Expand Boot Camp Partition to Existing HD Space

Ran out of space in my Windows 7 64-bit Boot Camp partition (was 35 GB) but now that I expanded to 80 GB and restored, Windows Explorer (and Disk Utility) says it's still 35 GB. I downloaded Acronis and it says Boot Camp is 80 GB, but FAT32. Tried converting to NTFS in the admin command prompt, it said it was already NTFS. Not sure what to do now to get the Boot Camp partition to take up the available space, any ideas?
Steps I've taken so far:
1. Backed up Windows 7 (image) and Mac partition (Time Machine)
2. Created Repair Disc for Win 7 64-bit
3. Removed Windows partition
4. Created new partition at 80 GB
5. Restored using Repair disc and image
6. Found that the Boot Camp partition is the same size (except in Acronis)

Extend volume is greyed out.
What's interesting there is the graphic below shows in this order:
(E:) BOOTCAMP (C:)
200 MB 197 GB HFS 129 MB 35.56 GB NTFS
Healthy Healthy Unallocated Healthy (System, Boot,
(GPT Protective (Primary Page File, Active,
partition) partition) Crash Dump, Primary partition)
I find this interesting because Acronis sees "Local Volume" as 152 GB and "BOOTCAMP" as 80 GB

Similar Messages

  • How to adjust Boot Camp partition for more Mac space?

    Hello,
    TLDR Version:
    When I setup Boot Camp, I intended to stay in Windows. I’ve now migrated to Mac and want more disc space allocated to it. How can I adjust this in Boot Camp without deleting and reinstalling Windows?
    Extended Version:
    I have had a 21.5” iMac for right at a year now, and have been running Windows 95% of the time prior to last week. I decided that I was spending more time on the Mac partition and deciding that it was better in my eyes than Windows, and decided to install all of my productivity software (Microsoft Office/Adobe Creative Suite) on it in an effort to wean myself off of Windows.
    Unfortunately, when I set the computer up, I did a 90/10 partition install of Windows on Boot Camp, with 90% of the disc space being allocated to Windows. Obviously, this will no longer work for me, and working from my files in the Boot Camp partition is both limited, and irritating. I would like to adjust the partition the other way; probably an 85/15 partition with the 85% being Mac OSX and the remainder being Windows. Because Mac OSX is the boot disc, it appears as though it can be made smaller, but not larger in Boot Camp.
    1. Is there a way to adjust the partition size without having to delete the Windows partition and reinstall?
    2. Is the Airport Time Capsule a suitable device to temporarily dump my data on while I adjust the partition? I’ve got 99% of my data on a separate external HDD from a data backup a month ago, but would rather not have to make another backup.
    I appreciate any information.
    Best regards,
    Ryan

    Ryan M Smith wrote:
    1. Is there a way to adjust the partition size without having to delete the Windows partition and reinstall?
    You may want to look at Winclone or Camptune. There is Gparted/Live CD for the adventurous souls.
    2. Is the Airport Time Capsule a suitable device to temporarily dump my data on while I adjust the partition? I’ve got 99% of my data on a separate external HDD from a data backup a month ago, but would rather not have to make another backup.
    Time Machine cannot backup Windows. It will only back up OS  - Mac Basics: Time Machine backs up your Mac - Apple Support.

  • I have recently purchased a hybred 750GbHDD as an upgrade for my MAC Book Pro (Intell Version) I have a boot camp partition to the original 500GB HDD. How can I expand both partitions to fit the new drive?

    I have recently purchased a hybred 750GbHDD as an upgrade for my MAC Book Pro (Intell Version) I have a boot camp partition to the original 500GB HDD. How can I expand both partitions to fit the new drive?
    I have tried bootcamp and have had no luck due to the fact that boot camp doesn't see the additional HDD space of 250Gb. What am I not doing?

