GParted - Resizing boot partition etc.
Hi,
This is what my partitions currently look like:
I'm aiming to have my 'Archroot' partition resized to soak up the ~25GB before it and to have my Archhome partition soak up the 26GB after the swap parition.
The first problem I'm having is that when I went to resize/move the Archroot partition into that space the Gparted gave me warning about me possibly losing data/losing the ability to boot since this partition contains my grub stuff.
The second problem is the fact that my Archhome resize would have to involve removing the swap partition and replacing it again at the end of then newly resized Archhome position. Is it okay to do this?
Also note that the Archroot and Archhome partitions have reasonably important work on them and I don't want to lose any of it.
Thanks in advance,
Huge.
hugecannon wrote:The first problem I'm having is that when I went to resize/move the Archroot partition into that space the Gparted gave me warning about me possibly losing data/losing the ability to boot since this partition contains my grub stuff.
Gparted always pops up warnings like that before it resizes stuff. Personally, I have never lost anything from resizing, but there is always a chance of that happening. I strongly suggest backing up important directories (like /etc and /home) before you do this, just because everyone should back up stuff. You'll thank me later when your disk drives crash.
hugecannon wrote:The second problem is the fact that my Archhome resize would have to involve removing the swap partition and replacing it again at the end of then newly resized Archhome position. Is it okay to do this?
Deleting swap and making it again later is totally fine, but you will have to do two things: first, type
swapoff -a
This will turn off your swap partition to make sure you aren't using it before you delete it. When you are done making the new swap partition, you will need to edit your /etc/fstab for the swap partition's new location ( /dev/sdbn ). Then just type
swapon -a
and you'll be good to go.
Similar Messages
-
I have an SBS 2011E server with a RAID 1 Mirror.
I need to resize the C:\ drive which has the OS on it.
The D:\ drive has lots of space on it but it also has a SQL Database that is ArchiOffice and some other minor software.
Can I shrink D: without loss of data and can I extend C: without loss of OS using Disk Management?
If I need third party software, which do I need?
Susan E. RusselHi Susie2229,
Based on your description, I test in my Lab environment. However, it seems that can’t achieve your target via
Disk Management.
I Shrink Volume on E drive via Disk Management. Then an unallocated partition occurred. It’s in the right of
E drive (if the unallocated partition is next to C drive, you may be able to extend volume). However, when I right click the C drive, the Extend Volume option is grey out. I can’t extend the C drive by using that unallocated partition. If my testing process
didn’t follow your original thoughts. Please feel free to let me know.
There is a similar thread that you can refer to. It may help you.
How to extend system drive partition (C:) to get more capacity
http://answers.microsoft.com/en-us/windows/forum/windows_7-performance/how-to-extend-system-drive-partition-c-to-get-more/6acd8697-4292-4280-8270-049691d14598
Just reminds. When
you do operations via some third-party software, please back up firstly. It will help us to avoid unexpected issues.
Hope this helps.
Best regards,
Justin Gu -
Resizing Windows Partition - No Longer Booting
Whenever I attempt to setup a Windows/Linux Dual boot I get hit with this same dilemma. I start off with a NTFS format partition with Windows XP on it. As soon as I resize the partition, it no longer boots. Even before installing linux/grub. I defragmented before attempting this, and I took every precaution. In the end, I'm never able to boot my Windows OS. I can boot Linux from the Grub menu, and I can still access my Windows files.
As of now I've reformatted back to Windows. I would just like to know what went wrong because I want to attempt another install later on.Ward,
windows is weird in that it notes somewhere the block numbers where the system is installed, and when that moves
it does not boot anymore.
Now you are making life more complicated then necessary: if you still have windows resized and installed (and not booting),
you can use the windows install cd and go into repair mode. It will fix the resized windows.
If you are starting from scratch, before installing windows, start a Linux live CD, do not install it, start the program
"gparted" and partition your disk as you want it. Then install windows in one of the partitions.
Instead of the Linux live CD you can also use a Gparted stand alone CD:
http://gparted.sourceforge.net/livecd.php
Hope it helps.
Mektub -
How to back up Boot Camp and how to resize FAT partitions
I suppose someone has already addressed this topic herein, but in case someone needs help I am leaving with you what I learned.
I started with a partition sized to 18 gigs and installed Windows XP on it. Soon the drive became full after I installed software and various disc images so I can play games. I wanted to resize the partition to 28 gigs without losing my data, leaving 46 gigs on my Mac partition.
