Disk Utility/Migration

Hi gang,
I'm trying to migrate from an OS 10.4.11 Mac to an OS 10.6.4 MacBook.
I was unsuccessful with the Migration Assistant, having tried the tips located here @ http://support.apple.com/kb/TS2664, so I'm now trying the last tip wherein I copy the HD to an external, USB HD.
I reboot my Mac w/ the system disk and call up Disk Utility. But when I select my HD and click "New Image", the window that pops up is asking me for an image to CONVERT (??). This prevents me from selecting my Mac's HD (or anything else, for that matter).
Ironically, when I do this running the Disk Utility from my Mac's HD, it prompts me to SAVE, which is what I expect. Unfortunately, I cannot continue on using the Disk Ut from my HD because it complains that the HD is in use.
So then, how can I create an image of my HD onto my external HD? Why doesn't the Disk Utility on my system disk (which came with the Mac) work as expected wherein the one on my HD does? Was there an update? If so, how do I propagate this update to my system disk?
Thanks, in advance!

Hi there,
Get carbon copy cloner to make an exact copy of your old HD to the New one...
http://www.bombich.com/software/ccc.html
SuperDuper...
http://www.shirt-pocket.com/SuperDuper/

Similar Messages

  • I know my back up exists I can see it on disk utility but migration and disc utility wont work to restore my back up on my new hard drive it shows up with the message "this disk is already in use" i am so done. someone pls help me

    I know my back up exists I can see it on disk utility but migration and disc utility wont work to restore my back up on my new hard drive it shows up with the message "this disk is already in use" i am so done. someone pls help me

    Otherwise software may be attempted to access the drive. The the computer up in Safe Mode by holding shift when you turn it on. Also be sure to power off and on the hard drive itself.

  • Using Disk Utility to Migrate TM to a New Hard Drive

    I'm posting this for search/google posterity:
    Along with SuperDuper and CCC, plain old Disk Copy works perfectly for migrating a TM backup from one HD to a new, empty one. What I did:
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    2. Go to Restore tab of Disk Utility
    3. Set existing TM HD as the source, and the new HD as the destination
    4. Click Restore button. Depending on the source HD size, this could take a while. My 400 GB source drive took about an 1.5 hours, with verification.
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    This is great info. I use a 160gb portable drive with my MacBook Pro as my TM device. I have a fear that if anything happens to my laptop, the portable drive would be lost too since I carry them together. Ideally, I would like to periodically backup the portable drive to the Maxtor I have at home too and this seems like the easiest way to do it.
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  • Migration Assistant fails to recognize a Time Machine disk (itself migrated using Disk Utility)

    So I outgrow my Time Machine disk. I listen to the advice (repeated in multiple places) that one can simply use Disk Utility's Restore tab, select the old time machine disk as source and the new one as destination, and click restore to copy block-by-block, then rename the disk.
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    But now I am in trouble. I am also outgrowing my MacBook disk. I put a larger disk in and install Snow Leopard from scratch. Now Migration Assistant does not recognize the new Time Machine disk (perpetually spinning wheel). Renaming the disk to the old name does not help. M.A. does recognize the old Time Machine disk, but that means manually managing the changes (and giving up on the larger TM disk). I reinstall Snow Leopard and do not miss that time the option to restore from Time Machine, but it still does not see the new Time Machine disk.
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    Thanks, Pondini, but the Time Machine disk passes the Disk Utility repairs and only the spinning wheel was visible under both the Setup Assistant and the Migration Assistant.
    I now have some good news, and some bad.
    First the good news: Lion's Migration Assistant offers the option to copy user (and other) files from the previous OSX disk, not just the Time Machine disk. If this option was already in Snow Leopard, then I missed it.
    Now the bad news..
    I spent several hours reading (Pondini's and others') suggestions to ensure that my Time Machine is as seamless as possible, namely, for the next backup to be incremental. No luck: all user data are copied. Until the interface of Time Machine stops trying so hard to shield us naive users from making decisions on our own, one idea is to keep the iPod and pictures/video collection backed-up by the straight-forward rsync. Then whether Time Machine is really incremental will not matter, and in any case a spare copy of the documents you wrote by hand is nice in case the some blocks of the disk fail.
    But I may have been the one who messed it. In Preferrences \ Time Machine \ Options... I excluded all users except the user "Admin" who restored the user accounts. The idea was to test first whether the mildest user will get a full backup. It may be that Time Machine does not look in the history to see if a given file or set of files already have some copy in the past. If a file does not exist in the very last backup, it is saved to the Time Machine disk.
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  • MacBook Pro Stuck in Recovery Loop; Disk Utility Error