    Ouch, well there is a problem.
    This is the stack of partitions on your old drive
    EFI (hidden)
    Lion (50GB say)
    Bootcamp (50GB say)
    Lion Recovery Partiton (hidden)
    This is the same stack on your new drive imaged from the old one.
    EFI (hidden)
    Lion (50GB say)
    Bootcamp (50GB say)
    Lion Recovery Partiton (hidden)
    Emtpy Space (100GB say)
    This is what you want
    EFI (hidden)
    Lion (100GB say)
    Bootcamp (100GB say)
    Lion Recovery Partiton (hidden)
    EFI has to be at the top of the drive and Lion Recovery has to be at the bottom of the drive.
    And you only have four partitions.
    You can't move the Lion Recovery Partition or Bootcamp partiton, however you can expand the Lion Partition into empty space below it. (but can't delete or move the Lion Recovery partition)
    Your Duplicator duplicated perfectly, too perfectly Likely would work with same sized drives/partitions.
    This is what your going to need to do.
    You need to move the Bootcamp partition to a blank external drive using WinClone and disconnect. This is so you have two backups of it. (one on your old 500GB drive)
    You will need a drive enclousre or IDE/SATA to USB adapter cable for the older 500GB drive and option key boot from it. (some enclosures can't be booted from so check first Other World Computing is good place to ask)
    Download the free Carbon Copy Cloner, grab any new files off the new 750GB internal drive to the old 500GB your booted from.
    Open Apple's Disk Utility and Erase with Zero option the entire internal 750GB drive and let it rip, this will map off as many bad sectors and improve reliability.
    Now use Carbon Copy Cloner to clone the 500GB Lion + Lion Recovery Partitions to the internal 750GB, it will "fix" things and place Lion Recovery at the bottom of the drive where it belongs, give all the extra space to OS X Lion.
    Next your going to have to follow WinClones instructions to restore your Bootcamp, likely you will have to recreate the Bootcamp partition first (in Bootcamp) to the size you want and then clone. Likely Winclone may "fix" Windows to recognize it's in a new larger partition now. I don't know you'll have to check as I haven't used it.
    When Bootcamp creates the partition it will place it near the bottom next to the Lion Recovery Partition.
    As you know you will have to re-validate Windows with Lord Redmond or it expires as you changed the hardware.

  • Help-Erasing a Boot Camp Partition Caused 32 GB of Disk Space to Vanish

    Hi
    I'm a new mac user I'd I have been really happy so far, expect for this problem:
    -I created a 32 gb partition with boot camp.
    -I tried installing windows xp without knowing I had to format the system to NTFS during the install
    The installation didnt work, and I erased the bootcamp partition.
    -When I tried to create a new boot camp partition, it said my Mac HD size hard drive is 227 gb, ie the *32 gb allocated to the partition had vanished*. In addition, I could not recreate a partition because of an error message.
    -I ran the snow leopard CD's disk utility and thought that I had fixed the problem.
    -However in boot camp, the mac drive is still only 227 gb (missing 32 gb). I can create partitions now, and deleting these partitions does cause any additional loss of disk space.
    -I tried erasing empty disk space with no luck.
    Does anyone know how to recover space lost by Boot Camp?
    Thanks

    qcpharaoh wrote:
    -When I tried to create a new boot camp partition, it said my Mac HD size hard drive is 227 gb, ie the *32 gb allocated to the partition had vanished*. In addition, I could not recreate a partition because of an error message.
    -I ran the snow leopard CD's disk utility and thought that I had fixed the problem.
    -However in boot camp, the mac drive is still only 227 gb (missing 32 gb). I can create partitions now, and deleting these partitions does cause any additional loss of disk space.
    Let me ask a simple question. What size HD do you have in your Mac? You say you see 227 GB and that 32GB is "missing". If I add those two numbers up I com up with 259 GB. I suspect that your "missing" space is due to the inconsistencies in which Snow Leopard now reports 1 GB. In some places it reports 1 GB as a hard disk manufacturer (1 GB = 1,000,000,000 bytes). In other places it reports 1 GB as a binary number (1 GB = 2^^30 [IIRC] = 1,073,741,824 Bytes). Since I do not know of any drive manufacturer that sells a 259 GB drive, I suspect that this is just due to the differing definitions of 1 GB.

  • Will reinstall of OSX wipe out existing Boot Camp partition?

    After a trial install of Parallels corrupted my XP side I have had to reinstall XP on a new boot camp partition, (seen as C: drive).
    But soon after that I noticed a few apps not working properly or not at all in the OSX side.
    I've tried to start up from the Tech Tool disk by holding the C key but it will not do it. It always just starts normally at the sign in prompt rather than running from the disk. I used the Disk Tools app. on the OSX installer disk to Repair Disk Permissions that seem to be needed. It then verifies the corrections are completed, but show back up again in repeat tests. I've concluded that I probably need to just do a fresh install of Osx but does that mean it wipes out the XP side as well?
    All this reinstalling takes a ton of time that I need to be doing my job instead.