I was not sure what would work so I chose several methods of possible restoration. The easiest was to boot to the Mac and use Disk Utility to make a Disk Image of Boot Camp. The next precaution I took was to back up my settings with the Windows Files and Settings Wizard. Lastly, I booted to Mac and turned on viewing of hidden files. Then I copied all the files off the Windows XP partition onto an external drive. I also tried Acronis True Image while in Windows but it was not compatible.
I also discovered a free program called Winclone (http://www.tuaw.com) that makes an image of the Windows partition and restores it for you, much like Disk Utility works.
In OSX, I ran Boot Camp Assistant again to rejoin the partitions. Then I ran it again to partition the new drive to 28 gigs.
The first thing I tried to do was to use Winclone to restore the Winclone image. That failed with errors. Then I tried to use Disk Utility to restore the drive and Disk Utility would not allow me to restore the disk image onto the drive. I am not sure why Apple is so unsupportive of implementing their Disk Imaging technology within the context of their own self-created Boot Camp technology.
Anyway, the last thing I could try was to copy the files back onto the new partition or to give up and reinstall Windows and use Files and Settings Transfer Wizard to restore my Windows settings.
After partitioning the drive with Boot Camp Assistant, I copied the files over and rebooted. Windows said there was an unsupported drive. Then I realized that I missed a step in the installation instructions provided by Apple for Boot Camp. I forgot to format the drive again using the Windows XP install CD, that the Apple says is necessary.
So I booted up the Windows cd and erased the Boot Camp partition and made it a FAT drive so that I would be able to copy my files over to it from OSX, which I would not have been able to do had the drive been formatted as NTFS.
As XP started to install its software, and it started to copy files from the cd, I pressed the power button to shut down the Mac. (Do this at your own risk. I am warning you that this could damage your computer, so do NOT try this if you feel uneasy about it.)
I booted into OSX. Then I trashed the few files that Windows had started to install on the Boot Camp drive. Then I copied all my backup files back onto the partition.
Here is a widget that will allow you to view hidden files in OSX: http://www.apple.com/downloads/dashboard/developer/hiddenfiles.html
I rebooted the Mac and held down the Option key while restarting. When the Mac and Windows drives appeared at the startup screen, I selected Windows, which booted up successfully. It then recognized the partitioned drive as new hardware and required me to restart, which I did.
I wanted to convert my drive from a FAT drive to a NTFS-formatted drive.
This is how I did that:
http://technet.microsoft.com/en-us/library/bb456984(TechNet.10).aspx
After converting Boot Camp to NTFS file system I noticed an immediate speed increase in Windows XP. I
In conclusion, Disk Utility is a good method of backing up your partition, as it allows you to use a password to make a disk image of your drive. It also allows you to copy the files off the disk image onto the Windows partition. But it would be a lot simpler if Apple allowed them to use Disk Utility to restore the whole image back onto Boot Camp.
Other methodologies I did not get to explore because I am happy with my results:
http://forums.macosxhints.com/archive/index.php/t-71165.html
http://forums.macrumors.com/showthread.php?t=241035After copying your files back to the Boot Camp partition you may get this error message when you boot up Windows XP. Notepad opens with this message "[.ShellClassInfo] LocalizedResourceName=@%SystemRoot%\System32\Shell32.dll,-21787". If this happens to you please see this article from Microsoft. I had to perform both Methods 1 and 2 to remove the messages. http://support.microsoft.com/kb/330132
-
Boot choice disappear after resizing main partition Mac
I wanted to resize the partition mac for more space later on Windows partition. But when the operation ended and I rebooted, I had no choice boot between windows and mac.
Now it boot, without asking my opinion, directly on the Mac partition.
How to fix this problem, so I can restart my Windows partition.
Thank you in advance for any help or advice.Hi and welcome to Discussions,
use Diks Utility in OSx to check if you maybe inadvertently made a partition between your OSx partition and the Windows partition while shrinking your OSX partition.
If so, then the 'partition numbering' has been changed and the Windows partition is not found.
For XP have a look at this thread http://discussions.apple.com/message.jspa?messageID=11783594#11783594 for a solution.
For Vista or Windows 7 EasyBCD http://neosmart.net/dl.php?id=1 would be my tool of choice.
Hope it helps
Stefan -
Hello, I am trying to upgrade my macbook pro to yosemite, but I get the "disk cannot be used to startup your computer" error.
