Disk Utility won't allow permission verify/repair

I have started getting some odd behavior from Disk Utility. I have one hard disk on my Mac Mini which I have never partitioned. When I open Disk Utility it shows the disk but not the partition under it that used to appear. When highlighting the main disk the options to repair/verify permissions don't appear. Occasionally when I start Disk Utility I do see the main partition but a small (200Mb)unmounted partition also appears. As I said I have never partitioned the hard disk so I don't know where this small partition is coming from. I can't seem to get Disk Utility to consistently show me the main partition that is supposed to be there. Can anyone offer suggestions for why this is happening and how to fix it. I recently moved from 10.5.6 to 10.5.8, but this problem appeared just before the OS upgrade. Thanks.

That is indeed strange behaviour. I'd try reformatting and repartitioning your hard drive with Disk Utility, and then restore your data from your backups. Make sure you keep your backups up to date after that.

Similar Messages

  • Disk Utility won't let me select "Repair" button - help!

    I'm trying to upgrade from 10.3.9 to 10.4. When I run Installation, it fails and gives me a message that I need to repair my hard drive. So I restarted from the DVD, selected Disk Utility, clicked on my hard drive and was able to click on Verify. When it got done, it said the disk needed repairs. But the Repair button is grayed out. Any suggestions on either the trouble with the install or why I can't select Repair?
    Thanks.

    Usually, being able to select the internal HD and click on Verify but not Repair indicates one is actually booted up from the internal HD rather than the optical drive. Which drive is shown at the top of the Disk Utility list on the left?
    What 10.4 version (e.g., 10.4.8) is shown on your retail black label Tiger 10.4 Install disc?
    You can also try repairing the drive using the file system check fsck utility in single user mode, as described in Using Disk Utility and fsck.
    When making disk repairs, repeat the repair until the utility reports no problems found or until it reports being unable to make further repairs. It's possible for one disk directory problem to mask another.

  • Disk Utility won't allow me to restore from image

    I've been keeping pretty good backups for a while now and I have started using SuperDuper to keep whole DMGs as well as using Time Machine. Today I planned on restoring from an image I had made. However, when I go to use the Restore function in Disk Utility, it lets me choose the disk image but will not let me drag the volume on the destination field.
    I've been having startup problems all day and I eventually got a 9972 error in Disk Utility.
    I'm having trouble finding my install disks and this is my only real option for today. I can't find much about this on Google either.