    I installed Leopard over Tiger on two machines (normal upgrade not A&I) and on both machines the XP and Vista sides were still working just as before.
    If you system is clean, there is no reason for an install of one to affect the other. Bootcamp is over and done with, once it creates the partition. At that point you have a dual-boot system and the partition wall will prevent one from OS from changing the other.
    I have not even run BC2.0. My partitions were created with BC1.3 which I updated to 1.4 before installing Leopard.

  • Windows disc does not update after resizing boot camp partition

    When I bought my iMac, it came with a 500 GB HDD. I used bootcamp to make a 200GB windows partition and a 300GB Mac partition. The other day I bought a 250GB SSD, and moved everything from my 300GB Mac partition onto the SSD.
    My plan was to use the whole 500GB HDD for windows. So, I deleted the 300GB Mac partition and made it free space on the drive. I then expanded the boot camp partition to take up the whole drive using Mini Tool on windows 7.
    Now, windows 7 shows that my drive is 465GB, but when I boot into mac, the bootcamp hard drive still reads 200GB and 300GB are "free space" even though I expanded the drive using Mini Tool.
    I tried to fix this by filling up the hard drive with an extra 120 GB so it exceeded the 200GB limit that windows shows. But when I booted back into OSX to see if it had worked, none of the files were showing up in the drive, making me believe that boot camp and OS X are not reading changes I am making to the bootcamp drive when I use Windows.
    How can I change this so Disk Utility shows the full size of the disc, like Mini Tool does?
    I will try to upload screenshots soon.

    Re-sizing Windows partitions is not supported on Bootcamp. It requires a clean install. The other option is using Winclone.
    Boot Camp 5.1: Frequently asked questions
    How can a Windows partition be resized after Windows is installed?
    You need to delete the Windows partition using the Boot Camp Assistant, and start over to change the size of the Windows partition. Back up your important Windows files first.

  • Boot Camp partition data disappeared - No DVD drive

    Up until today my Boot Camp partition was working swimmingly.
    Today, I was greeted with the "bootmgr not found" error. After restarting into OSX, none of my files on the drive show up (I have Paragon NTFS) pictured below:
    It looks like the data is still there, but something in the partition tables/mbr is messed up. If possible, I'd like to salvage the existing data.
    To complicate things, I don't have a DVD drive on my MBP. Also, apparently I cannot boot from windows USB keys.
    This makes the usual windows boot repair difficult.
    My attempted solution, which worked to get windows installed in the first place was to make a new partition, and copy Windows install files to it, but I can't seem to get that to boot, either. I tried using Boot Camp Assistant to prepare the files, as well as unetbootin. I also tried formatting as both HFS and Fat, and copying the files from the windows install disk. I also installed rEFIt, but I just get errors when attempting to boot the install partition.
    My last ditch attempt was to rig something through VMware fusion to repair the drive by mounting it as a raw disk, 
    and loading my Windows 7 ISO to perform the repair, but raw disks don't seem to work well with partitions, and I didn't want to nuke all of my data.
    Does anyone have suggestions as to how I might fix this drive, to at least grab some files off of it?
    Any ideas are greatly appreciated.

    To clarify, in Bootcamp the " This disk cannot be partitioned because some files cannot be moved" error is relating to my OSX boot drive - 128Gb SSD. It currently has ~30gb free. Is there a way I can clone this data, and restore it without a DVD drive, or some other bootable media?
    Not being able to create a second partition is on my second drive, 320Gb. Which has 64Gb free. Searching around the net, I saw that resizing a partition to it's smallest possible size is the easiest way to defrag free space in OSX. I did that, and the option to create a second windows partition is still greyed out.
    Even if I nuke the existing bootcamp partition, I need another working, bootable partition that I can boot the Win 7 disc from. Not sure what's changed since my initial install, but it seems even more difficult this time.
    I'll try using carbon copy cloner on my system partition, and test if it's bootable from USB. I'm running out of Ideas.

  • How do I delete my boot camp partition?

    I want to have as much space as possible on my drive. I have a boot camp partition set up but have decided not to use it. How do I safely delete it?

    Launch the Boot Camp Utility. You'll have the option to remove an existing Boot Camp partition. Delete it and the space will be returned to OS X.