Resizing the partition does not work for me and I get the error "MediaKit reports no such partition" probably because I installed linux in dual boot and the disk manager is lost.
Anyway to tell the yosemite installer that it should not pay attention whether the disk is bootable or not ?
If I am doomed, any way to delete the installer and downloaded OS from my hard drive ?
Thanks for your helpAs usual, the Linux installer wrecked the partition table. You would have to boot from your OS X installation disc and repartition. Doing so will of course remove all data from the drive, so you must back up first if you haven't already done so.
-
Resized Boot Camp partition; now I have "disk0s4"
OK so i was following this tutorial on how to increase your boot camp partition from this website.
Following this blog post:
http://blog.craigharvey.me/2012/09/02/resize-boot-camp-partition-for-free-window s-8/
I resized my Boot Camp partition to give Windows 7 more space. In Disk Utility on OS X ML, I reduced the size of my OS X partition. So then i clicked apply and now that partition says disk0s4. I tried to verfiy and repair it through disk utitlity but It wont let me as there are problems. I have reiszed my parition before and never had this problem before. What did I do wrong and will I be able to fix it?As you have found out, those instructions do not work, so.
If you can you still boot to OSX, you can Use Boot Camp to remove the Windows partition and return the Mac to normal, then start agin.
Next time you need to resize an NTFS partition use Paragon Camp Tune, which can do it without borking things.
Do Not Ever use Disk Utility to do anything to a Windows partition, it will make the problem worse. -
OVM 3.2.1 / OEL 5.6 Template: How to resize the /boot partition
I need to enlarge the /boot partition from its default 100 MB to 300 MB for OEL 5.6.
I am using OVM_OL5U6_X86_64_PVM_10GB.tgz from Oracle edelivery.
Examining the modifyjeos manpage there is no function for extending and/or modifying /boot that I can locate unless it is an undocumented feature.
The way the disk partitions are laid out in the template make it very daunting as well with
/dev/xvda1 /boot
/dev/xvda2 /
/dev/xvda3 swamp
Perhaps there is an undocumented means via modifyjeos to change the partitioning layout ? or, even better, increase the size of /boot inside the template itself via modifyjeos or some other OVM 3.2.1 and.or OEL 5.X magic
Thanks
Mark E. LLoyd
Data Center Technology
AccentureIt's all explained very well, I'm using tftpd64, I keep getting an error from the switch that the tftp server is unreachable and no explanation why this is happening...
I'm using my computer's wired IP and the full filename, sx300_boot-13506.rfb, and I have the server interface as my computer's wired IP and tftp bound to my computer's wired IP, and no security.
I keep getting the error that the tftp server is unreachable:
Bytes Transferred:
0
Status:
Copy failed
Error Message:
TFTP server unreachable
The RAM memory log says things like:
2147483404
2014-Feb-04 17:04:57
Warning
%COPY-W-TRAP: The copy operation has failed
2147483405
2014-Feb-04 17:04:57
Notice
%TFTP-N-TIMERSEND: Session is closed after timeout is expired
2147483406
2014-Feb-04 17:03:42
Informational
%COPY-I-FILECPY: Files Copy - source URL tftp://172.16.0.90/sx300_boot-13506.rfb destination URL flash://BOOT
2147483407
2014-Feb-04 16:56:13
Warning
%COPY-W-TRAP: The copy operation has failed
2147483408
2014-Feb-04 16:56:13
Notice
%TFTP-N-TIMERSEND: Session is closed after timeout is expired
2147483409
2014-Feb-04 16:54:58
Informational
%COPY-I-FILECPY: Files Copy - source URL tftp://172.16.0.90/sx300_boot-13506.rfb destination URL flash://BOOT
2147483410
2014-Feb-04 16:51:58
Warning
%COPY-W-TRAP: The copy operation has failed, aggregated (1)
2147483411
2014-Feb-04 16:51:58
Notice
%TFTP-N-TIMERSEND: Session is closed after timeout is expired, aggregated (1)
2147483412
2014-Feb-04 16:50:43
Informational
%COPY-I-FILECPY: Files Copy - source URL tftp://172.16.0.90/sx300_boot-13506.rfb destination URL flash://BOOT, aggregated (1)
2147483413
2014-Feb-04 16:49:07
Warning
%COPY-W-TRAP: The copy operation has failed
How do I get tftp working properly??