    There's no point in using a disc image for a backup. Better to simply clone to a backup drive then maintain the clone with incremental updates. Use a normal backup utility such as Carbon Copy Cloner or Super Duper.
    As for the 9972 error you will find it's a really difficult error to correct. See the following:
    How to Deal with a -9972 Error
    Contributed by Fumiaki Kawashima
    The error message, "Error: The underlying task reported failure on exit (-9972)" is a serious filesystem error in the Mac OS X Core Foundation. The problem can also lead to other critical errors such as "Keys Out of Order," "Invalid node structure" and/or "Invalid sibling link." The causes and scenarios vary. Troubleshooting a solution may depend upon computer configuration and whether the -9972 error is accompanied by other critical errors. This issue can also lead up to a kernel panic. If the error occurs when an external FireWire device is connected, disconnect it until you verify the device's compatibility.
    Symptoms:
    In most cases, you are unable to restart from Mac OS X.
    * A volume is grayed out or not mounted with or without a kernel panic.
    * A folder with a flashing question mark may appear.
    * A bad partition map may be reported.
    * A target disk mode solution may not work.
    * Most likely, Disk Utility, Norton Utilities, TechTool and DiskWarrior cannot fix the issues.
    * The high level disk format (Standard format) may unable to perform.
    * You may unable to re-initialize the hard drive.
    * A disk physically malfunctions in the worst case.
    Example of an accompanied error message:
    DiskWarrior normally fixes 1 to 6, but cannot fix errors 7 to 10 if the symptoms are very bad. There is no definite case.
    01. Volume check failed
    02. Invalid B-tree Header
    03. Invalid map node
    04. Invalid extents entry
    05. Invalid clump size
    06. Incorrect block count file
    07. Invalid node structure
    08. Overlapped extent allocation
    09. Keys Out of Order
    10. Invalid sibling link
    Related documents:
    What to Do When It Finds an Error
    Technical overview of disk volume structures
    Possible causes:
    * Third-party FireWire device or enclosure, or other peripheral devices.
    * Third-party mass storage drives or PCI card issues.
    * Incompatible third-party kernel extensions.
    * Mac OS X installer disc is improperly treated.
    Solutions:
    If possible and needed, back up data before troubleshooting. Methods (4) and (5) are for Power Mac desktop computers other than G5 models. The best bet is method (4) if you encounter multiple bad errors.
    1. Unplug the power cord. Disconnect all third-party hardware except Apple keyboard and mouse before you start.
    2. Do NOT re-install any third-party software/hardware until you completely solve the issue(s) and carefully investigate the compatibility with Mac OS X 10.3.x you install.
    3. If another critical error "Invalid sibling link" is detected at any phases, disconnect and reconnect all internal power cords and data cables for hard drives and any ATAPI device. To do so, you may need to read the computer's CIP Instructions in advance. Normally, you do not need to remove third-party RAMs.
    Method 1:
    (1) Start up from Mac OS X 10.3.x Panther Full Install CD or DVD.
    (2) Re-initialize and re-partition the hard drive. RECOMMENDATION: Select "Zero all data" option if "Invalid node structure" or "Keys Out of Order" error is detected.
    If this method is of avail, go to Method 2 or greater.
    Method 2:
    (1) Start up in Mac OS 9.2.2 and shut down the computer.
    (2) Start up from a copy of a Disk Warrior bootable CD for Mac OS 9.2.2.
    (3) Run DW to fix the damage(s).
    Method 3:
    (1) Unplug the computer.
    (2) Find a second ATA drive and jumper it as MASTER. Jumper the hard drive in question as SLAVE. Verify the jumper pin settings.
    (3) Install Mac OS 9.2.x system on the MASTER drive, and update it to Mac OS 9.2.2.
    (4) Start up from Mac OS 9.2.2. Re-initialize and re-partition the damaged hard drive with Drive Setup using the "Zero all data" option. Unplug the computer and reconfigure the jumper pin setting on the repaired drive for MASTER and the second drive for SLAVE.
    (5) Restart from Mac OS X 10.3 Panther full install CD. Re-initialize and re-partition the repaired drive to install Mac OS X 10.3. Update to Mac OS X 10.3.7 via Software Update. Repair the disk permissions after each Mac OS X 10.3 installation and Mac OS X 10.3.7 update.
    You may want to try starting up from Mac OS 9.2.x Full Install CD instead of from (2) to (4).
    Method 4:
    (1) Find a desktop computer that has an ATA controller PCI card (SCSI environment) and has two hard drive bays. This will make your damaged drive appear as a quasi-SCSI hard drive. Mac OS 9.2.2 must be pre-installed on the computer. I recommend a host computer that installs an Ultra DMA/xxx or xxx (ATA-x) interface equal to or better than the damaged drive with backwards compatible.
    (2) Set the host computer's primary drive as MASTER and your damaged hard drive as SLAVE and install the damaged drive in the second drive bay of the host computer. Verify properly configured jumper pin settings in advance.
    (3) Start up the host computer from Mac OS 9.2.2. Launch the "Drive Setup" utility. Re-initialize the damaged disk on the second drive using the "Low level format" option. It may take hours but less than "Zero all data" option. Note: Normally, a low level format with a quasi-SCSI drive takes much less (30 - 40%) time than an ATA configuration drive. Note that "Low level format" fixes all difficult logical damage.
    (4) Put the fixed disk back in your computer's drive bay. Re-configure the jumper pin setting to MASTER before you place it into the drive bay of your computer.
    (5) Restart from Mac OS X 10.3 Panther full install CD. Re-initialize and re-partition it to install Mac OS X 10.3. Update to Mac OS X 10.3.7 via Software Update. Repair the disk permissions after each Mac OS X 10.3 installation and Mac OS X 10.3.7 update.
    Note that Panther's Disk Utility does not implement a "Low level format" option.
    Method 5:
    If Method 4 does not work or fix the damaged drive, let me know. You may need an advanced technique to fix it if the drive is physically not a problem.
    OPTION:
    Purchase a known good hard drive that conforms to your computer's ATA specification. Fix the damaged hard drive some other time. Nowadays, prices of hard drives are inexpensive.
    Mac Pro 2.66 Ghz; MacBook Pro C2D 2.33 Ghz; MacBook Pro 2.16 Ghz   Mac OS X (10.4.8)   Intel iMac C2D 17 "; iBook G3 800 Mhz; 30 GB iPod Video (Black); iPod Nano 2 GB