  • Windows will not boot to my boot camp partition on a DIY fusion drive - gives "No bootable device found" error

    I have a MacBookPro 9,1 (mid-2012, non-retina) running OS X 10.8.2.  Here is what I have done to my system:
    Installed Windows 7 x64 Pro to a boot camp partition; installed all windows updates.
    Using WinClone, save an image of this boot camp partition.
    Removed optical drive and HDD.
    Installed HDD in place of optical drive.
    Installed SSD in place of HDD.
    Booted to recovery partition, installed OS X on a flash drive.
    Booted to flash drive, created fusion drive using [MacWorld's instructions](http://www.macworld.com/article/2014011/how-to-make-your-own-fusion-drive.html)
    Booted to recovery partition on flash drive.
    Restored system to fusion drive from a Time Machine backup. Unfortunately, it seems that because I never installed OS X on my fusion drive, I do not have a recovery partition. But that's an issue for another day.
    Using Boot Camp assistant, created a boot camp partition on my HDD.
    Using WinClone, restore my Windows installation from the previously created image.
    Now, Windows boots to a black screen telling me that it can't find a bootable device. I have tried a few things to resolve this, all without effect:
    I know that VMware Fusion has to prepare a boot camp partition in order to virtualize it, so I figured it might inadvertently fix things. Alas, while it *did* successfully boot my boot camp partition into a virtual machine, I still can't boot into Windows.
    I figured I'd just try to reinstall Windows. Surprisingly, my system booted to my Windows install disc, which was in my original optical drive (which I had put in a USB case). But, Windows refused to install, giving me a an error 0x8030024. It seems the solution to this issue is to disconnect all drives but the one on which you want to install Windows, which is something I would dearly like to avoid. It would be a pain, but more than that, I'm afraid it would bork my fusion drive, even if I'm careful to never boot to OS X with the SSD disconnected.
    A lot of places said that this error results from a borked MBR, and suggest using a tool like gptfdisk to rewrite it. I followed the instructions [here](https://discussions.apple.com/thread/4144252?start=0&tstart=0), but *that* didn't work either.
    I am now completely at a loss as to how to proceed, and Google isn't much help either.
    In conclusion, here is some information that you may find helpful:
        $ diskutil list
    /dev/disk0
       #:                       TYPE NAME                    SIZE       IDENTIFIER
       0:      GUID_partition_scheme                        *240.1 GB   disk0
       1:                        EFI                         209.7 MB   disk0s1
       2:          Apple_CoreStorage                         239.7 GB   disk0s2
       3:                 Apple_Boot Boot OS X               134.2 MB   disk0s3
    /dev/disk1
       #:                       TYPE NAME                    SIZE       IDENTIFIER
       0:      GUID_partition_scheme                        *750.2 GB   disk1
       1:                        EFI                         209.7 MB   disk1s1
       2:          Apple_CoreStorage                         648.4 GB   disk1s2
       3:                 Apple_Boot Boot OS X               650.0 MB   disk1s3
       4:       Microsoft Basic Data BOOTCAMP                100.9 GB   disk1s4
    /dev/disk2
       #:                       TYPE NAME                    SIZE       IDENTIFIER
       0:                  Apple_HFS Mayfly                 *884.0 GB   disk2
    $ diskutil cs list
    CoreStorage logical volume groups (1 found)
    |
    +-- Logical Volume Group 63DC419F-1A09-4C5B-977A-F59F79502CA1
       =========================================================
       Name:         FusionDrive
       Size:         888087773184 B (888.1 GB)
       Free Space:   0 B (0 B)
       |
       +-< Physical Volume B1B14251-2DB3-491C-9E7A-5C2FD11881BA
       |   ----------------------------------------------------
       |   Index:    0
       |   Disk:     disk0s2
       |   Status:   Online
       |   Size:     239713435648 B (239.7 GB)
       |
       +-< Physical Volume D0BA2837-514D-4620-8E1D-26D18137CA94
       |   ----------------------------------------------------
       |   Index:    1
       |   Disk:     disk1s2
       |   Status:   Online
       |   Size:     648374337536 B (648.4 GB)
       |
       +-> Logical Volume Family 736A8900-FE9C-4342-A932-EDC35444774C
           Encryption Status:       Unlocked
           Encryption Type:         None
           Conversion Status:       NoConversion
           Conversion Direction:    -none-
           Has Encrypted Extents:   No
           Fully Secure:            No
           Passphrase Required:     No
           |
           +-> Logical Volume B4997853-59F8-4480-BB48-3481B2F2A123
               Disk:               disk2
               Status:             Online
               Size (Total):       884000030720 B (884.0 GB)
               Size (Converted):   -none-
               Revertible:         No
               LV Name:            Mayfly
               Volume Name:        Mayfly
               Content Hint:       Apple_HFS
    $  sudo gpt -r -vv show disk1
    Password:
    gpt show: disk1: mediasize=750156374016; sectorsize=512; blocks=1465149168
    gpt show: disk1: Suspicious MBR at sector 0
    gpt show: disk1: Pri GPT at sector 1
    gpt show: disk1: Sec GPT at sector 1465149167
          start        size  index  contents
              0           1         MBR
              1           1         Pri GPT header
              2          32         Pri GPT table
             34           6        
             40      409600      1  GPT part - C12A7328-F81F-11D2-BA4B-00A0C93EC93B
         409640  1266356128      2  GPT part - 53746F72-6167-11AA-AA11-00306543ECAC
    1266765768     1269536      3  GPT part - 426F6F74-0000-11AA-AA11-00306543ECAC
    1268035304         280        
    1268035584   197111808      4  GPT part - EBD0A0A2-B9E5-4433-87C0-68B6B72699C7
    1465147392        1743        
    1465149135          32         Sec GPT table
    1465149167           1         Sec GPT header
    $ sudo fdisk /dev/disk1
    Disk: /dev/disk1     geometry: 91201/255/63 [1465149168 sectors]
    Signature: 0xAA55
             Starting       Ending
    #: id  cyl  hd sec -  cyl  hd sec [     start -       size]
    1: EE    0   0   2 - 1023 254  63 [         1 - 1268035583]     *2: 07 1023 254  63 - 1023 254  63 [1268035584 -  197111808] HPFS/QNX/AUX
    3: 00    0   0   0 -    0   0   0 [         0 -          0] unused     
    4: 00    0   0   0 -    0   0   0 [         0 -          0] unused