    I am getting the error: Disk Utility Stopped Repairing "disk0s2" - says disk utility can't repair the disk and I will need to reformat the disk and restore my files. This appears to be the startup disk (could be wrong) - as I am currently in recovery mode and any time I reboot, I am taken back to recovery mode and there are no start-up disks available to be selected.
    When I run Disk Utility on my Internal HD (or what appears to be - this is 250 GB Hitachi) - I get the all clear that everything appears to be working correctly.
    I do have TMbackups saved to a NAS. My MacBook Pro has been running very slowly as of recent (slight boost after upgrading to Yosemite, but then returned to slow performance).
    I am running OS X Server on it - and have considered migrating that to a Mac Mini (yet to be purchased) - but want to get a better idea of options before I pull that trigger. I also want to make sure my MacBook Pro is recoverable and can still be used.
    1. What is the risk of reformatting just the startup disk "disk0s2"? Is that even possible?
    2. Is MacBook Pro in need of service at the apple store? Or can this be completed by me? (I have above average ability, but no wizard)
    3. My logic on best practice to recover MBP and then add Mac Mini, migrating OS X Server to it: (all recommendations/suggestions welcome)
    a. reformat MBP startup disk
    b. restore TMbackup
    c. use migration wizard to migrate OS X Server to Mac Mini
    d. reformat MBP again, starting from scratch and install fresh copy of Yosemite
    I had also considered just a fresh build of OS X Server on a new Mac Mini and starting fresh with the MBP. I don't use a ton of services on OS X Server so think my rebuild would be less time intensive than most.
    Appreciate all the feedback.

    Well, your hard drive (flash storage) is good, at least. Here's what I would try next (before making a trip to the Apple Store or an AASP):
    Boot into your Recovery partition and reinstall OS X. This won't damage or erase any of your user files, etc., just give you a fresh installation of Mountain Lion. Since your hardware seems to be OK, it could be that the system has just become corrupt and reinstalling it may 'fix' the problem.
    Call back if that doesn't work...
    Clinton

  • Disk Utility and DiskWarrior trouble with external hard-drive.

    I got an external hard-drive that doesn't show up on finder. On both Disk Utility and DiskWarrior it keeps mounting and unmounting. Disk Utility when trying to repair, spits this out when it unmounts...
    2011-07-28 22:43:43 -0700: Problems were encountered during repair of the partition map
    2011-07-28 22:43:43 -0700: Error: Some information was unavailable during an internal lookup.
    2011-07-28 22:43:43 -0700: : Some information was unavailable during an internal lookup.
    2011-07-28 22:43:43 -0700: [DUDiskController mountDisk] expecting DUDisk, but got nil
    On DiskWarrior it simply says 'Directory cannot be rebuilt due to disk hardware failure (-36,2747)
    Earlier today it would stay mounted and Disk Utility would spit out...
    Verify and Repair volume “Back-up Hard Drive”
    Checking file systemChecking Journaled HFS Plus volume.
    Checking extents overflow file.
    Checking catalog file.
    Invalid sibling link
    Rebuilding catalog B-tree.
    Invalid node structure
    The volume Back-up Hard Drive could not be repaired.
    Volume repair complete.
    Updating boot support partitions for the volume as required.
    Error: Disk Utility can’t repair this disk. Back up as many of your files as possible, reformat the disk, and restore your backed-up files.
    while DiskWarrior would try to fix it, but on
    Step 5: Locating directory date...
    Speed reduced by disk malfunction: 339,474, er make that 340,239, er make that 341,327
    and I finally gave up there.
    I try to fix the Invalid sibling link error via Terminal and I get this...
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    ** /dev/rdisk2s2 (NO WRITE)
    Can't open /dev/rdisk2s2: Resource busy
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    It's the cord that's being used that decides if it shows up, or if it shows up and then goes away over and over. Using a cord where it stays on in the programs, when I run Disk Utility of the darked out part of the hard-drive, it spits out...
    Verifying and repairing partition map for “MICRONET”
    Checking prerequisites
    Checking the partition list
    Checking for an EFI system partition
    Checking the EFI system partition’s size
    Checking the EFI system partition’s file system
    Checking all HFS data partition loader spaces
    Reviewing boot support loaders
    Checking Core Storage Physical Volume partitions
    Updating Windows boot.ini files as required
    The partition map appears to be OK
    while the part of the disk just below it that's light spits out
    Verifying volume “Back-up Hard Drive”
    Checking file system
    Error: This disk needs to be repaired. Click Repair Disk.
    Verify and Repair volume “Back-up Hard Drive”
    Starting repair tool:
    Checking file system
    Volume repair complete.
    Updating boot support partitions for the volume as required.
    Error: Disk Utility can’t repair this disk. Back up as many of your files as possible, reformat the disk, and restore your backed-up files.
    Disk Utility stopped repairing “Back-up Hard Drive”: Disk Utility can’t repair this disk. Back up as many of your files as possible, reformat the disk, and restore your backed-up files.
    while DiskWarrior tries to rebuild it and spits out a memory error.

