File Vault 2 and Lion Recovery Partition

Has anyone noticed that the Lion recovery partition disapears after enabling File Vault 2? I don't have one anymore. It's Gone!

Check out the OS X Lion: About FileVault2 kb.
Starting from the Recovery HD partition after FileVault 2 is enabled
When FileVault 2 is enabled, Recovery HD does not appear in the Startup Manager (which is accessed by holding Option during startup).  However, you can select the Recovery HD by holding Command-R as Lion starts up.

Similar Messages

  • Recovery Partition mandatory for File Vault and unencrypted TM Backup?

    I recently had to setup my Macbook Pro from scratch meaning erasing the whole disk and start from there.
    The update to Lion took already place a while ago and I had File Vault active. After making a last backup using
    TM I erased the disk and all partitions including Recovery partition and used the Leopard system DVD to boot
    the machine.
    From there I used the restore function to restore my TM backup to the MacBook. However, as the drive was
    not partioned and not formated, I had to do this manually. Apparently, the recovery process via TM does not include
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    I was a little surprised to see that I was able to do this recovery without being asked for ID and password of the user's File Vault access
    or the File Vault recovery key. All I needed was the TM ID and password (which is different from the owners ID and password)
    I am not sure if this is supposed to work like this but I looks rather easy to gain access to application an data of another user if that
    is all it takes?
    Now booting Lion again, I checked File Vault and noticed it was disabled although it was enabled for quite a while and long time
    before I took the latest backup. I could not turn it on, after providing a recovery key and asking me wether I wanted to write it down
    or safe it with Apple which I declined I wanted to reboot the notebook to start encryption but stopped saying my partition or volume
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    Leopard then upgrade to Lion and install all the apps and configure the OS again, would be great? I assume when I am back on Lion and use the TM
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    I am a little concerned about the fact that it seems so easy to gain access to a protected backup and that the TM restore process does not include
    restoring partition and volumes as well. Who knows how many other dependencies exist and users have to reinstall their system again after recovery.
    I was following the recovery instruction of Apple but perhaps someone knows a better way to do this?

    Just an update, I went ahead and installed Lion again over the existing TM restored installation using the Lion Update file and at least File Vault is working. Interestingly, I still do not have a Recover partition so obviously something new for Apple Support to learn.

  • Will reinstalling Lion via the Lion recovery partition cause you to loose all of your applications, documents, etc or does it just replace the Lion operating system and leave everything else untouched?

    Will reinstalling Lion via the Lion recovery partition cause you to loose all of your applications, documents, etc or does it just replace the Lion operating system and leave everything else untouched?

    The latter. I cant tell you how many times I've reinstalled lion! all your apps will be fine!
    Things that will change are system graphics if you altered them with something like candybar or did it manually.
    Having said that, you should always backup your stuff with time machine incase something does happen.
    This is a very important step which will insure the safety of your files while doing things like updating or installing the OS.
    Please exercise caution when doing things with a Hard Drive.

  • File vault and wanted to upgrade to Lion

    I have a client who was using file vault and wanted to upgrade to Lion. I did a Time Machine backup and upgraded to Lion. Ater that I noted that time machine does not backup file vault files. Please help.

    Are you trying to sign into the App Store and can't?

  • How do I install just the Lion installer via the lion recovery partition.

    I am trying to bootcamp windows 7 on my new macbook pro (early 2011), the installation was successfull but i am missing drivers on the windows side and cannot access the internet until i install them.  I installed all the bootcamp updates and put them on a usb to transfer to windows partition but windows kept telling me i need an earlier version of bootcamp which is not available from the update support downloads section of the apple website.
    After some research i realized i needed the mac boot disc for lion, which doesnt exist so i need to create my own.  I was told i could install lion from the lion recovery partition.
    here is my question....If i install lion onto my mac partition that currently has lion, can i stop the download after the initial 4 gb installer and not go through with the full re-installation of lion?  so that i can then take the installesd.dmg (i think thats right) file and put it on a dvd to install from the windows partition and finally get the drivers i need to get it running.
    Comment: based on what i have read on how you used to bootcamp a mac, apple has made it very difficult, unneccesarily difficult it seems.