    My setup is very similar to your's, Ryan, on a Mac Mini5,2 and the ordering is different and Winclone was not used.
    1. New Mini with internal 500GB with Mountain Lion(ML), put into an external FW enclosure, so the Mini can/could be booted using an external drive for contigency.
    2. Replaced internal stock HDD (500Gb/5400rpm) with SSD/HDD (256Gb SSD/1TB 5400rpm).
    3. Installed W7 x64 on 64GB partition on HDD, which was a single-partition drive to begin with.
    4. The remaining HDD partition and the entire SSD was put into a Fusion drive.
    5. Using Command-R, new ML installed on Fusion HD.
    Here is what I currently have...(Disk0 - SSD, Disk1- 1TB HDD, Disk2 - Fusion, Disk3 - External FW).
    diskutil list
    /dev/disk0
       #:                       TYPE NAME                    SIZE       IDENTIFIER
       0:      GUID_partition_scheme                        *256.1 GB   disk0
       1:                        EFI                         209.7 MB   disk0s1
       2:          Apple_CoreStorage                         255.7 GB   disk0s2
       3:                 Apple_Boot Boot OS X               134.2 MB   disk0s3
    /dev/disk1
       #:                       TYPE NAME                    SIZE       IDENTIFIER
       0:      GUID_partition_scheme                        *1.0 TB     disk1
       1:                        EFI                         209.7 MB   disk1s1
       2:          Apple_CoreStorage                         934.5 GB   disk1s2
       3:                 Apple_Boot Boot OS X               650.0 MB   disk1s3
       4:       Microsoft Basic Data BOOTCAMP                64.9 GB    disk1s4
    /dev/disk2
       #:                       TYPE NAME                    SIZE       IDENTIFIER
       0:                  Apple_HFS Fusion HD              *1.2 TB     disk2
    /dev/disk3
       #:                       TYPE NAME                    SIZE       IDENTIFIER
       0:      GUID_partition_scheme                        *500.1 GB   disk3
       1:                        EFI                         209.7 MB   disk3s1
       2:                  Apple_HFS Rescue HD               371.8 GB   disk3s2
       3:                  Apple_HFS Leopard HD              31.9 GB    disk3s3
       4:                  Apple_HFS Snow Leopard HD         31.9 GB    disk3s4
       5:                  Apple_HFS Lion HD                 31.3 GB    disk3s5
       6:                 Apple_Boot Lion Recovery HD        650.0 MB   disk3s6
       7:                  Apple_HFS Mountain Lion HD        31.3 GB    disk3s7
       8:                 Apple_Boot Mountain Lion Recove... 650.0 MB   disk3s8
    diskutil cs list
    CoreStorage logical volume groups (1 found)
    |
    +-- Logical Volume Group A8C00490-0E14-401F-AB69-59F37724E8C4
        =========================================================
        Name:         Fusion
        Size:         1190201270272 B (1.2 TB)
        Free Space:   0 B (0 B)
        |
        +-< Physical Volume 4772013B-5520-4801-9BE5-BCAEF4AEDAB3
        |   ----------------------------------------------------
        |   Index:    0
        |   Disk:     disk0s2
        |   Status:   Online
        |   Size:     255716540416 B (255.7 GB)
        |
        +-< Physical Volume A679A101-3C78-4A59-B5EE-A4339210CFAD
        |   ----------------------------------------------------
        |   Index:    1
        |   Disk:     disk1s2
        |   Status:   Online
        |   Size:     934484729856 B (934.5 GB)
        |
        +-> Logical Volume Family 5EF5C7CA-0B9C-4169-82A1-41C84F206672
            Encryption Status:       Unlocked
            Encryption Type:         None
            Conversion Status:       NoConversion
            Conversion Direction:    -none-
            Has Encrypted Extents:   No
            Fully Secure:            No
            Passphrase Required:     No
            |
            +-> Logical Volume 1512657C-ED13-4B31-82C6-7AECBBCA7F98
                Disk:               disk2
                Status:             Online
                Size (Total):       1185508581376 B (1.2 TB)
                Size (Converted):   -none-
                Revertible:         No
                LV Name:            Fusion HD
                Volume Name:        Fusion HD
                Content Hint:       Apple_HFS
    sudo gpt -r -vv show disk1
    gpt show: disk1: mediasize=1000204886016; sectorsize=512; blocks=1953525168
    gpt show: disk1: Suspicious MBR at sector 0
    gpt show: disk1: Pri GPT at sector 1
    gpt show: disk1: Sec GPT at sector 1953525167
           start        size  index  contents
               0           1         MBR
               1           1         Pri GPT header
               2          32         Pri GPT table
              34           6        
              40      409600      1  GPT part - C12A7328-F81F-11D2-BA4B-00A0C93EC93B
          409640  1825165488      2  GPT part - 53746F72-6167-11AA-AA11-00306543ECAC
      1825575128     1269544      3  GPT part - 426F6F74-0000-11AA-AA11-00306543ECAC
      1826844672   126679040      4  GPT part - EBD0A0A2-B9E5-4433-87C0-68B6B72699C7
      1953523712        1423        
      1953525135          32         Sec GPT table
      1953525167           1         Sec GPT header