  • Disk Utility no longer working correctly

    I did a search and couldn't find a similar problem, so here goes.
    I'm running OS 10.4.11 on a G4 PPC Dual 1.25 GHz.
    I've done the regular updates the last several weeks:
    QuickTime-7.5.5
    iTunes- 8.0
    Xserve RAID Driver Update- 1.0
    Java for Mac OS X 10.4, Release 7- 1.0
    Digital Camera Raw Compatibility Update- 2.2
    Security Update 2008-006 (PowerPC)- 1.0
    Security Update 2008-007 (PowerPC)- 1.0
    Migration and DVD/CD Sharing Update- 1.1
    iTunes- 8.0.1
    iPhoto Update- 7.1.5
    Digital Camera Raw Compatibility Update- 2.3
    Safari- 3.2
    iLife Support- 8.3.1
    iTunes- 8.0.2
    Safari- 3.2.1
    Since the updating of the above, when launching Disk Utility, I get the spinning beachball as it tries to find my hard drives. It spins and spins and spins, but my drives don't show up.
    Sometimes logging out and back in and then restarting will make DU work ok, but that can't be normal. It should work on each launch.
    Is anyone having similar problems? Anyone know what the cause and solution may be?
    Thanks in advance for any help, and Happy Thanksgiving!

    Hi,
    Could be many things, we should start with this...
    "Try Disk Utility
    1. Insert the Mac OS X Install disc that came with your computer, then restart the computer while holding the C key.
    2. When your computer finishes starting up from the disc, choose Disk Utility from the Installer menu. (In Mac OS X 10.4 or later, you must select your language first.)
    Important: Do not click Continue in the first screen of the Installer. If you do, you must restart from the disc again to access Disk Utility.
    3. Click the First Aid tab.
    4. Click the disclosure triangle to the left of the hard drive icon to display the names of your hard disk volumes and partitions.
    5. Select your Mac OS X volume.
    6. Click Repair. Disk Utility checks and repairs the disk."
    http://docs.info.apple.com/article.html?artnum=106214
    Then Safe Boot , (holding Shift key down at bootup), run Disk Utility in Applications>Utilities, then highlight your drive, click on Repair Permissions, reboot when it finishes.
    The usual reason why updates fail or mess things up, or things don't load/run, is if Permissions are not fixed before & after every update, with a reboot... you may get a partial update when the installer finds it doesn't have Permissions to change one obscure little part of the OS, leaving you with a mix of OS versions.
    Some people get away without Repairing Permissions for years, some for only days.
    If Permissions are wrong before applying an update, you could get mixed OS versions, if Directory is the slightest messed up, who knows!
    If many Permission are repaired, or any Directory errors are found, you may need to re-apply some the latest/biggest updates again, or even do an A&I if you have enough free disk space.
    The combo update for PowerPC-based Macs...
    http://www.apple.com/support/downloads/macosx10411comboupdateppc.html
    The combo update for Intel-based Macs...
    http://www.apple.com/support/downloads/macosx10411comboupdateintel.html
    Repair Permissions before & after re-install, then reboot again each time.
    If all the above do not resolve the problem, then it's time for an Archive & Install, which gives you a new OS, but can preserve all your files, pics, music, settings, etc., as long as you have plenty of free disk space...
    http://docs.info.apple.com/article.html?artnum=107120
    Or, Might give a try with Applejack...
    http://www.versiontracker.com/dyn/moreinfo/macosx/19596
    After installing, reboot holding down CMD+s, (+s), then when the DOS like prompt shows, type in...
    applejack AUTO
    Then let it do all 5 of it's things.
    At least it'll eliminate some questions if it doesn't fix it.
    The 5 things it does are...
    Correct any Disk problems.
    Repair Permissions.
    Clear out Cache Files.
    Repair/check several plist files.
    Dump the VM files for a fresh start.