  • Disk Utility won't allow Master Boot Record?

    Hello all -
    I just purchased a WD MyBook 3TB hard drive for storing our movies on.  We had our previous external hard drive (250GB) plugged into our Sony Blu-Ray player and it worked smoothly.  But now, I plug in our new hard drive, and the blu-ray player doesn't recognize it.
    I tried re-formatting the hard drive as FAT32 (same as the old hard drive), but that didn't work.
    The only noticeable thing I see is that the partition map scheme of the WD hard drive is "GUID Partition Table", and the old hard drive's map scheme is "Master Boot Record".  I went into Options in the Partition page of Disk Utility to try to change the WD hard drive to Master Boot Record... but it won't let me.  It's greyed out.  It's there as an option, but apparently not for my hard drive. 
    What gives?  How do I get around this?  Thanks in advance for your help!

    Alberto you're right, but here's what Lacie answered:
    [QUOTE]<a rel="nofollow" href="http://forums.macrumors.com/showthread.php?p=16913829" target="_blank">Originally Posted by Runnernorth</a>
    Hi, thx for your reply:-), just a quick question, do YOU think it's possible to make my 2big thunderbolt work as RAID0 in windows 7/64bit, or just as two independent drives......?
    Kindly[/QUOTE]
    hi, if you already have the disks RAIDed from OSX then you can't re-RAID them in Windows. The only thing you can do is set it to a RAID, volume scheme and file system that both OSes are able to detect.
    Otherwise yes, if you haven't already set a RAID mode on another OS then the disks can do RAID 0 and 1 in Windows.
    ~mn, LaCie

  • Disk Utility Won't "Repair"

    My powerbook has been running slow lately so I wanted to do a disk repair however Utility won't allow me to run the 'Repair' function. I can Verify and Repair disk permissions and also Verify the disk but the button for Repair disk isn't even active. My Hard Drive is archived if that information is pertinent.
    Please let me know if you've had this problem before or know what I can do.

    You can't repair the volume you've booted from, which is why that option is grayed out. What you'll need to do is insert the first OS X DVD that came with your system (or the first Tiger disk), and boot holding the C key down. This will boot from the DVD, and then you can choose disk utility from the menu bar, and repair the disk.
    In addition, you may want to download OnyX or Yasu to run the disk maintenance routines, which can help with overall speed by cleaning up your hard drive. This also assumes there is at least 10% space free on your hard drive. OnyX can be found at http://www.titanium.free.fr/pgs2/english/download.html and Yasu can be found at http://jimmitchell.org/projects/yasu/ .

  • Os x could not be installed on Mac book pro because storage system verify or repair failed. When i open disk utility HDD does not let me repair.

    os x could not be installed on Mac book pro because storage system verify or repair failed.
    When i open disk utility HDD does not let me repair.

    In order to repair the system disk you must boot from another disk drive. The operating system will not allow the disk drive it is running from to be repaired.
    Book the MBP and create a bootable clone on an external disk drive. Then boot from the external disk drive and repair the system disk drive from there.