  • Help: Windows XP on MacBook Pro Boot Camp Partition via Target Disk Mode

    Firstly, let me lay out my situation. I have an old MacBook Pro (2,2) with a broken disk drive. It was dropped in its youth and can no longer read from or write to CDs or DVDs of any kind. I have just recently bought a new MacBook Pro to replace it (6,2) and am currently trying to convert the old computer into an XP machine through Boot Camp. I'd like to be able to do so without having to buy an external disk drive.
    After a clean install of OS X (10.6.3) onto the old machine, I successfully partition 85GB of space (although I previously attempted the same with a 32GB file system to no avail as well) for XP to be installed upon. Because I cannot boot my XP install disk directly from the broken disk drive, I then close Boot Camp Assistant and shut down the computer. I start it up in Target Disk Mode to be accessed from the new MacBook (6,2).
    Once the old MacBook is connected, I insert my XP install disk into the new MacBook (6,2) and boot from the disk. After allowing the XP (Professional) boot to load the install files, I arrow-key down to my 85GB partition (FAT32, named standard as "BOOTCAMP") on the old MacBook (2,2)'s hard drive and select it as the partition I would like to install to. This is where I am directed to a new boot window that tells me in a series of paragraphs that the XP installer cannot reach the selected partition for what seems to be a number of reasons. What it seems to be trying to say to me is that it cannot do a remote install of XP on a Target Disk Mode-connected machine, while not "knowing" that I am trying to do so. It's a similar message to the one that Boot Camp Assistant shows when one tries to create a Boot Camp partition on a machine that is being accessed via Target Disk Mode (Apple puts it much more clearly than Microsoft).
    I'd be perfectly content, albiet slightly vexed, to conclude here that it is not possible, shuttle over to the nearest Best Buy, and purchase an external disk drive if it weren't for one thing: I tried the same thing two weeks ago with Ubuntu 10.10 and it installed perfectly on the Boot Camp partition I had created then (I have since wiped all and installed OS X cleanly on the laptop).
    Here comes the point/questions:
    If the Ubuntu boot disk can access the partition, why can't the XP boot disk?
    Is there some way to convince the boot system that the drive is local, rather than being accessed via Target Disk Mode?
    Is there an easy solution that doesn't even require that, and will allow me to install to the disk over a firewire connection?
    If anyone's knowledgeable and/or brave enough to tackle this one, I'll be eternally grateful. Heck, I'll be grateful if anyone even attempts to tackle it.
    Thanks,
    -Alec Page