  • Cannot backup macbook onto external hard drive in disk utility

    I can't get past the section of repair disk it says in red
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    Invalid leaf record count
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    Invalid node structure
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    Then it says A few other things then error disk utility can't repair disk
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    I think you're saying your internal drive is giving that message, which means you need to replace it. If I were you, I'd get a new drive and put it in an external enclosure. You don't say what machine or OS X version, but assuming you're on something fairly recent, boot into the Recovery partition by holding down the Command and R keys at startup. First use Disk Utility to prep the internal drive, then install the OS. Once it's done, try to run Migration Assistant to move your stuff to the external drive. When that's finally done, swap the new drive and the failing one.
    http://www.amazon.com/Sabrent-2-5-Inch-Aluminum-Enclosure-EC-TB4P/dp/B005EIGUD4/ ref=sr_1_3?ie=UTF8&qid=1395497340&sr=8-3&keywords=2.5+enclosure

  • DIsk Utility doesn't allow creating a partition

    Hi all,
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    Any other idea other than sending the macbookPro back to Apple?
    Thanks
    Matt

    You should of taken the encryption off before you started that proccess. That is one thing they don't tell you. Never try to modify an encrypted partition.
    You may have to boot to the Internet (Online) Recovery HD system lto Re-Partition the drive as one partition.
    Hold down Command+Option+r keys at boot and keep them held down until you see a spinning globe in the center of the screen, then you can let them up. Have the computer WIRED to your unternet router.
    Once that loads open disk utility and select the Drive Name (Not volume name, IE Macintosh HD) and then the partition tab and select One partition from the Partition Layout drop down.
    If that doesn't work then the drive is FUBAR.

  • Disk Utility: What does "scan image for restore" do?

    Before restoring a disk image, I know that I need to use Disk Utility's "Scan Image for Restore…" feature.
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    I asked because I didn't know.
    I was helping someone upgrade his PowerMac G5 from the original 80GB hard drive to a 1TB drive.
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    I couldn't connect both drives to my MacBook Pro, since I only have one SATA drive dock. So I did it like this:
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  • Disk Utility broken while booted from Installation CDs??

    Situation: I have a Macbook Pro with a 120 GB HDD. I had partitioned it into two partitions, and later desired that I should have only one partition on the drive. I booted the Mac OS X installation CDs and attempted the following three-step procedure:
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    2. Verify the image and repartition ("Erase") my laptop's internal HDD
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    http://upload.pbase.com/silentplummet/image/72221384.jpg
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    Macbook Pro 15" 2.0 GHz Mac mini 1.5   Mac OS X (10.4.6)  

    Others have (in the Mac Pro forum) noticed this bug in Disk Utility on the Intel version install disks. Your easiest fix would be to reinstall OSX on you Macbook disk, boot it, mount the disk image from the USB drive, and use the Migration Assistant to copy over all your accounts and data files.

  • Disk Utility Issues Wait to Install Leopard

    Dear fellow Mac users,
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    After carefully making a bootable backup of my HD on an external drive, I installed Leopard choosing the Option "Erase and install." This occurred without visible glitch. After updating the system to its latest version, I migrated all my data and settings. The result was an incredibly slow system, completely useless. It cannot have been the results of my settings, because I also created a "clean" account called "Maintenance," with the same results. On the recommendation of the "Apple Genius" I also added 1 GB of memory, getting a total of 1.5 GB of RAM installed to the cost of $150. It did NOT improve the situation.
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    Nerowolfe,
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    3. Spotlight just does not work, period
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    I wait for help.......
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  • Disk Utility is not working for me.