  • Fix my hard drive - Disk Utility won't repair

    I have a powerbook g4 1.5 17" 1.5 gig ram
    it has annnn 80gig hard drive
    it's only about a year or 2 old
    now recently i've been having hard drive trouble
    when i play movies off the hard drive they kinda freeze up and stuff, not cos of the file but the hard drive it's like they're copied onto a bad sector or something.
    i have files such as pictures and movies that i try to move or copy but they wont let me, or they get half way and cant copy the rest....
    oh i was using bit-torrent to download some big files and it kept stuffing up with a hard drive read/write error
    now the 1.7 gig i just downloaded wont open or copy to somewhere else to open it
    and thats not good
    so i've tried Disk Utility and got it to Verify the hard drive and it recognises some errors and stops scanning and says you need to fix it
    i think one of them is a checksum/table error or something or.... i will have to get the exact error message off it later. but it tells me to fix it but i can't press the 'repair' button cos it's not available to be clicked! so that's a bugger
    is there another program i can get off version tracker to help fix this or something else i can do? any way to try and recover that huge file too?
    let me know what you think and i'll give u any more info that you need cos i definately dont wanna replace the hard drive!

    is that just the 2 dvd set that came with the computer?
    it's like a system restore disc or something
    i dont have an actual OSX disc cos it came with OSX 10.4 loaded
    i'm worried that my dvd restore discs will have 10.3 on them and it wont be compatible.. although i'm not sure, does anyone know what it originally shipped with?
    apple-history doesn't seem to know
    and the other thing
    IF i do need a new hard drive what size can i upgrade to? it's 80gig now, i know they went up to 100gig at the time but can i put anything bigger in it or will it crack it?
    and what kind of hard drive do i need, i'll probly buy one off ebay - so some kind of bits that help me identify it would help heaps
    THEN should i pay for someone to repair it and put it in or open her up and do it myself? i'm not worried about the changing it over part it's more how do i then format it and get it ready to go into the computer
    any help will be deemed HELPFUL
    thanks heaps

  • Disk Utility says "drive can't be repaired, disk and restore your backed up files."

    My Mac Book Pro froze yesterday and I had to force restart it. It had been showing me messages that my hard drive disk was full for a while and I was in the middle of transferring files to my external hard drive and I accidentally put a huge large file from my external hard drive into the trash on my laptop which makes me wonder if that means I added more GB to a computer that was already very full. Anyway, after freezing I restarted it and the desktop wouldn't load properly. The desktop picture was there, but folders on desktop did not appear, finder bar was missing and the dock was acting super slow and nothing worked when clicked on. Then the next few attempts were around the same result and eventually became stuck on the apple logo, spinning gear and a progress bar that was not loading at all.
    Here's what I've tried so far:
    Safe mode- nothing happens
    Command + R - I am unsure how to work this since I can't seem to find an internet connection when it prompts for one. None of the internet connections have much signal and my own information doesn't seem to load since the gear spins to find the internet connection name and password I typed to load it but can't seem to find it. Perhaps I have the wrong internet information, but I don't think so.
    I tried Command + S to use in single user mode and type in a command to help fix the drive, BUT, even though the black screen and white lettering mode did show up, it remained in a place where I was not allowed to type anything and the last thing written at the bottom of the screen was something about set up for bluetooth, I think. I tried this twice and both times it stopped in the same place and I could not type a command.
    Disk Utility using installation dvd to verify and repair disk. Verify says disk needs repair and then repair has some red colored phrases: Invalid volume file count. (It should be 786374 instead of 786274) Incorrect number of thread records. And there was another problem listed but I do not remember it. Then, near the end of repairing it says: "Disk Utility stopped repairing Macintosh HD." It tells me it couldn't repair the disk and that I should back up as many of my files as possible, reformat the disk and restore backed up files.
    That would be fine and dandy, but I have no idea how to back up my files and do all this. I have no idea how to exactly get the data off my hard drive. If someone does, please list a step by step guide for me on how to do so.
    I have an external hard drive and I tried plugging in and selecting the hard drive and making a "New Image" to copy to the external hard drive destination, but it just stops a few seconds into it and tells me there is an input/output error. I tried read only, read/write only, compressed options for making a copy and all yield the same result.
    In Disk Utility, I believe I have a partition -the Macintosh HD. I have listed on the left hand side: 320.07 GB Hitachi HTSS45.....etc. and below it in non-bolded, grey lettering it says "Macintosh HD."
    The Hitachi, when clicked upon, shows the S.M.A.R.T. status as Verified and the Macintosh HD doesn't show much in details except for "Not mounted."
    At one point, the Macintosh HD was in bold lettering and seemed to be mounted for a few minutes. When that happened, I was able to see the details reading: Mount Point: /Volumes/Macintosh HD, Capacity: 319.73 GB, Available: 11.92 GB, Used: 307.81 GB, etc.
    I'm getting nervous to keep turning on and off the computer on force start and shut downs, especially since I have been reading up that the longer the computer is on, the more the hard drive is in use and the more chance for it to start deleting or overwriting my files. Is this true?
    It's not mounted anymore since it was momentarily mounted. I just want to get my files off the disk and save them to my external hard drive. That is my main goal right now. What can I do?
    Thank you in advance for your help!

