Disk utility verify

Help!!!
I finally, was able to start my iMac, using safe mode, but it prompt me to normal login, I did not opened only app, and went directly to disk utility...
I choose to verify the disk, but, after some time, it froze, and I can't do nothing (but wait)
So, my questions are:
Does anyone know how long does it takes for disk utility to verify my HD (320 GB)?
And, is it normal that it froze my iMac, to the point is completely unresponsive? How long should I wait in this state, before know something is wrong?
Thanks!

Tony:
I gave up, and decided to erase the disk. But, new issues have come...
I boot from command R, disk utility, erase disk...
First problem, is did not let me select Macintosh HD, appear in light gray color, so I went for the HD with the seria number name...
It has been almost 50 minutes, and all it say is: dismounting disk, so, my question is: is this normal? Should I panic?
I got to a pint were I borrowed a MacBook, so my business can continue working, so, I don't mind wait, but, how much is real wait, and when I will need to do another drastic move.
Thanks!
Federico

Similar Messages

  • Disk Utility - Verify Disk Permissions / Repair

    I run Disk Utility > Verify Disk Permissions with this rsult:
    Verify permissions for “Macintosh HD”
    Permissions differ on "usr/share/derby", should be drwxr-xr-x , they are lrwxr-xr-x .
    The following repair was successful.
    A few minutes later I run Verify Disk Permissions again with the SAME result:
    Verify permissions for “Macintosh HD”
    Permissions differ on "usr/share/derby", should be drwxr-xr-x , they are lrwxr-xr-x .
    What does it mean and how can I stop this error?
    Thanks!

    There is nothing in that message that requires repairing. That is why it keeps showing up.
    The permission database has to be updated every time the system is updated. If they miss a change that they have made in the system, it will get flagged as you see, but doesn't mean anything is wrong.
    That KnowledgeBase article also must be updated to reflect the things they missed.
    All that message is saying is that the directory derby is now replaced with a link to another directory (the l vs the d). However, mine doesn't have a link. Did you install anything that might have updated derby?
    If you open Terminal and enter this code, can you post the line that has derby on it?ls -al /usr/share/
    I'm repairing permissions now to see what pops up for me, but that will take a little while.
    Edit: I looked into the Derby directory and Derby is a Relational Database Management System used by Apache. So, did you install something that modified Apache, PHP, mySQL or something like that? It might have altered the link.
    Message was edited by: Barney-15E

  • When I run disk utility, verify permissions I get "WARNING SUID file system/Library/Coreservices/Remotemanagement/ARDAgent.app/Contents/MacOS/ARDAge nt has been modified

    When I run disk utility, verify permissions I get "WARNING SUID file system/Library/Coreservices/Remotemanagement/ARDAgent.app/Contents/MacOS/ARDAge nt has been modified

    Please read Disk Utility's Repair Disk Permissions messages that you can safely ignore.
    Roger