    I have had a nightmare trying to install a Boot Camp partition on my brand new 27" iMac with 3TB Fusion Drive and running 10.8.4.
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    So I booted with CMD+R, launched Disk Utility, and tried to create a 500GB empty partition.  It started and just never quit, so I CMD+Q, got out of it, went back to Disk Utility, I found that I now have a 1.22TB empty partition and a 1.78TB Mac Partition.  This is probably my own fault, I should have just let it run, but after 20 minutes, it wasn't moving.
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    The Boot Camp Assistant in 10.8.4 should be able to partition your 3TB+ drive so you can have Windows. If Disk Utility is not working then your disk is corrupt. Backup all your data using Time Machine. Erase the volume and restore from Time Machine backup. You can use the ‘OS X Recovery Disk Assistant’ (http://support.apple.com/kb/DL1433). Open Recovery Disk Assistant and follow the on screen instructions to create a Recovery HD on the external drive. When the Recovery Disk Assistant completes, the partition will not be visible in the Finder. To access the external Recovery HD, connect the drive, then restart the computer and hold the Option key. Select Recovery HD from the Startup Manager. You would need to re-install Mountain Lion up to 10.8.4.  Then ran Boot Camp Assistant and then install Windows.   Once you have confirmed that Windows is running then open up Migration Assistant (in the utilities folder) and migrate your Time Machine backup back on to the hard drive.

  • Disk utility finds new errors after every reboot

    My problem: every time I reboot my computer, disk utility shows minor corruption of the catalog, attributes, and free space maps on my internal drive. If I boot into the Recovery partition and use Disk Utility to repair the drive, the repair succeeds, and runnin Verify Disk shows a clean file system. But once I boot into the OS from the HD, shut down, and restart, a new set of disk errors appears. The errors are never exactly the same (in mismatch of clusters, for example) but are always off by a few percent.
    Things that may be related:
    This is a new (1-wk-old) MBP 17" (late 2011 model), which I bought to replace an older 15" MBP running OSX 10.6. I used Migration Assistant to move my data and apps from a Time Machine backup of the old laptop to the new laptop. I then made a Time Machine backup of the new laptop, replaced the factory HD with a Seagate Momentus 720GB, 7200 rpm drive, and used Time Machine to do a complete restore of OS and data onto the new drive. I later used Bootcamp assistant to create an NTFS partition (which doesn't ever show errors).
    Things I've already tried to fix the problem that haven't worked:
    --Repaired disk permissions as well as the disk structure.
    --Using the online recovery tool to do a complete reinstallation of Lion (preserving my data and apps, so not a clean install).
    --Using TechToolPro DVD to do a deeper analysis and repair of the disk's volume structure. The repair  succeeded, but the disk errors came right back.
    --Uninstall every utility or extension that might possibly affect the hard drive.
    --Disable all login items using the Accounts preferences pane.
    --Disabled Spotlight by moving the entire volume into the Private area in Spotlight preferences.
    --Reset the PRAM.
    --Reset the SMC.
    No joy from any of these. I haven't tried running fsck (is there any reason to?). I'd love to track down the program that is causing the disk corruption, but don't know how to do that.
    I would be most grateful for any suggestions on diagnosing and permanently fixing this problem, as it does seem to make my system unstable and prone to crashing.

    Thanks for responding. Yes, I should have mentioned that I used the TechToolPro boot DVD to do a thorough SMART scan on the drive as well as a full scan for bad sectors. No problems were found. I also did a long scan of the RAM to rule out memory errors.
    I did remove the new drive and replaced it, taking extra care to ensure the connector was seated properly. But the disk corruption/repair/corruption cycle still reoccured.
    I haven't put the factory drive back in to check whether the problem affects that (smaller, slower) drive as well. If it does, should I conclude that I have a H/W problem with, e.g. the drive controller chip or the drive cable in the laptop?
    I wonder if this might be related to another problem I'm seeing with the laptop, which is that the lid closure doesn't work--the OS isn't able to detect when the lid is closed. It looks like the wire to the sensor goes through the same cable bundle as the SATA cable. Perhaps there is a defect in that bundle or connector.
    I will try the factory disk. If the problem doesn't show up with that, then I guess I should focus again on the possibility of a defective HD. Is there some utility other than TechTool that would do an even more thorough check of the HD?

  • Hard drive not visible in finder or desktop, ghosted in disk utility

    I just reinstalled Snow Leopard to my MacBook Pro 13 inch from mavericks, and now when I try to access my time machine backup on my hard drive, it isn't showing up. It is ghosted in disk utility. I have tried restarting my computer, and have scoured the online forums to no avail. Please help!

    I strongly doubt that SL's TM can recognize a Mavericks TM volume. Your best bet if you want to migrate your stuff from the latter is to install Mavericks, restore that TM backup, then boot into the SL volume and migrate from the restored Mavericks volume.
    iMac (27-inch Mid 2011), OS X Mavericks (10.9.3), SL & ML, G4 450 MP w/Leopard, 9.2.2

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