Create a bootable disk in mavericks

I want to create a bootable disk in Mavericks. I plan to do this on a LaCie Thunderbolt SSD drive.
Is this possible?

If you want to boot on a disk, you gat to have an OS on it.
First, with the disk manager you resize your disk and then use bootcamp to build it as a bootable device.
The nature of the disk you're using doesn't mater.
regards

Similar Messages

  • Question about creating a bootable disk image in Leopard.

    I have a Powerbook G4 that originally came with OS9, I upgraded to Tiger and recently upgraded to Leopard. The computer is running great but if it should go down what are my bootable options?
    1) Boot from the install disk set then load tiger upgrade then load Leopard upgrade? then reload all my programs back on the G4?
    2) Can I create a bootable disk image and save it on an external hard drive and then boot and reload everything at once? ( I guess by asking this question I really don't understand what the full scope of a bootable disk image is?) can someone explain...
    Which option is better? I am also running __time machine__... what is the safest and easiest way to use time machine to get my software back together after I get the operating system up and running.
    Thanks for the advice

    Your best alternative is to create a bootable clone on an external Firewire drive.
    How to Clone Using Restore Option of Disk Utility
    1. Open Disk Utility from the Utilities folder.
    2. Select the backup or destination volume from the left side list.
    3. Click on the Erase tab in the DU main window. Set the format type to Mac OS Extended (journaled, if available) and click on the Erase button. This step can be skipped if the destination has already been freshly erased.
    4. Click on the Restore tab in the DU main window.
    5. Select the backup or destination volume from the left side list and drag it to the Destination entry field.
    6. Select the startup or source volume from the left side list and drag it to the Source entry field.
    7. Double-check you got it right, then click on the Restore button.
    Of course you can use other software for cloning and backup:
    Backup Software Recommendations
    My personal recommendations are (order is not significant):
    1. Retrospect Desktop (Commercial - not yet universal binary)
    2. Synchronize! Pro X (Commercial)
    3. Synk (Backup, Standard, or Pro)
    4. Deja Vu (Shareware)
    5. PsynchX 2.1.1 and RsyncX 2.1 (Freeware)
    6. Carbon Copy Cloner (Freeware - 3.0 is a Universal Binary)
    7. SuperDuper! (Commercial)
    8. Intego Personal Backup (Commercial)
    9. Data Backup (Commercial)
    For use with Leopard always be sure you use a version of the software that is compatible with Leopard.

  • Create a bootable OS X Mavericks DVD

    Hi,
    I'm running OS X Mountain Lion.
    I'm trying to upgrade to OS X Mavericks.
    I have downloaded the OS X Mavericks, but can not create a bootable OS X Mavericks.
    How do I create a "bootable OS X Mavericks DVD"?
    Thanks in advance.
    Ed

    You cannot use DVD, capacity is not enough.
    Click blue "Reader" button at the end of URL/Address bar of Safari for easy viewing.
    http://arstechnica.com/apple/2013/10/how-to-make-your-own-bootable-os-x-10-9-mav ericks-usb-install-drive/
    Best.

  • Software to create a bootable disk image????

    Hi,
    I need to create a bootable image. I have a ISO file, and need to create a bootable image to install software onto one of my servers. Is there software out there for a Mac that will allow me to create a bootable image?
    Thanks for any input,
    Nigel

    Disk Utility doesn't make for bootable images. However, the command-line utility 'hdiutil' does (use it via Terminal.app. I've made bootable Linux DVD images before that way, but never a bootable Mac image.
    I'm guessing that a bootable Mac image would involve making a disk image file, copying the necessary system files, blessing the image (in Terminal.app, type 'man bless' for more info), and then converting it to a regular ISO image.
    Similarly, I think that all you need to make a bootable USB key/drive is to partition it GPT, copy the system files, and bless it. That said, you can probably use the OS X install media to install the OS on the USB key (it certainly works for USB hard drives) directly. You could even do that, then take an image of the drive (using dd) and convert it to an ISO with hdiutil.

  • Can I create a bootable disk

    Is it possible to create a bootable DVD to use when I need to work on the hard disk?

    The simplest thing would be to clone your boot drive to a backup (which you should be doing anyhow).  Popular backup utilities are Carbon Copy Cloner and Super Duper.
    Alternatively make copy of your installer dvd.  You can do that with Disk Utility.  Here's a small articale on how to do that.
    Make a Bootable Backup Snow Leopard Install Disc

  • How can I create a bootable DISK IMAGE of my PB Internal Drive?