  • Question on Disk Utility Verify

    I have a two-week old 27" iMac, 1 TB SSD, 32 GB RAM, 1 4 GB RAID-0 external G-Drive (external Max OS drive), 2 4 GB external G-Drives (1 used as partitioned backup (1 TB for Boot Camp, 3 TB for Time Machine), 1 planned for Windows external drive).  I also bought and installed the Paragon NTFS and CampTune applications.
    Have setup Boot Camp on the internal 1 TB SSD (127 GB partition) and finally got things to work, but, I am continually having issues with WIndows crashing (either in the middle of use, or during startup or shutdown with the KERNEL_SECURITY_CHECK_FAILURE.  I have been Googling, and this seems associated with the use of external drives?
    The last time I got this, I was unable to boot back into Mac partition, and ended up having to hold down the Option Key at boot, and select the right partition to boot from, I then started verifying all my drives and paritions with Disk Utility, and was finding and repairing various issues (everything seemed to repair fine) and also the Mac HD partition seemed to have Permissions issues, which seemed to repair fine.
    But, in the process of doing this, am noticing an issue, or at least a difference between the Mac HD and and the External Mac-formatted Verify logs.  The External drive ALWAYS tells me the drive is good, while the Mac HD has done that only once, and usually seems just to stop with "Checking Volume Information" as the last entry.  Not sure this is an issue, or not, but was looking for ANY cause for the continual Windows issue.
    Disk Utility Log Dumps are below, first the internal Mac HD (two partitions, Mac and Boot Camp, checking only the Mac partition), second the External G-Drive, formatted Mac RAID HD.  Both times, I am selecting the drive partition below the actual physical HW.
    The Boot Camp partition checks good.
    Thanks.
    2014-06-15 01:54:28 -0600:
    2014-06-15 02:16:43 -0600: Verifying volume “Macintosh HD”
    2014-06-15 02:16:43 -0600: Starting verification tool:
    2014-06-15 02:16:43 -0600: Checking file system
    2014-06-15 02:16:44 -0600: Performing live verification.
    2014-06-15 02:16:44 -0600: Checking Journaled HFS Plus volume.
    2014-06-15 02:16:44 -0600: Checking extents overflow file.
    2014-06-15 02:16:50 -0600: Checking multi-linked files.
    2014-06-15 02:16:51 -0600: Checking catalog hierarchy.
    2014-06-15 02:16:59 -0600: Checking extended attributes file.
    2014-06-15 02:17:01 -0600: Checking volume information.
    2014-06-15 02:17:01 -0600: Repair tool completed:
    2014-06-15 02:17:01 -0600:
    2014-06-15 02:18:21 -0600: Verifying volume “G-RAID with Thunderbolt”
    2014-06-15 02:18:21 -0600: Starting verification tool:
    2014-06-15 02:18:21 -0600: Checking file system
    2014-06-15 02:18:21 -0600: Checking Journaled HFS Plus volume.
    2014-06-15 02:18:21 -0600: Checking extents overflow file.
    2014-06-15 02:18:21 -0600: Checking catalog file.
    2014-06-15 02:18:23 -0600: Checking multi-linked files.
    2014-06-15 02:18:23 -0600: Checking catalog hierarchy.
    2014-06-15 02:18:23 -0600: Checking extended attributes file.
    2014-06-15 02:18:25 -0600: Checking volume bitmap.
    2014-06-15 02:18:25 -0600: Checking volume information.
    2014-06-15 02:18:25 -0600: The volume External_1 appears to be OK.
    2014-06-15 02:18:26 -0600: Repair tool completed:
    2014-06-15 02:18:26 -0600:
    2014-06-15 02:28:20 -0600: Verifying volume “BOOTCAMP”
    2014-06-15 02:28:20 -0600: Starting verification tool:
    2014-06-15 02:28:20 -0600: Checking file system
    2014-06-15 02:28:20 -0600: Checking Volume /dev/disk1s4...                                               
    2014-06-15 02:28:20 -0600: Type of the filesystem is NTFS.                                               
    2014-06-15 02:28:20 -0600: Volume label is: BOOTCAMP.                                                    
    2014-06-15 02:28:21 -0600: Verifying 9820 file(s) with EAs...                                            
    2014-06-15 02:28:28 -0600: $UpCase file is formatted for use in Windows 7/8/8.1.                         
    2014-06-15 02:28:28 -0600:      51.90 GB in 87120 files.                                                 
    2014-06-15 02:28:28 -0600:      65860 KB in 22860 directories.                                           
    2014-06-15 02:28:28 -0600:          0 KB in bad blocks in 0 fragments.                                   
    2014-06-15 02:28:28 -0600:     231124 KB in use by the system.                                           
    2014-06-15 02:28:28 -0600:         64 MB occupied by the log/journal file.                               
    2014-06-15 02:28:28 -0600:          4 KB in each allocation unit.                                        
    2014-06-15 02:28:28 -0600:   31175679 total allocation units on volume (118.93 GB).                      
    2014-06-15 02:28:28 -0600:   17488312 allocation units available on volume (66.71 GB).                   
    2014-06-15 02:28:28 -0600: No repairs were necessary for volume /dev/disk1s4.                            
    2014-06-15 02:28:28 -0600: Repair tool completed:
    2014-06-15 02:28:28 -0600:

    Do a backup. Boot to the Recovery Volume (command - R on a restart or hold down the option key during a restart and select Recovery Volume). Run Disk Utility Verify/Repair and Repair Permissions until you get no errors. See if the internal drive checks good.
    OS X Recovery
    OS X Recovery (2)

  • Disk utility verify comes back with a errors.

    I am running Mac OS X 10.5.8.
    When I run the disk utility verify it comes back with a message saying that it cannot repair the errors found on the drive. I also get msgs that the file counts and directory counts are not what they are supposed to be.
    What do you recommend I do? Are these errors serious or should I ignore them. I only noticed these errors yesterday after my computer would not boot. I had to actually take out the power cord from the back of the computer and hold the power buttom down for 20 secs and then reattach the power cord. Only then did it boot again.
    I am thinking about doing a complete reinstall from scratch however, there may be a chance that some other disk utility out there can fix my problems....any ideas?
    Thanks in advance for your help.

    Since your system is having trouble booting, you should probably fix those errors.
    When Disk Utility can't repair a problem, you have some choices. Many people buy Disk Warrior or TechTool Pro, with Disk Warrior the preferred program, to fix those sort of errors, assuming they aren't caused by failing hardware. Those sound like 'soft' errors that Disk Warrior can repair (see their web site).
    If you want to check your hard drive hardware, you can run the Apple hardware test (run the extended test), and SMART Utility is another program that will give you insights into the health of the hard drive.
    If you have a good backup, another option is to boot to an OS X DVD (or a bootable backup), use Disk Utility to erase the hard drive and write zero's to it, then restore your backup. If you go this route, make sure you have a good backup because you'll be erasing, permanently, everything on your hard drive.