    Windows XP will only install from the optical drive. Target Disk Mode does not work with Windows volumes. Windows will not install from any external device.

  • How do I create a Boot Camp partition with Windows & blank NTFS partitions?

    I'm trying to create this kind of setup:
    OS X partition
    Windows 7 partition
    blank NTFS partition (no OS)
    blank NTFS partition (no OS)
    This would be much easier if I created just the OS X partition and the Windows 7 partition with the Boot Camp Assistant tool (done this many times before successfully on other computers). The problem begins when I try to split the Boot Camp partition through the Windows 7 DVD partition manager during setup by deleting the Boot Camp partition, and recreating three partitions from the unallocated space. After installing Windows 7 on one of those new three partitions, I'm getting all kinds of startup errors when I try to install the Boot Camp drivers.
    What would the best way to achieve this setup?

    Yes, I researched many options for three partition dual boot set ups. After many trials and tribulations, there is a simple method that I have used on multiple MBPs.
    1. Run Boot Camp Assistant, as per the Boot Camp Installation and Setup Guide. Once you have Mac OS X and Windows 7 set up, check the partitions and back them up (with Time Machine, and Winclone).
    2. Get iPartition, and resize the Mac and Windows partitions to what you want, say 100GB each, and set up your other partitions to the size you want. I put mine "after" the Windows partition, at the end of the disk, and have had no problems. It takes a few minutes to create the bootable CD for iPartition, but you get everything you need to do so from Coriolis Systems. You will need your Mac OS X installl disc.
    3. Install Paragon's HFS+ for Windows and NTFS for Mac, and everybody can read and write everything.
    4. I have both Time Machine and Norton 360 back up the Data partitions, just in case -- to an external drive, of course.
    You can boot to either OS and access any partition.

  • Help with boot camp partition on leopard!

    So I wanted to increase my partition disc size, because I ran out of space. So I restored it and started the whole process over again, using like 75 out of the 102 gigs of free space. This time, something went wrong. I window came up and said:
    "The disk cannot be partitioned because some files cannot be moved. Back up the disk and use the disk utility to format it as a single Mac OS Extended(journaled) volume. Restore your information to the disk and try using Boot Camp Assistant again."
    All I want to do is repartition it... I need help plz, thanks. Oh and I assumed the big files were obstacles so I deleted some 1-6 gig stuff I used to use not anymore(not any system stuff either) but that didn't work. Help!

    I bought a new MacBook today with Leopard. I tried to install Windows XP (with service pack 2). I chose 32GB for windows. When I clicked start installation the screen went white, the windows CD was ejected and nothing else happened.
    I had to switch it off manually and then I tried to restart the MacBook. The screen was just black.
    I just read this:
    +This means that the Windows partition is not bootable, usually because of a formatting problem. The Boot Camp Setup Assistant creates the Boot Camp partition, but the Windows installer must format it. Boot back into Mac OS X and re run the Boot Camp Setup Assistant. Remove the partition and re create it. Then install Windows again, this time allowing Windows to format the partition. Refer to the "Boot Camp Installation & Setup Guide" PDF document for more detail on installing Boot Camp.+
    I couldn't reboot it into the Mac OS X so I went back to PC World and created merry ****.
    They blamed me and I blamed them and said there was a formatting problem. I left the MacBook with them and they said they would try and install windows XP for me. I collect it today.
    What do I do if they can't get windows on there as I don't really understand what I read above so will need something a bit clearer....step-by-step.
    Can anyone help me please?