    I would like to make a bootable image of my Hard Drive but without including any Free Space.
    You see all I need on the image are the OSX and the programs, NOT the 60GB of Free Space. Disk Utility however wants to create a 80gb image which includes 60GB of Free Space.
    I would like to use the Bootable image as a source image to use with the RESTORE function in Disk Utility.
    Regards

    You'll need a second machine or an external HDD with Mac OS X installed on it.
    For purposes of this procedure I'll be calling your machine the 'source' and the second machine or your external HDD the 'target'.
    First either boot the source into target mode by holding down the 'T' key while it boots. Once you see the FireWire icon on the screen, let go of the 'T' key and plug the source into the target. If you're going with the external HDD route, boot your source of off your external HDD.
    Now, select the drive of your source machine, and hit Apple-I to bring up the information pane. Down at the bottom (in the permissions area) you'll see a check box labeled "Ignore ownership..." Uncheck that.
    Open up Disk Utility. Select the source drive and run First Aid and Repair Permissions on it.
    Now, select the File menu -> New -> New Disk Image from Folder. You're going to want to hit that big "New Image" button, but don't. Trust me. It'll only cause trouble for you down the road.
    Select the source drive as the source. You can leave everything else the same and click "Image".
    Select the target as the destination. Click Save.
    Wait for a couple of hours (depending on how much stuff you have).
    When it's done, select the Images menu -> Scan image for Restore.
    Select the disk image you just made and click "Scan".
    When that's done you have a restorable image. Just use the restore tab to restore it.
    I've done this literally hundreds of times and it's worked every single time.

  • How do I make a bootable disk for mavericks

    Do I have to do it manually or is there an App which will do it for you?

    Try here: It works, as I have just done it.
    http://osxdaily.com/2013/06/12/make-boot-os-x-mavericks-usb-install-drive/

  • I have installed The Lion through App Store but i'm unable to find it in applications in order to create a bootable disk ? what can i do ?

    What to do ?

    If you've installed it, the installer is no longer there - it self destructs after the install. You will have to downlod it again; when the download is finished, stop the installer and go to the Applications folder. You will find the installer there - save it to a safe place.

  • No option to create bootable disk.

    Intel MBP with Mountain Lion. Using the assistant to bootcamp but in the select tasks menu, I only have two options to download Windows support software or to install Windows 7. I have no option to create a bootable disk, which I need to burn the iso onto a USB hard drive. Is there any way of fixing this? I've tried creating a bootable disk on another laptop but I can't boot from the external disk either.

    As you now the option is unavailable for machines that have optical drives but you can do a tweak in the info.plist that makes it also possible for you too.
    Follow this guide: http://www.codez4mac.com/forum/viewtopic.php?f=212&t=61921
    Or read about it here: https://discussions.apple.com/thread/3435734?start=15&tstart=0

  • Need a simple, free program to make bootable disk image.

    Folks,
    I'm looking all around for a freeware backup to create simple, bootable disk images for both Win7/64 and XP/32 builds. Nothing fancy, just as a disaster backup for the seven computers I'm zeroing out and re-loading for my math class.  My builds are straightforward single-partition, single-disk machines.
    I need to keep these machines clean and the school's network uninfected, so if I suspect an ugly virus or porn has sneeked in on a thumb drive my hope is to zero out the drive and simply re-load. I haven't yet had the pleasure of trying to re-load from a disk image.
    I've got 40 hours into this project and am ready to backup all of them. I'll probably do something rash if another glitch causes me to re-load for the nth time this week.  Freakin' 10 hours a day at it!  (Please - don't even ask about the deadline today in getting my XP Service Pack 2 machines updated before Microsoft ends support for SP2....)
    Luckily, Win 7 has a disk image applet I've used to create a disk image on an external drive and a recovery disk for these builds.  I hope this built-in feature is good enough.
    My three XP builds have no such luxury, so I'm looking for a freeware app to create bootable recovery disks on DVD. The full XP load is only about 10GB, so this is merely three DVD's.
    I've gone all 'round the net, checking out reviews.  Anybody here have a favorite?  I do see a vote for Terabyte in Harm's "Favorite Tools" thread.