  • Disk utility verify drive error

    When I run disk utility I receive the following error. In reading previous posts I discoverd that I needed to use the OSX install disk. So I get it showing in the utilities window on the left side and attempt to get disk utility running by following this path on the disk -- Applications > Utilities > Disk Utility. Double clicking disk utility has no result.
    Any suggestions would be appreciated.
    The error when running verify disk from disk utility on the iMac:
    Verifying volume “Macintosh HD”
    Checking HFS Plus volume.
    Checking Extents Overflow file.
    Checking Catalog file.
    Invalid node structure
    The volume Macintosh HD needs to be repaired.
    Error: The underlying task reported failure on exit
    1 HFS volume checked
    Volume needs repair

    As Doug has said, & indeed you have tried....you need to run diskutility from the OS install disk. Or more accurately, you need to run diskutility when booted from the install disk.
    The following ( from diskutility help) should explain it clearly.
    Start up your computer using another disk.
    To use the Install Mac OS X disc, insert the disc and restart your computer holding down the Option key, then select the Install Mac OS X disc and click the arrow.
    Open Disk Utility.
    If you're using the Mac OS X Install disk, follow the onscreen instructions until the menu bar appears with the Utilities menu in it., and then choose Utilities > Open Disk Utility.
    Select the startup disk in the list of disks and volumes, then click First Aid.
    Check the S.M.A.R.T. Status at the bottom of the window. If you can't see it, be sure you selected the hard disk your volume is on, and not the volume itself.
    If the S.M.A.R.T. Status is "About to Fail," back up your files on the disk as soon as possible and replace the disk.
    If the S.M.A.R.T. Status is "Verified" or "Not supported," click Repair Disk to repair the disk.
    If Disk Utility tells you to look for links to corrupt files in the DamagedFiles directory, two or more files occupy the same space on your hard disk and at least one of them is likely to be corrupt. Examine each affected file in the DamagedFiles folder, which at the top-level of the affected disk. If you can replace it or recreate the file, delete it. If it contains necessary information, open it and examine its data to make sure it has not been corrupted.
    If Disk Utility reports "The underlying task reported failure," Disk Utility encountered a problem it could not repair. Back up as much of your data as possible, reformat your disk, reinstall Mac OS X, and restore your backed up data.

  • Disk Utility Verify/Repair options

    When I Verify my HD in Disk Utility I get this error.
    Why does it say this? Should I Repair the disk? Will I lose data? Any help thanks!

    You will need to repair the HD per the instructions, this is critcal. Prior to doing this backup your computer, that should be your #1 priority!! To repair the HD, restart the computer, when you hear the startup tone hold down the Option Key and select the Recovery Partition. Open Disk Utility, select your internal HD and run Repair Disk. If the disk has error run Repair Disk 2-3 times, if errors continue your have a damaged HD that needs to be replaced.

  • Disk Utility, Verify Disk & Repair Disk unavailable

    Hi there!
    I want to check my Hard Disk with Disk Utility, but none of the two buttons (Verify Disk & Repair Disk) are available, I started up from my Mac OS X installation disc, and once, it told me that the disk had errors and needed to backup my files, so I went back and backed up with Time Machine, then out of curiosity went again and I started up from my Mac OS X installation disc, and this time it told me that the disk was fine and there wasn't any errors, but when I open Disk Utility with my Mac, none of the buttons are available, is this normal?
    What should I do?
    Context: Before all this, I installed a program called Tuxera to create a NTFS partition but my Mac started to act weird, so I deactivate and uninstalled this program, that's when I went to verify the disk.
    Any Help would be gratefully appreciated

    I hope I'm wrong but it sounds very much like Tuxera did something to your startup disk. I would also be somewhat concerned about the integrity of any Time Machine Backups you made after you ran Tuxera.
    The safest thing to do would be to start up from your Snow Leopard disk and see if you can *restore your system and data from your Time Machine backups to an +external HD+* formatted using Mac OS Extended (Journaled) and GUID Partitioning. Formatting will erase all the data on that disk. *If you try to restore to the internal and it doesn't work you will probably lose most of your data.*
    Startup your Mac using the external and check very carefully to see that you have all your data and that everything works as it should. If it does you can safely reformat your internal drive from Disk Utility on the Leopard disk using Mac OS Extended (Journaled) and GUID Partitioning. After that you can clone the external drive to your Mac's internal drive or install from the Time Machine backups.
    If the Time Machine backup doesn't work you will need to run a disk data recovery utility to see if you can salvage your data from your internal drive.
    I don't use PC's so someone may be along with much better advice. However, unless and until someone more knowledgeable about PC file formats comes along to help *don't reformat your internal drive until you know your Time Machine backups are OK.*

  • Disk utility: verify selection- which to choose

    When you open disk utility, you see the size/type of HD you have, then underneath usually "Macintosh HD." Assuming this is all you have and you haven't split your disk up, does it matter which you choose in order to repair and verify? Does each location produce different results?