    If you want to preserve the data on the boot drive, you must try to back up now, before you do anything else. It may or may not be possible. If you don't care about the data, you can skip this step.
    There are several ways to back up a Mac that is unable to fully boot. You need an external hard drive to hold the backup data.
    1. Boot into Recovery (command-R at startup) or from a local Time Machine backup volume (option key at startup.) Launch Disk Utility and follow the instructions in the support article linked below, under “Instructions for backing up to an external hard disk via Disk Utility.”
    How to back up and restore your files
    2. If you have access to a working Mac, and both it and the non-working Mac have FireWire or Thunderbolt ports, boot the non-working Mac in target disk mode by holding down the key combination command-T at the startup chime. Connect the two Macs with a FireWire or Thunderbolt cable. The internal drive of the machine running in target mode will mount as an external drive on the other machine. Copy the data to another drive. This technique won't work with USB, Ethernet, Wi-Fi, or Bluetooth.
    How to use and troubleshoot FireWire target disk mode
    3. If the internal drive of the non-working Mac is user-replaceable, remove it and mount it in an external enclosure or drive dock. Use another Mac to copy the data.

  • Am replacing airport extreme with Time Machine and want to upgrade from Tiger to Snow leopard. Am told I should manually back up into T Machine before OS update but set up utility won't allow anything with OS below 10.5 and I'm 10.4.11. What to do?

    Am replacing airport extreme with Time Machine and want to upgrade from Tiger to Snow leopard. Am told I should manually back up into T Machine before OS update but set up utility won't allow anything with OS below 10.5 and I'm 10.4.11. What to do?

    I think you mean you are replacing your Airport Extreme with a Time Capsule. Time Machine is software integrated into OS X 10.5 & 10.6 used to automatically backup a system to an external HD. Time Capsule is an Airport Extreme that has a hard disk integrated into it that can be used for storage or  as a Time Machine backup drive.
    Because you are currently on Tiger 10.4.x you can backup to a external HD using SuperDuper or Carbon Copy Cloner. Having a backup is very wise before doing any major system update. After  you have created the backup and have successfully upgraded to Snow Leopard you can still use the external HD for many things. The strategy I'd recommend is to use the new Time Capsule as your Time Machine backup and then use the external HD as backup using SuperDuper or CCC. Redundant backups is wise because backups can (and do) fail too! In addition both SD and CCC are bootable clones, this is useful in that if your internal HD crashes you can boot from a cloned drive and continue working until the internal HD is replaced.
    Below are some links to some articles from MacWorld, I would recommend reading them where you find a common theme, redundant backups. Backup Plan I, Backup Plan II & Backup Plan III.
    Roger