    Clonezilla
    Macrium Reflect

  • Creating a Mavericks USB boot drive after the horse has bolted.  Can I create a bootable USB drive from my iMac after installing Mavericks without saving the Install OS X Mavericks.app file?  Do I need to re- download the whole 5.29 Gb again?

    Creating a Mavericks USB boot drive after the horse has bolted.  Can I create a bootable USB drive from my iMac after installing Mavericks without saving the Install OS X Mavericks.app file?  Do I need to re- download the whole 5.29 Gb from the App Store again?  My problem is my 4Gb/month allowance on a 12 month contract.  I cannot purchase a data block from my ISP and although my speed is theoretically slowed to 64k after reaching my 4Gb, it actually ceases to download in reality.

    HI tasclix, it depends what you mean by an OS X boot drive.
    If you want a recovery disk from which you can reinstall (by re-downloading) or recover from a time machine backup, then nbar is correct.
    If, however, you want to boot and run the OS X installer from the USB drive (so that you don't need to download again), then you will need a copy of "Install OS X  Mavericks.app"; see this article:
    http://support.apple.com/kb/HT5856
    Before downloading again, search your system to see if the installer is still there - it's usually in the /Applications folder unless it has been deleted, but check your whole system for it anyway, you never know, you might still have it somewhere.
    Message was edited by: SilverSkyRat

  • Creating a bootable Lion install disc/disk and using it

    Hi all,
    Below is a copy of a method ds store posted for creating a bootable Lion install disc. Some questions:
    1. Is this a polished final version of the process, or are there other steps which could/should be added?
    2. Are there any disadvantages to going this route instead of installing directly onto a Mac?
    3. After creating a Lion install disc/disk via this method and using this saved dmg to install Lion on a Mac, will it set up the Mac exactly the same way it would by downloading/installing directly from the Apple Store (sounds like a "duh" question, but nothing would surprise me with Lion)?
    4. Exact size of this dmg (in case I want to use a flash drive instead)?
    I have been avoiding Lion, hoping it would shape up. I'm still not satisfied and will not run it on my main machines. (Of course ymmv; I'm not looking to be talked into or out of using Lion.) However, I am ******* (hmmm, I guess l-u-s-t-i-n-g is a bad word!) over a new Mac Mini, which will have Lion installed, with no chance of running SL on it due to the new hardware revision. Thus, I'm either going to have to make peace with Lion or forget about a new Mini. I guess I'll have to give Lion a try, but I still don't want to actually run it on any of my machines; thus, I want to run it from an external drive, playing with it as I have time/desire, leading to more questions.
    5. Using the install disc/disk created above, will it set up Lion on a DVD, flash drive, or external HD exactly as it would on a Mac (Recovery Disk, etc.)?
    6. How much space is needed on a destination disc/disk to install Lion?
    7. Is it possible to boot from a different volume, mount this dmg, and install Lion from it?
    8. Any advantages/disadvantages doing it this way (#7) as opposed to booting from the Lion install disc/disk created above?
    9. Another method I'm thinking of using is to (after cloning my SL installation) actually install Lion on my MBP over my current SL installation (shudders violently ), clone it to an external HD, then erase/zero the MBP's HD and clone my SL install back to my MBP. Has anyone done this? Again, I'm concerned that Lion will do something goofy and leave some kind of footprint behind, like maybe messing with firmware; cloning my SL installation back to my internal HD would not reverse a firmware change.
    10. Any constructive suggestions on anything related to any of these steps is welcome!
    Yes, I've searched and read a number of responses, but I'm hoping much of the "discovery" phase is over, and there are some "solid"/refined answers by now. My bottom line is to be able to play with Lion without having to depend on it.
    Thanks!
    Backup Lion Bootable 10.7  Disk
    Purchase and download Lion from the Mac App Store on any Lion compatible Mac running Snow Leopard.
    Right click on “Mac OS X     Lion”     installer and choose the option to     “Show Package Contents.”
    Inside the Contents folder     that     appears you will find a SharedSupport     folder and inside the     SharedSupport folder     you will find the “InstallESD.dmg.” This is         the Lion boot disc image we have all been waiting for.
    Copy “InstallESD.dmg” to         another folder like the Desktop.
    Launch Disk Utility and click     the     burn button.
    Select the copied “InstallESD.dmg” as the image to     burn,     insert a standard sized 4.7 GB DVD,     and wait for your new Lion Boot     Disc to come     out toasty hot.
    With this disc you can boot any Lion compatible Mac, andinstall10.7 just like you installed previous version of Mac OS X. Youcan even use Disk Utility's Restore function to image your Lion bootdisc image onto a external drive suitable for performing a cleaninstall on a optical-drive-less MacBook Air, or Mac mini server.