    Before you do anything else, I suggest a thorough read of this:
    http://manuals.info.apple.com/en_US/boot_camp_install-setup_10.7.pdf

  • USB disk with Lion recovery partition + storage partition shared by Mac & Windows: Windows can't read it.

    I have a Lexar Express Card flash drive (16GB). It works the same as any USB flash drive.
    I use it to move files between Mac OS and Windows 7/Bootcamp: Drag files to it in one OS, reboot in the other OS, take the files back off.
    Recently, I discovered the Lion Recvoery Disk Assistant, which allows you to create a Lion Recovery Disk on an external drive (just in case). So, I decided I would use a ~1GB partition on the express card for the recovery disk, and leave a ~15GB partition for the same file sharing I am used to.
    This setup requires that the disk use a GUID Partition Map with a HFS+ file system for the recovery partition, and I use a FAT32 file system for the shared partition. The partitioning was done in Mac OS Disk Utility, and then I think the Recovery Disk Assistant modifies it further by adding an EFI partition.
    When I try to access the disk in Windows 7, it says it needs to format the drive first (which it shows to be a ~200MB "volume" on a disk with ~15.4GB "capacity"). From what I have been able to find on my own, Windows 7 should be fine with a disk using a GUID Partition Map, and both OSs can use a FAT32 file system. So why does Windows only see the 200MB EFI partition at the first section of the disk, and not the other partitions, particularly the FAT32 file sharing partition?
    The last thing I will mention is that the disk is being seen by Windows as a MBR/Master Boot Record partitioned device. I'm assuming this is the GPT/GUID Partition Table's protective partition's fault; the one MBR partition that keeps the GPT partitioning safe from software that doesn't recognize or know about GPT.
    I'm asking on the Apple discussions because it's in Boot Camp and I'm primarily a Mac user. If anyone knows a better, Windows-focused place to ask, please say so!

    You really need to search first as there are A LOT of post's with the same question. Different issues with different Models.
    What model/year do you have and what OS were you using first? Snow Leopard (10.6) is the last one that came with a CD/DVD with the computer.
    You insert the disk when it's done installing W7 and reboots into Windows then you insert the 10.6 MacOS Installer disk for the Windows drivers. Lion does it a different way.
    PR7 wrote:
    ...........because I lost the OS X Lion install disk that came with my Mac)..........
    Lion (10.7) is only a download now, there are no more physical disk's, (unless you pay the extra money for the USB installer thumb drive directly from Apple). So if your computer came with 10.7 Lion installed then you will not have a physical disk. There should be a "Repair Partition" that you use to boot to if you need to  repair or to reinstall the Lion OS.
    PR7 wrote:
    However, when I log on my Windows account and I insert the bootable OS X Lion install disk, Windows doesn't read it. I can't even find the disk in Windows Explorer or even Right Click on the disk.
    Please Help!
    Thank You!!!
    I don't believe the Boot Camps drivers are in the Lion download anymore, ( to keep the download smaller?), the only way you get them now is when you start BCAssistant, it will prompt you to download them onto a CD, or USB drive. You have to download and install the Boot Camp drivers separately. You then insert it when it's done, when Windows boots.

  • How to rename a hidden Lion recovery partition?

    I want to put a Lion recovery partition for each post Snow Leopard computer I'm supporting, but can't find a way to rename them, so that I don't have a bunch of identically named partitions to choose from. Any ideas?

    First enable Disk Utility's Debug menu by entering this in Terminal:
    defaults write com.apple.DiskUtility DUDebugMenuEnabled -bool YES
    Then relaunch Disk Utility.  Under the Debug menu, select "Show Every Partition".  The Recovery HD will appear in the sidebar.  Click it once, and then click "Mount" in the toolbar.  The Recovery HD will then mount on the Desktop, where you can rename it like any other Finder item.

  • After downloading the new lion os x 10.7.2 with cloud and lion recovery update my internet doesnt work. I have tried 2 different networks that work for other people but not me. help?

    After downloading the new lion os x 10.7.2 with cloud and lion recovery update my internet doesnt work. I have tried 2 different networks that work for other people but not me. help?