  • Desktop or Disk Utility won't show External Hard Drives

    The Desktop or Disk Utility won't show  2 of my old external hard drives and so they are currently unsusable. My computer however recognise other external drives.
    320GB Western Digital MyBook Premium model number: WD3200D032-000
    500 GB Western Digital MyBook Premium model number: WD5000E032
    I have same issues both of these external drives.
    The blue circle lights come on so power is getting to it.
    Tried 2 USB cables, one I know for sure is working - Nothing.
    I am using Lion 10.7.4 on a mid 2009 13" MacBook Pro
    All efforts to help much appreciated

    No they haven't worked on this computer before. I using them on my old MacBook Pro (a computer which is no longer working)  which ran Snow Leopard.
    The 500GB drive  "stopped working" with that old MBP too
    But the 320GB drive was always working with old MBP if I remember correctly.
    Cheers

  • Disk Utility won't start up in 10.5.3

    I have been unable to open up my Disk Utility at all. I was able to do so earlier, perhaps with 10.5.0 while I was mounting my external hard drive. Now, I cannot mount the hard drive, and therefore cannot use Time Machine all because DIsk Utility won't open. I've diagnosed my hardware with "Disk 1" and found no problem. And, I've reinstalled the operating system. Any ideas?

    Chris:
    I just had the same issue on my son's MacBook. As long as you have a wired keyboard, the following will work.
    1. Shut down the computer if it is on.
    2. Press the power button to start the computer.
    3. Immediately press and hold the Command (Apple) key and the "s" key for single-user mode.
    4. Type mount -uw / (then press the Return Key) wait for next line to appear with # root/
    (there is a space between t and - and another space between w and /)
    5. Then Type "passwd" (without quotation marks then press the Return Key)
    6. Enter new password (this will be for the root user account) (watch your fingers when you type because it doesn't show what you are typing, then hit the Return Key after you type it.
    It will prompt you to retype the new password again, so retype it again and then hit the Return Key) wait for next line to appear...
    7. Then Type "reboot" (without the quotes and hit the Return Key)
    after the computer restarts and comes up with the login window....
    8. Login with any of your usernames just to get the desktop up.
    9. After desktop comes up choose System Preferences, then choose accounts. Unlock if you have to and using the username: root ..... and the password you just setup in the single user mode You now should be able to make users including your existing user account an admin.
    After you log back in under your real account, it is advisable to deactivate the root user account. To do this,
    1. Click the Finder icon in the Dock.
    2. From the Go menu, choose Utilities.
    3. Open Directory Utility.
    4. Click the lock in the Directory Utility window if you need to unlock the utility.
    5. Enter an administrator account name and password, then click OK.
    6. Choose Disable Root User from the Edit menu.
    Hope this helps.
    David

  • Disk Utility won't resize a partition

    Disk Utility won't resize (eliminate smaller partition from a 2-partitioned internal) Hard Drive. This is the message I get:
    "Partition failed
    Partition failed with the error:
    Filesystem resize support required, such as HFS+ with Journaling enabled."
    Help files offer no information on this error. I followed the Help instructions to do this operation, but the resize doesn't work. The older, smaller partition shows up in Disk Utility but is dimmed out. It will activate at highlight, but is not recognized on the desktop.
    Any suggestions as to how to fix this problem?

    Intel based Macs use a different partition scheme called GPL or GUID rather than what PowerPC used, APL.
    You could try reformatting, or get a new system, and run BootCamp and Windows even.
    Even if you've used Macs for years, there is always a place on my book shelf for this one, David Pogue's "Mac OS X: The Missing Manual (Leopard Edition)"
    http://books.slashdot.org/books/08/02/27/1551206.shtml

  • Disk Utility won't partition ext. drive

    Hi everyone,
    I would like to split my external MyBook Pro drive in two so I can keep Time machine B/ups separate, but Disk utility keeps informing me that there is not enough space! I only want approx 80gb of the remaining 105gb. Where am I going wrong. Any help would be much appreciated. Thanks.

    Are you willing to erase the contents on the external hard drive? Disk utility won't subdivide existing space, you have to do the entire drive at once. However, there are utilities (I believe they are purchase/commercial only) that will sub partition an existing disk partition.