  • Resizing Boot Camp Partition

    Is it possible to dynamically reduce the size of my Boot Camp partition to allow room to increase my OS X partition. I really don't want to delete Boot Camp and then reinstall everything from XP to the applications so was hoping I can painlessly take 5GB out of it.

    Backup both - WinClone for Windows, SuperDuper or Disk Utility Restore for OS X.
    Head over to Paragon Software and download CampTune and read the directions.
    For 5GB???
    As for OS X, it has a fit if it doesn't have 10-20% free space, less than 10% and it can belly-up, loss of btree directory.
    Sounds like time for hard drive swap actually.

  • Does Winclone still work to restore a Boot Camp partition?

    I have a 50GB Boot Camp partition, NTFS file system, with Windows XP. My computer is a Mac Pro running OS X 10.6.5. I have been using Winclone to clone the Boot Camp partition as a backup. I know that Winclone is no longer supported, and have heard that Winclone may not work properly with Snow Leopard.
    I have no problem creating an image of the Boot Camp partition using Winclone. I have not yet had to do a restore to a new partition, but assume that some day I may need to do so.
    My question is: Has anyone running Snow Leopard successfully used Winclone to restore a Boot Camp partition?
    A secondary question: Is there any other utility, running on the Mac side, that will clone/restore a Boot Camp partition?

    coruscate wrote:
     I have the Winclone backup, but I am unclear how to restore it.
    Using Winclone, I can select the Image to restore.
    When I click on Mount, Winclone puts a disk image of the partition on the desktop.
    When I select the desired partition in Destination and click Restore, it tells me "No Windows Partition Found."
    Has anyone done this? Can you give me any advice about how to complete the restore?
    Good luck to you. I am trying to transfer/migrate my Bootcamp partition (XP pro, FAT32) to a larger HD. I tried Winclone, and like you could create an image, but am unable to restore it on the new drive. I get the same error that you do. I tried creating a Bootcamp partition, rather than having Winclone do it, but would get this error in the log:
    Source image volume size is not an exact multiple of 1 MiB
    This happened whether I used Bootcamp Assistant or Disk Utility to create the partition, and it didn't matter whether I used a larger partition size or attempted to match the existing one. Apparently Winclone measures the block-sizes differently than Finder, Terminal, or any other measurement that I have used reports.
    I've read about suggestions to turn my old FAT-32 Bootcamp Parition into an NFTS one, but I'm loathe to do that since I have on idea if that will work.

  • Recover Deleted Boot Camp Partition

    Hello,
    A week ago I tried to delete Ubuntu from my Windows 8 Boot Camp partition on my MacBook. However, after the process I couldn't boot Mavericks anymore. When I finally got Mavericks to boot, my Windows partition became unbootable. After running the repair disk, I accidentally ran the "clean" command using Diskpart and COMPLETELY wiped my computer of everything - even my Mac OS X partition. The only way I could get my computer to become usable again was to add a partition using the Internet Recovery Disk Utility tools (there were 0 partitions) and fresh-install Lion.
    However, I had all of my important files and apps on my Windows partition and my last backup of it (using Winclone) was outdated. I am not very familiar with this sort of situation, so I was hoping for some help. Currently, I have not attempted to add another Boot Camp partition, but I'm not sure if adding the Lion partition (to make my Mac usable) would make the Windows partition unrecoverable. Also, should I update to Mavericks and then take further action?
    I would sincerely appreciate it if I could receive some assistance.
    MacBook Pro 13-inch, Late 2011
    Processor  2.4 GHz Intel Core i5
    Memory  4 GB 1333 MHz DDR3
    Software  Mac OS X Lion 10.7.5

    Sorry for the late reply!
    I've found the NTFS partition with the right size capacity, 136 GB. However, when I press "p" to list files, the only directory folders that show up are .Trashes and System Volume Information. The partition also appears to be resized (it may have accidentally happened?) because its size is shown as 146 GB/136 GB.
    How would I restore the NTFS partition so that I could fix it with a utility (because I think it's been accidentally resized)? As I'd said above, I deleted my Mac partition too and I had to install a new Lion partition. However, this new Lion partition takes up all of the partition space because there is currently only one, so would I have to re-partition it before I can restore the Windows partition?
    Thanks again!

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