    Logic's preference files may have become corrupted:
    1. Quit Logic Pro
    2. In the Finder, press and hold down the "option" key then select "Library" from the "Go" menu
    3. Open the "Preferences" folder
    4. Drag the following files to the Trash:
        - com.apple.logic.pro.cs
        - com.apple.logic.pro.LSSharedFileList.plist
        - com.apple.logic.pro.LSSharedFileList.plist.lockfile
        - com.apple.logic.pro.plist
        - com.apple.logic.pro.plist.lockfile
    These files will be re-created when Logic is next opened.

  • Removed Lion Recovery Partition!

    I have removed the Lion Recovery partition and shat should I do now to get that back again?

    Download Carbon Copy Cloner and WinClone 3
    Get two blank external drives, make sure they are formatted GUID and OS X extended journaled in Disk Utility (actually check Winclone for their external drive format requirments for Windows)
    Use CCC to clone the OS X partition to one external drive.
    Use Winclone to clone the Windows Boot Camp partition to the other external drive.
    Disconnect all drives.
    Now the problem is how to get Recovery HD back onto the machine.
    If you upgraded 10.6 to 10.7/10.8, then hold option/alt and boot off the 10.6 disk, use it to erase the entire internal drive of everything, then install 10.6, upgrade to 10.6.8 and reinstall 10.7/10.8 from AppSore by option click on Purchases or whatever it uses, that will put the Recovery HD back on the machine.
    If your machine came with 10.7 or 10.8, then hold the command option and r keys down and boot the machine on a fast Internet connection (Ethernet the router preferred) and this will load Internet Recovery from Apple's servers. Use Disk Utility there to erase the entire drive of everything and quit, then reinstall OS X from Apple's servers, it will recreate the Recovery HD partition that way, as it's assuming it's a new drive it's installing on.
    When you have your machine in order, go to BootCamp and set up your partition again, then quit.
    Hold the option/alt key down and boot off the OS X "CCC" clone you made, now use CCC to reverse clone OS X back onto the internal drive.
    Connect the Winclone drive, run Winclone and clone that back onto your BootCamp partition.
    When done, reboot and disconnect all drives, head to System Preferences > Startup Disk and set it to either OS X or BootCamp as the default boot. As you know if you change your mind to hold option key at boot to go to the other instead.

  • ICloud (Find My Mac) won't recognize my Lion Recovery Partition.

    When I open the iCloud prefs, Find My Mac is greyed out and says "Recovery partition required." My recovery partion is bootable and working.
    This happened after I resized my partitions using GParted. As mentioned, I tested the Recovery Partition right after resizing them, and it still works.
    Here is the output of 'diskutil list /dev/disk0':
    /dev/disk0
       #:                  TYPE NAME            SIZE       IDENTIFIER
       0: GUID_partition_scheme                *320.1 GB   disk0
       1:                   EFI                 209.7 MB   disk0s1
       2:             Apple_HFS Macintosh HD    213.9 GB   disk0s2
       3:             Apple_HFS Recovery HD     649.1 MB   disk0s3
       4:  Microsoft Basic Data BOOTCAMP        75.5 GB    disk0s4
       5:  Microsoft Basic Data                 21.0 GB    disk0s5
       6:            Linux Swap                 8.7 GB     disk0s6
    Partition 5 is ext3 formatted for Linux.

    I tried using the RecoveryHDUpdate from Apple, but no dice. When selecting an install disk, it gave this error with a yellow triangle icon:
    Lion Recovery Update can't be installed on this disk. An error occurred while evaluating JavaScript for the package.
    Selecting the Recovery HD itself yielded a different yellow triangle error:
    Lion Recovery Update can't be installed on this disk. This update requires Mac OS X version 10.7.