  • Disk utility does not allow to restore Macintosh HD after I deleted a small size (1GB) partition

    Hi, when I tried to create a new 1GB partition (on my Mac mini 2011, using Mac OS X 10.7.3) and then to delete it I could not restore (increase) Macintosh HD size using Disk utility (diskutil list shows the same value for Macitosh HD (498,17GB) partition before and after I deleted a new created 1GB partition).
    Please help, how I can restore the original size of Macintosh HD when Disk utility does not allow to restore Macintosh HD after I deleted a small size (1GB) partition?
    Thank you.

    The bottom right corner dragging does not help in my case, because it shows that Macintosh HD partition size is maximal, but its real size did not change after I removed 1GB partition.
    Maybe any other idea can help me, for example some built-in tool like diskutil which allows to view and manage unused partitions in terminal?
    Thank you.

  • 10.4.11 Installed -Safari Crashes, Disk Utility Won't Open

    Installed 10.4.11 yesterday via software update on our 2.0GHz Core Duo Macbook Pro.
    After installing Safari crashes seconds after opening (it freezes then crashes) and then I downloaded the 10.4.11 update from Apples website (using firefox) but Disk Utility won't open it. If I try and launch disk utility myself it just bounces in the dock once and closes. Please help!

    Same here - two identical iBook G4's, both updated to 10.4.11 - one is fine and everything works, the other one has the following problems: safari crashes 100% of the time, USB devices are failing to be recognised (mouse, storage key etc).
    Looking in /var/log/system there is an error message saying a previous version of a kernel module is already loaded (cant get to the original error message text sorry!).
    Looking on other forums looked like a simple 'trash the cache' fix - which I did - and hey presto the usb devices started working - but not safari. Messing around trying to flush out a safari cache failed after a few attempt, as did fixing file perms, zapping PRAM, booting from open firmware, and all the other usual things mentioned in the forums.
    As it happens the iBook has nothing precious on it - so though to reinstall from the original installation disk. iBook G4 specific OSX Tiger distribution disk 1 inserted, but iBook now refuses to boot from it - holding down the c key on reboot just pops up a blue screen with a folder icon on it and an alternating finder and question mark logo - as in 'error I can't find a system on this installation disk' - the iBook then boots from the internal disk - getting nowhere fast.
    Out come the Leopard install disks, and iBook quite happily boots from there and is right now doing a clean install from them (like I said nothing precious on there and thats why I cant get to the original error message...).
    I've seen lots of posts about folks struggling to boot from the original install disks recently - wondering if patch 11 did something to knock the OSX version number on the machine greater than the version on the shipped G4 install disks??
    And there is something very odd about patch 11 that seems to have hit this iBook and not my other one - they both installed fine, they have identical software apps on them and they are both the same spec.
    Can't help more than this - but given I've seen these issues raised in several places worth adding to the thread.

Maybe you are looking for

  • HT1600 can i add apps to apple tv

    can i add apps to apple tv

  • MS Word crashes when I do find/replace with the OS X 10.5.6

    Does anyone know what I can do about MS Word crashing when I do a find and/or replace in a document? It happens constantly. The interesting thing is that is doesn't occur every single time I do find/replace but the SECOND time I use the feature. The

  • Getting connected...

    Hey, i just recieved my iBook today and am having difficulty getting online. For my desktop PC i have a Speedtouch USB DSL modem and i wish to take this from my desktop and use it to connect my iBook to the internet. How do i go about doing this? Im

  • No Vibration on Q 10

    I had restar my phone pressing the on/off button until blackberry symbol appear, also I turn on all the vibrate configurations in Notifications menu, like applications and others but it doesn´t function, somebody can help me please

  • "/usr/lib is not a symbolic link" and testify+libjpeg7 problem

    everytime I update pacman or do a "ldconfig" I get this: /sbin/ldconfig: /usr/lib/ is not a symbolic link this appeared by the time i installed libjpeg7 from aur (though I'm not 100% sure libjpeg7 is responsible). I've looked through google trying to