    Hi, powerbook1701.
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    Data Volume 3</pre>and then clicked Repair Disk, all volumes on the two drives would be repaired.
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    Dr. Smoke
    Author: Troubleshooting Mac® OS X

  • Disk Utility Verify Weirdness

    My wireless mighty mouse started acting erratic again today. The Bluetooth 2.0 update from a few weeks back seemed to fix this problem for a good 10 days or so but unfortunately, the erratic mouse problem is back. So I ran some tests on my hard drive. I ran TechTool Deluxe 3.1.2 from my extended AppleCare package. I tested the drive hardware, did a format check and directory scan, surface scan and tested the processor and RAM. No problems were found.
    I restarted after this and then ran Disk Utility and repaired permissions. Then I did a "Verify Disk" with Disk Utility and the progress bar (barber shop pole) stopped spinning part way in (it almost looked like it was locked up) and I got a spinning beach ball and couldn't click anywhere on the desktop. The verify disk procedure eventually completed and no problems were found. So out of curiosity, I tried this again and the exact same thing happened. So I did a Safe Boot and ran Disk Utility once more, then restarted again and now Disk Utility seems to work normally again.
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    Thanks for letting me know everything is A-OK with the boot device issue. I think the startup disk was deselected because I reset the PRAM. Regarding the erratic mouse, I still have this problem and it is driving me insane - I've got a replacement coming from Apple. It must be defective. I keep seeing these errors in the system log:
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  • Disk Utility verify of ISO burn fails, but md5 sum matches

    Frequently when I burn a large DVD iso to a DVD, via the "Burn" task in OS X Disk Utility, the process results in a failure at the end of the verify process.  However, if I check the md5 sum of the DVD against the published md5 sum for the ISO, the checksum matches.  From this I assume that the DVD must have written correctly.  Why does DiskUtility report that the verify failed?
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    its not your drive the problem its the disk if you use singapore produce disk there is a way to find out what kind of disk is made by you could have a disk of poor quality made by Ricoh, singapore disk dual layer disk of of top quality.
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  • Disk Utility - Verify button greyed out.

    [IMG]http://img.photobucket.com/albums/v43/pupspals/DiskUtility-noVerifyDisk.jpg[/IMG]
    I'm running 10.4.9 & have everything updated except for the recent Pro App. I wanted to verify my disk before installing this when I noticed that the button was greyed out! I click on my hard drive, I click on my disk & it's still greyed out!
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    Thanks!

    I never use the Verify Disk feature from my boot volume which can report a problem that doesn't exist when later running Repair Disk via Disk Utility when booted from your install disc.
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  • Disk Utility - Verify Disk (???)

    I've got 3 Macs and the same issue is appearing on each. Observation #1 - it is not computer specific.
    Here's the question:
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    Thanks!!!
    PCBjr

    Have you just let it run. I have this problem with 10.4.5. If I let it go, for maybe 5-6min it works fine and finishes.
    No - after about 3 minutes I get frustrated. When I first went to 10.4.5, it ran like a charm - 30 secs to a minute with NO beachball.
    Is this an issue with Tiger I need to avoid?

  • EMac G4 fails Disk Utility Verify

    My eMac has been "on the shelf" since November. I drowned my "new" (rebuilt) iMac's HD so have taken the e out for a rescue mission. It seemed exceptionally slow with a few other quirks so I did a Disk Utility on the Volume HD as well as the HD itself and got this:
    Verifying volume “HD X10.4.11”
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    Checking Extents Overflow file.
    Checking Catalog file.
    Checking multi-linked files.
    Checking Catalog hierarchy.
    Checking Extended Attributes file.
    Checking volume bitmap.
    Checking volume information.
    Volume Header needs minor repair
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    1 HFS volume checked
    Volume needs repair
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    If you have the Install Disc handy...
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    1. Insert the Mac OS X Install disc, 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.
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    5. Click Repair Disk, (not Repair Permissions). Disk Utility checks and repairs the disk."
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    Then try a 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 completes.
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    (Space between fsck AND -fy important).
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    http://docs.info.apple.com/article.html?artnum=106214

  • Recovery/Disk Utility/Verifying Partition

    Hello and thanks in advance for any help you can offer!
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