
    NOTES: You must replace the () and everything in between with the respective path. You can simple drag and drop the source (your .dmg) and your target (the drive to be restored) while you are typing in terminal.
    Enter admin password
    In terminal Type the following command
    diskutil list
    note which disk and slice is the restore partition. It should be /dev/disk0s3, but it could vary a bit.
    Now, run the following in terminal
    sudo asr adjust --target /dev/disk0s3 --settype "Apple_Boot"
    REMEMBER: you may need to replace /dev/disk0s3 with your new restore partition's designation.
    Enter Admin Password when prompted
    Restart.
    Don't forget to enter the following terminal command into the machine you took the Recovery HD image from.
    defaults write com.apple.DiskUtility DUDebugMenuEnabled -bool false

  • Boot Camp can't create a Windows partition

    Hello,
    I'm trying to create a new partition to install Windows 7 on, but I am unable to do so.
    At first I tried to do this with Boot Camp Assistant, but it didn't work.
    Then I tried to create a FAT partition with Disk Utility, which didn't work either.
    So I verified and repaired the disk, tried to create the partition again, yet it still didn't work.
    I verified and repaired the disk and tried to create the partition while running the OS, in Safe Mode and from the Mac OSX Install DVD.
    Neither of them worked.
    I noticed while running the OS, the info of the HD said the capacity is 749.81 GB, while checking that from the Mac OSX Install DVD it only says about 700 GB (I mentioned 698.6 GB).
    Strange..
    It might also be important to mention that I recently (2 days ago) I installed a new HD: Western Digital Scorpio Black 750 GB, and today I swapped my 2x 2GB RAM for 2x 4GB RAM (Samsung).
    On my previous HD, the Fujitsu 250GB, this proces was no problem at all. I installed W7 on that drive just a week ago.
    I made a clone of the Fujitsu HD and "back-upped" it to my new WD HD. The W7 partition on the Fujitsu HD was 50GB, which is the difference in capacity mentioned above. I'm not sure if there's a link here..
    I've got a MacBook Pro from mid 2009.
    I'm not sure what to do next... I'm stuck!
    Any help is greatly appreciated!

    Did you do an upgrade to Leopard? If so, some files may be scattered over your HD, making it impossible for BC to find a single contiguous area on the drive.
    Also, be sure you did not have eDisk installed - that's the thing from the TechTools disk that comes with AppleCare.
    This is not an uncommon problem. It's not just you.
    If you have a complete backup of Leopard, you can use the DU to make a single partition. You may be lucky and not lose any data, but backup anwyay.
    In DU, repair the disk, if necessary and verify/repair permissions.
    Once you have done this try again.
    If BC still fails, you will need to erase the HD and then copy everything back from the backup.
    I always suggest a bootable clone for the backup and be sure to test it first to see it works.

  • Can't create a windows partition

    I'm trying to create a windows partition through bootcamp but it refuses to do so because I'm guessing that it's scanning permission that need to be repaired. The message states that I need to run disk utility.
    The problem though is, I can't do anything about the permissions cause of a known "bug" (??) on leopard.
    It states 3-4 permission need repairing but they can't be repaired. Others have that issue but they probably had windows installed before this happening.
    here is an image of disk utility.
    http://idisk.mac.com/dkatsafouros/Public/permissions.jpg

    Alright I solved the problem. It was a repair disk and a repair permissions check.
    Everything is fine now

Maybe you are looking for

  • Receiving null pointer exception

    Created the following program to read and output a file: import java.io.*; import java.util.StringTokenizer; public class ReadSource { public static void main(String[] arguments) {      StringTokenizer st1;      try {           FileReader file = new

  • User Exit / BAdI to update the pricing conditions of the Purchase Order

    Hello SAPients, This is my requirement: "Copy the Pricing Conditions from the Shipment Cost Document (VI01 / VI02) to the automatically generated Purchase Order". I'm using the enhancement V54U0002 (Function Module EXIT_SAPLV54U_002) to EXPORT  the v

  • Connect tv remote to laptop

    I have model  G5N44UA#ABA and want to be able to use a remote control when watching tv via my computer

  • Oracle client with Citrix Xenapp 64 bit

    Hi, I have below queries : 1) Can we install Oracle 9i client 32 bit on Citrix Xenapp 64 bit machine ? 2) Can we install Oracle 9i client 64 bit on Citrix Xenapp 64 bit machine ? 3) Can we install Oracle 11g client 32 bit on Citrix Xenapp 64 bit mach

  • Trigger and Gate Only Returns One Channel

    Hello all, I am trying to write a VI that will run in the background and start writing some data to a file when it detects a signal. For detecting the signal, the VI uses the "Trigger and Gate" express VI to see when the input voltage goes above a tr