Thank you, Tom -
i used gparted live in order to maximize the size of root partition but i can't
Device Boot Start End Blocks Id System
/dev/sda1 2048 718847 358400 7 HPFS/NTFS/exFAT
/dev/sda2 * 718848 586656347 292968750 7 HPFS/NTFS/exFAT
/dev/sda3 612048894 976771071 182361089 5 Extended
/dev/sda4 586657792 612046847 12694528 83 Linux
/dev/sda5 967215104 976771071 4777984 82 Linux swap / Solaris
/dev/sda6 612048896 967213055 177582080 83 Linux
Number Start End Size Type File system Flags
1 1049kB 368MB 367MB primary ntfs
2 368MB 300GB 300GB primary ntfs boot
4 300GB 313GB 13.0GB primary ext4
3 313GB 500GB 187GB extended
6 313GB 495GB 182GB logical ext4
5 495GB 500GB 4893MB logical linux-swap(v1)
i minimize the size of sda6(home folder) in order to give more space to my root partition sda4 but i can't .gparted don't give the option to add the unallocated space to sda4.when i tried to adjust the partitions the swap partition was off
Last edited by kosgeter (2014-04-30 21:52:13)That's a no-no, you can't do that
To increase the size of sda4, there must be continuous free space after it.
In your case it's like
sda4
sda5
sda6
You first reduce sda6 and you get free space after it, you need to move sda6(not just resize it). Also you will need to delete sda5(which is your swap) and remake it.
Example:
sda4 - 10GB
sda5 - 4GB
sda6 - 100GB
delete sda5 and resize sda6:
sda4 - 10GB
4GB free space
sda6 - 50GB
50GB free space
move sda6:
sda4 - 10GB
50GB free space
sda6 - 50 GB
4GB free space
resize sda4 and create swap(sda7):
sda4 - 60GB
sda6 - 50 GB
sda7 - 4GB
Might I suggest that you use console tools instead of gparted(imho gparted is buggy). The tools in the arch install iso should do fine. Also you can't resize mounted partitions, so you shouldn't try to touch your arch root partition while using it
Last edited by rand_x0r (2014-05-01 16:06:31) -
[SOLVED] Longwinded beginner - Dual-boot & partition questions
Hello,
I'm interested in installing Arch Linux alongside Windows XP (dual-boot). I have little previous linux experience, although I have rented some servers that have used it in the past, as well as compiling some stuff with it while at University (studying Computer Science). Nevertheless, I am relatively confident that if I can still boot into XP, I will be able to acccustomise myself and like the fact that this distribution seems to be hands-on and leaves a lot up to the user.
I've been reading the Beginner's Guide and the dual boot guide, and I would like to get started, however, I'm not going to go ahead with this until I am certain that I will be left with a system that can still boot into Windows XP. I assume that it'll take me a while to get to grips with Arch, and in the meantime it would be massively inconvenient if I couldn't work/play/etc...
What I already know
Anyway, currently I have a 250GB hard drive that I use for Windows (as well as 3 other hard drives full of stuff). I have partitioned the drive with Windows XP on it with gparted like so:
(in order)
UNALLOCATED 32GB
SDB1 (Windows XP) 50GB
SDB2 (Downloads) 150GB
I hope to use the unallocated space to hold linux (and then have access to my other windows drives in the future, using ntfs-3g), however, I am a little confused over what partitions I 'should' have and how large they should be, considering that I will use the OS to mainly develop, browse the web, listen to music, etc...
I was thinking:
/boot -- ext2 -- 100MB
/ -- ext4 -- 15GB
swap -- -- 1GB
/home -- ext4 -- 12GB
/var -- ReiserFS -- 4GB
Questions
• Is 30GB too little, even though most of my stuff is on other NTFS hard drives?
• How large should / be? I've read that it contains /bin, /dev, /etc and others. How do I know how much space these need? Am I misunderstanding things?
• Is a /var partition unnecessary? How large should it be?
• 10GB for /home, 1GB for swap, 100MB for /boot?
• Do I need a /tmp or /usr? This is a single-user machine, but I don't want it to get messy!
• I was thinking of giving /boot ext2, and /var ReiserFS, and then giving every other partition ext4. That okay?
• Do I need to set these partitions up when installing, or can I set them up in advance with gparted - it might be simpler.
• Due to already having 2 NTFS primary partitions on the hard disk, I presume that some of the above will need to be logical partitions in an extended partition? How is this done?