    tjk wrote:
    5. Using the install disc/disk created above, will it set up Lion on a DVD, flash drive, or external HD exactly as it would on a Mac (Recovery Disk, etc.)?
    DVD: no, flash drive: if it's large enough, external hard drive: yes
    6. How much space is needed on a destination disc/disk to install Lion?
    Whatever Apple minimum requirements are.
    7. Is it possible to boot from a different volume, mount this dmg, and install Lion from it?
    possibly, never tried it, it is a dmg so it's a volume all to itself, except it can't install to the same media it's on and can only install to something formatted with GUID and a OS X extended format, like a flash drive or hard drive large enough.
    DVD's can't be formatted with a GUID EFI partiton
    8. Any advantages/disadvantages doing it this way (#7) as opposed to booting from the Lion install disc/disk created above?
    Speed limitation of the media and bus your using, USB 1 is a slower than a hard drive with 7,200 RPM on a Firewire 800 port
    9. Another method I'm thinking of using is to (after cloning my SL installation) actually install Lion on my MBP over my current SL installation (shudders violently ), clone it to an external HD, then erase/zero the MBP's HD and clone my SL install back to my MBP.
    The problems come from installing Lion over a existing Snow Leopard setup that isn't quite pristine enough for Lions quirkyness, has tweaks or other software installed that breaks 10.7, requiring you to fix it.
    You can try it, you've got the 10.6 clone to option boot off of and restore from.
    Cloning back and forth is a performance enhancer, not a problem solver.
    Ideally it's best to clone 10.6, disconnect, zero and install 10.6, same user name, then up to 10.6.8, then to 10.7, then install programs from fresh sources/copies and then files returned last from backup off the clone (no migration assistant or it brings trouble back)
    This will ensure the best possible performance possible with the least trouble as everything is wiped and installed fresh. Only problem being your files it there is something wrong with them, which is easy to remedy to the cause as it's the only thing not pristine.
    Once you've got a pristine system, then clone that twice, once for a immediate update other for falling back a week, two weeks or even a month back.
    Has anyone done this? Again, I'm concerned that Lion will do something goofy and leave some kind of footprint behind, like maybe messing with firmware; cloning my SL installation back to my internal HD would not reverse a firmware change.
    Firmware is hardware specific not OS specific, of course it's possible a old version of a OS won't work with newer firmware, like 10.5 for instance perhaps because Apple has dropped all work on PPC code.
    10.6 and 10.7 are just fine with most all present firmware, however there will be a time where a new firmware update could disallow 10.6, likely when iOS X 10.8 Bobcat arrives.
    10. Any constructive suggestions on anything related to any of these steps is welcome! 
    Yes, I've searched and read a number of responses, but I'm hoping much of the "discovery" phase is over, and there are some "solid"/refined answers by now. My bottom line is to be able to play with Lion without having to depend on it.
    Cloning only clones the Lion OS X Partition, not the Lion Recovery Partition.
    A comptuer that is Lion capable will boot off a media with no Lion Recovery Partition.
    You need to create a Lion Disk Assistant USB which copies your Lion Recovery Partition.
    It's in my post.
    https://discussions.apple.com/message/16276201#16276201

  • How to create a bootable copy of MacOs 10.5.8 as a start up disk

    I have leopard  installed on my main powermac G5 plus my two Powerbook laptops.
    The install disk works fine in the slot loading laptops but when I put it in the disk drive of the G5 then it isn't being read. I can hear the drive  trying to read it but it eventually spits it out.
    I was therefore looking to make a bootbale version from the disc while it is in the laptop so that I can use this version to do a restart and permissions repair.
    Firstly is there any reason why this disk is not able to be read by the drive in the G5? It reads almost every other disk I insert and this behaviour is unique to the one disk I want to work more than most.
    I reckon if I can repair the permissions on the start up disk then the chances are that the drive may accept the Os disk. Maybe.
    Secondly how do I go about creating a bootable start up device on a usb stick or such like from the existing disk?
    Any help would be most welcome.