  • Lion Recovery partition on 2011 MacBook Airs

    I did a post for my blog yesterday concerning the use of the Lion recovery partition in solving the problem of turning on Find My Mac. I've had a very positive response from readers, most reporting success. But one has raised a question I cannot answer.
    Here is the original article
    http://www.macfilos.com/home/2011/10/16/icloud-cannot-turn-on-find-my-mac-recove ry-system-update-req.html
    My reader maintains that the Lion recovery partition is not active on her 2011 MacBook Air. She has the latest OS X build and has also installed the Lion Recovery update. I can't really believe this, but I only have a 2010 Air to play with. Can someone confirm or deny?
    The problem I (and many others) had was that the recovery update was not being recognised, the reason being a corrupt volume. After repairing the volume using the recovery partition it was then possible to reinstall the recovery update and subsequently turn on Find My Mac. It could be that my reader has a more intransigent version with the same cause that needs additional work.
    Michael

    If she enters in Terminal
         diskutil list
    if there is a Recovery Partition, she'll see:
         Apple_Boot Recovery HD             650.0 MB   disk0s3
    as the last partition.
    See also: https://discussions.apple.com/message/16417843#16417843
    Tony

  • How to delete lion recovery partition

    i have mac book air 13inch with 128g hdd
    when i install lion, it creats lion recovery partition on my HDD
    and it does not clear out and stays all the time
    i want to delete the lion recovery partition and make my HDD united to only one partition
    how can i do this?
    it there any way to do this?
    help me~~~

    You could, but not recommended.  The recovery partition is
    there so that you can repair or re-install Lion if necessary.
    I don't recall, but I think some people have had issues with
    some Mac models booting Lion if a Recovery HD is not
    present.  Not sure if the Air is one.
    First, to be safe, you should probably make a USB stick
    installer or DVD for Lion should things go south on you and
    have to reinstall from scratch.
    Next,the simplest approach would be to clone your Lion
    install to an external, bootable hard drive using either
    Carbon Copy Cloner or Super Duper.  When that is
    complete boot to that volume then reformat the internal
    volume, then clone the external volume back.
    Don't interrupt any of the processes or you could
    end up with a MacBrick.

  • File Vault and Firewall?

    I have a new macbook pro. Should I turn on File Vault and Firewall?

    The purpose of FileVault is to protect your files from being read by someone who has physical access to the computer. If you need or want that protection, you should enable it.
    The application firewall blocks incoming network traffic, regardless of origin, on a per-application basis. Typically, it would be configured to allow only applications digitally signed by Apple to listen on the network. It does not block outgoing traffic, nor can it distinguish between different sources of incoming traffic. It is not, as some people seem to believe, a malware filter.
    So for example, suppose you enable file sharing, and allow access by guests to certain folders. You want people on your local network to be able to access those files without having to enter a password. When configured as stated above, the firewall will allow that. Your router will prevent outsiders from accessing the files, whether the application firewall is on or not. But if your computer is portable and you connect it to an untrusted network such as a public hotspot, the firewall will still allow access to anyone, which is not what you want.
    Now suppose you unknowingly install a trojan that steals your data and uploads it to a remote server. The firewall, no matter how it's configured, will not block that outgoing traffic. It does nothing to protect you from that threat.
    Another scenario: Your web browser is compromised by a trojan. The trojan redirects all your web traffic to a bogus server. The firewall does nothing to protect you from this threat.
    A final scenario: You're running a public web server. Your router forwards TCP connection requests on port 80 to your Mac, and the connections are accepted by the built-in web server, which is signed by Apple. The application firewall, still configured as above, allows this to happen. Now you download a different trojan, one that tries to hijack port 80 and replace the built-in web server. The good news here is that the firewall does protect you; it blocks incoming connections to the trojan and alerts you. The bad news is that you've been rooted. The attacker who can do all this can just as easily disable the firewall, in which case it doesn't protect you after all.
    It might make a bit of sense to use the firewall if you're running trusted services on an unprivileged port; that is, a port numbered higher than 1023. Those ports can be bound by a process with no special privileges.
    Here is a more realistic scenario in which you should enable the firewall. Your portable Mac has several sharing services enabled. You want those services to be available to others on a home or office network. When you're on those networks, the firewall should be off. When you move to an untrusted network, you can either turn off all the services, or enable the firewall to block them. Blocking is easier: one configuration change instead of several.

  • What are the differences between file vault and legacy file vault?

    what are the differences between file vault and legacy file vault?

    Legacy is an encrypted disk image of your Home folder, FileVault2 is whole disk encryption

  • Recover the lion recovery partition?

    Hi all,
    After removing bootcamp partition my lion recovery partition is missing. Is there any way to recover the recovery partition?
    Thanks..

    You might get a better answer if you post in the OS X Lion forum...

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