Once the partitions have been set up, and linux is installed, I presume it's just a matter of completing the rest of Part I of the guide, and then ammending /boot/grub/menu.lst to include 'Windows XP'? At that point I am able to restart Windows XP, and only delve into Arch when I want to continue with the configuration, fixing, and so on...
Sorry for the wall of text, and thanks for your patience. (:
Last edited by Bedtimes (2009-09-27 14:21:55)That's the thing, I expect that I'm doing something wrong with the GRUB loader - and I admit my hard disk layout has been quite strange for a long time before installing linux.
Basically, it currently looks like this:
/dev/sda1 ntfs Music 250GB
/dev/sdb3 ext2 /boot 120MB
/dev/dsb4 extended
---- /dev/sdb5 linux-swap 1GB
---- /dev/sdb6 ext4 / 20GB
---- /dev/sdb7 ext4 /home 12GB
/dev/sdb1 ntfs Windows XP 50GB
/dev/sdb2 ntfs Downloads 150GB
/dev/sdc1 ntfs TV & Movies 950GB
• This list is in order that the entries appear on the hard disk, hence /boot is in the first 1024 cylinders of the hard disk, but as you can see the sdb numbers are actually in the chronological order that I created them.
• I used an extended partition with logical partitions inside since I had read that there was an issue with more than 4 partitions in a hard disk, and I already had 2 NTFS partitions.
• When it asked me to install GRUB to the MBR, I installed it to SDB as opposed to SDBx as it asked me to in the manual. This is the drive that contains /boot!
• I just managed to amend something in the menu.lst, in order that I can boot into Windows XP. Therefore my machine is not totally fucked up any more. (: Unfortunately, what I changed doesn't make sense to me, since I would have expected Windows XP to be on a different hard disk.
The contents of sdb3:
grub kernel26-fallback.img kernel26.img
lost+found System.map26 umlinuz26
When typing the command /sbin/blkid:
/dev/sda1: UUID="D0..." LABEL="Music" TYPE="ntfs"
/dev/sdb1: UUID="A8..." LABEL="Windows XP" TYPE="ntfs"
/dev/sdb2: UUID="557..." LABEL="Downloads" TYPE="ntfs"
/dev/sdb3: UUID="2676..." TYPE="ext2"
/dev/sdb5: UUID="0474..." TYPE="swap"
/dev/sdb6: UUID="0886..." TYPE="ext4"
/dev/sdb7: UUID="519becf..." TYPE="ext4"
/dev/sdc1: UUID="46AC59" LABEL="TV & Movies" TYPE="ntfs"
Inside /boot/grub/menu.lst:
timeout 5
default 0
color light-blue/black light-cyan/blue
# (1) Windows XP
title Windows XP
rootnoverify (hd0,0)
chainloader +1
# (2) Arch Linux
title Arch Linux
root (hd1,5)
kernel /boot/vmlinuz root=/dev/disk/by-uuid/0886... ro vga=773
initrd /boot/kernel26.img
# (3) Arch Linux (Fallback)
title Arch Linux (Fallback)
root (hd1,5)
kernel /boot/vmlinuz root=/dev/disk/by-uuid/0886... ro vga=773
initrd /boot/kernel26-fallback.img
edit: I'm able to access all of the installation partitions with gparted-live's terminal (by mounting the devices I need to access into folders in my root folder), so is there anything else you want me to check/change in order to find my linux root/boot partition?
Last edited by Bedtimes (2009-09-27 12:54:24) -
How would I resize my partition for Windows? I had not expected as much updates for Windows to take place and underestimated the amount of space for my hard drive. Please help!
I'll probably give-up on waiting for a compatible Camptune X on ML, however all's not lost as Coriolis whom do both iDefrag and iPartition have confirmed in a rely email that iPartition can resize the Bootcamp partion.
There are apparently a few small things to bare in mind if using iPartition 3. Firstly it is recommended to check the NTFS filesystem for any errors beforehand (obviously a wise thing to do for any partition resizing program) and that you'll have to boot from iPartition running on external media, i.e. USB boot drive etc. This shouldn't be a problem for many as this is how Camptune use to work and I'm probably not confident of a partition re-sizing program that adjusts partitions on the very drive the system is booted into (although that would be a really cool and convenient feature if proven to be 100% safe with no known issues or repercussions - maybe an iPartition 4 might address that if OS X allows).