    Trouble is, most PPC Macs will not boot from USB, but if you wish to try... clone the Install Disc to a Flash drive or such, or if big enough Install OSX to the flash drive, then he hard part...
    You need a USB2 drive with an OS X system installed (I am using 10.4.3, though any I think will work as far as what the machine can boot). As you know, there are many different ways of getting a system on a USB drive; contact me if you have any questions on how to do that, or search macosxhints.com for that information.
    Connect the drive to your machine, and find out which partition the OS X system is installed on. I usually find this by going to Disk Utility and looking at the info for the partition on the USB disk with OS X. That is, disk2s3 is usually for a USB disk with no OS 9 drivers installed that is the second disk disk. disk3s9 might be a USB disk with OS 9 drivers that is considered the third disk. There are other ways of finding this out, but in my case, my disk is disk2s3 (the 3 on the end will come into play soon).
    Start up the machine in Open Firmware (this is the fun part). Hold Command-Option-F-F right after the machine is turned on.
    Here is the moment of truth. If this step does not work, I have had very limited success getting a machine to boot off USB2. In Open Firmware, type devalias, and you should get a list as output. In this list, look for ud, usually below where you see hd (ud is "USB Disk," I presume). If found, it will usually have beside it /pci@f2000000/usb@1/disk1, or something similar. Again, if you see this, I have not had this fail yet.
    Now type printenv boot-device, which will usually get you output of boot-device hd:,\\:tbxi. (See where this is going yet?)
    Type setenv boot-device ud:3,\\:tbxi where the number after the colon corresponds to that partition number we found in step two. You should get an ok back.
    Type printenv boot-device, and you should see the change displayed already. Something like:
    boot-device        ud:3,\\:tbxi        hd:,\\:tbxi"
    http://hints.macworld.com/article.php?story=20060301112336384
    You can also try the Install Disc in a PB, boot the PB in t mode, boot the G5 holding the Option/alt key down & see if the Install Disc in the PB shows up as a boot choice.

  • Hi all, i want create a bootable Mavericks  USB key (8G) but installEDS. dmg does'nt exist in my HD. How can i dowload this. Thank you

    Hi All
    I want to create a bootable Mavericks  USB key (8G) but installEDS. dmg does'nt exist in my HD. How can i dowload this?
    Thank you

    You just want to create a Mavericks USB thumb drive, right? If so, you don't need to erase Mavericks and you don't need to reinstall Snow Leopard.
    While you're in Mavericks and at your Desktop, open the App Store. Go to the Purchases tab and click on the Download button on the right hand side across from OS X Mavericks. This will start the download of the OS X Mavericks installer. When it finishes and you see a screen that wants you to continue, go up to the menu bar and QUIT the installer (Install OS X). Do not click the Continue button.

  • Can someone install Lion from a bootable disk created by me?

    Hi all,
    don't misunderstand me, I'm not asking for something "prohibited". I purchased Lion on day one, then I created a bootable USB HD, formatted my MB hard disk and finally installed the OS.
    Now a friend of mine doesn't have a full speed internet connection, so he's asking me if there's a proper way to install Lion on his iMac. To solve the problem, I was guessing if I can lend him my bootable HD so that, after the full installation and after entering his Apple ID, he could be charged in that moment for his licence. Do you know if this procedure works?
    Thanks a lot,
    Andrea
    Italy

    Certainly. Your good intentions are laudable; however, what you proposed is not possible: you pay = you download/install; that is the only way it will work. Anything else is illegal.
    Here are a couple of links:
    iTunes/MAS terms:
    http://www.apple.com/legal/itunes/us/terms.html#SALE
    Lion SLA (software license agreement) - click on Lion for an automatic download:
    http://www.apple.com/legal/sla/
    Excerpt:
    B. License from Mac App Store. If you obtained a license for the Apple Software from the Mac App Store,then subject to the terms and conditions of this License and as permitted by the Mac App Store Usage Rulesset forth in the App Store Terms and Conditions (http://www.apple.com/legal/itunes/ww/) (“Usage Rules”), youare granted a limited, non-transferable, non-exclusive license:
    to download, install, use and run for personal, non-commercial use, one (1) copy of the AppleSoftware directly on each Apple-branded computer running Mac OS X Snow Leopard or Mac OS XSnow Leopard Server (“Mac Computer”) that you own or control;
    and:
    You may not rent, lease, lend, sell, redistribute or sublicense the Apple Software.

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