Additionally it is advised that virtual machines such as Parallels or VMWare apparently may need to be recreated, but I'm a little unclear on wether that simply means 1. re-adding the virtual machin image back to Parallels, OR, 2. copying the virual image over to an external drive and then back after partitioning-resizing has been done in order to just simply 'add' the virtual image back into Parallels, OR, 3. the more undesired concept that the virtual machine would have to be rebuilt from scratch, i.e. re-installing Windows/activation/updates etc. which is the same as simply running Bootcamp assistant and setting up Bootcamp all over again with the now desired partition size. I will have to check back with Coriolis on this, however they are very helpful and quick to answer.
That aside, iPartition 3 does look very impressive and can deal with virtually all disk related partitioning and formatting. I can't help feel that it is what Disk Utility should have been.
A word of caution; I recently used Paragon Hard Disk Manager 2012 Professional for resizing the Bootcamp partition and completely lost the 'GUID' format structure after which was not good. I ended up eventually reinstalling OS X and Bootcamp from scratch. -
How can I access my user folder on a second boot partition?
Hi there. Thank you for reading this. I am at a bit of a loss although I have searched several forums to find someone having the same problem:
I use my Macbook Pro in the office and at home. To keep things strictly apart and have to separate Time Machine backup procedures, I have divided my harddrive into two boot partitions ('office' and 'private') and installed Mountain Lion on both of them. Now occasionally when I am at the office I would like to access my user folder on 'private' to retrieve a file from the documents folder there (e.g. a paper I gave in my free time but would like to send to a colleague). Now although I see the 'private' volume, and the other user folder and the Documents folder in it with a red 'No Access' badge, even when I set read/write permissions via Command-I > Permissions for my current account, I do not see any files in it apart from Microsoft User Data. I have tried enabling the root user but with the sam result.
Do I really have to shut down the computer and boot with the 'private' boot volume in order to access the files on 'private'>user?
Looking forward to your suggestions! Thank you in advance!
ChristianTo solve this issue permanently, is to first disconnect both TimeMachine drives.
Boot into one partition and consider it history, make a note of everything, apps, export bookmarks, serial keys and files to a regular external drive. (non TimeMachine)
If on a hard drive, consider the first partition for performance, the second one is going to be slower. (SSD no need)
Next what you do is boot into the first partition and use Disk Utility to erase (with zero option if a hard drive) the other partition. Then use Carbon Copy Cloner to clone the first partition to the second. (should be about equal sizes or tweak before cloning.)
Repair permissions on both partitions in Disk Utility.
Next boot into the second partition and install/uninstall apps and files. etc and set it backup up the way you had it.
Once your sure, then update TimeMachine for each one.
Now you will be able to easily access the other bootable partition as long as your logged into the same account name on the first partition., in other words you can access the same named account on both partitions and trade files without rebooting.
Because it's a clone, you have the same access privileges to the files on the other partition.
If your a power user, your going to find bootable clones are a much superior option than TimeMachine
Most commonly used backup methods -
Bootcamp partition missing after resizing OSX partition
Hi,
Please help me, after resizing OSX partition, i can't go back to windows, and i see bootcamp partition change to disk0s4 on disk utility
After find solution on this discussions site, I try to follow Lonner T way on "Missing Operating system_ " After installing Yosemite
but i have different problem :
sudo gpt -vv -r show /dev/disk0
gpt show: disk0: mediasize=251000193024; sectorsize=512; blocks=490234752
gpt show: disk0: Suspicious MBR at sector 0
gpt show: disk0: Pri GPT at sector 1
gpt show: disk0: Sec GPT at sector 490234751
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 292614464 2 GPT part - 48465300-0000-11AA-AA11-00306543ECAC
293024104 1269536 3 GPT part - 426F6F74-0000-11AA-AA11-00306543ECAC
294293640 98285432
392579072 97654784 4 GPT part - EBD0A0A2-B9E5-4433-87C0-68B6B72699C7
490233856 863
490234719 32 Sec GPT table
490234751 1 Sec GPT header
And try using testdisk
output
> MS Data
392579071 490862590 98283520
After that I follow this solution
Rebuild using start/end offsets from Testdisk DeepSearch using GPT Fdisk (http://sourceforge.net/projects/gptfdisk/)
Sudo gdisk /dev/rdisk0
P (print the full list of parts)
D (delete)
4 (part 4)
N (new part)
4 (part 4)
392579071- Start offset in bytes (start point for Bootcamp part)
+1072318457 (Size offset as opposed to End offset)
I have problem on point 9,
output
GPT fdisk (gdisk) version 0.8.10
Warning: Devices opened with shared lock will not have their
partition table automatically reloaded!
Partition table scan:
MBR: hybrid
BSD: not present
APM: not present
GPT: present
Found valid GPT with hybrid MBR; using GPT.
Command (? for help): p
Disk /dev/disk0: 490234752 sectors, 233.8 GiB
Logical sector size: 512 bytes
Disk identifier (GUID): FB335EA6-2601-48E6-87FE-1208E28CCAF9
Partition table holds up to 128 entries
First usable sector is 34, last usable sector is 490234718
Partitions will be aligned on 8-sector boundaries
Total free space is 98285430 sectors (46.9 GiB)
Number Start (sector) End (sector) Size Code Name
1 40 409639 200.0 MiB EF00 EFI System Partition
2 409640 293024103 139.5 GiB AF00 Customer
3 293024104 294293639 619.9 MiB AB00 Recovery HD
4 392579064 490234718 46.6 GiB 0700 Microsoft basic data
Command (? for help): d
Partition number (1-4): 4
Command (? for help): n
Partition number (4-128, default 4): 4
First sector (34-490234718, default = 294293640) or {+-}size{KMGTP}: 392579071
Information: Moved requested sector from 392579071 to 392579064 in
order to align on 8-sector boundaries.
Use 'l' on the experts' menu to adjust alignment
Last sector (392579064-490234718, default = 490234718) or {+-}size{KMGTP}: 98283520
Last sector (392579064-490234718, default = 490234718) or {+-}size{KMGTP}:
Please help meLoner T wrote:
Thank you.
No, I am who should be thanking to you
This is output from deepsearch
TestDisk 7.0-WIP, Data Recovery Utility, March 2015
Christophe GRENIER <[email protected]>
http://www.cgsecurity.org
Disk /dev/rdisk0 - 251 GB / 233 GiB - 490234752 sectors (RO)
Partition Start End Size in sectors
D EFI System 40 409639 409600 [EFI]
D EFI System 46 409645 409600 [EFI]
D Mac HFS 409640 293024103 292614464
D Mac HFS 978664 293593127 292614464
D Mac HFS 980528 293594991 292614464
D Mac HFS 982464 293596927 292614464
D Mac HFS 984072 293598535 292614464
D Mac HFS 985904 293600367 292614464
D Mac HFS 986416 293600879 292614464
D Mac HFS 986976 293601439 292614464
D Mac HFS 987440 293601903 292614464
D Mac HFS 988224 293602687 292614464
D Mac HFS 990104 293604567 292614464
D Mac HFS 991640 293606103 292614464
D Mac HFS 992112 293606575 292614464
D Mac HFS 992408 293606871 292614464
D Mac HFS 992656 293607119 292614464
D Mac HFS 992752 293607215 292614464
D Mac HFS 992960 293607423 292614464
D Mac HFS 993224 293607687 292614464
D Mac HFS 993552 293608015 292614464
D Mac HFS 994248 293608711 292614464
D Mac HFS 995560 293610023 292614464
D Mac HFS 995656 293610119 292614464
D Mac HFS 996304 293610767 292614464
D Mac HFS 998056 293612519 292614464
D Mac HFS 999112 293613575 292614464
D Mac HFS 999248 293613711 292614464
D Mac HFS 999352 293613815 292614464
D Mac HFS 999488 293613951 292614464
D Mac HFS 999624 293614087 292614464
D Mac HFS 999824 293614287 292614464
D Mac HFS 1000120 293614583 292614464
D Mac HFS 1000336 293614799 292614464
D Mac HFS 1000432 293614895 292614464
D Mac HFS 1000664 293615127 292614464
D Mac HFS 1000928 293615391 292614464
D Mac HFS 1001096 293615559 292614464
D Mac HFS 1001240 293615703 292614464
D Mac HFS 1001344 293615807 292614464
D Mac HFS 1001680 293616143 292614464
D Mac HFS 1002568 293617031 292614464
D Mac HFS 1004272 293618735 292614464
D Mac HFS 1004432 293618895 292614464
D Mac HFS 1004640 293619103 292614464
D Mac HFS 1005944 293620407 292614464
D Mac HFS 1007784 293622247 292614464
D Mac HFS 1008160 293622623 292614464
D Mac HFS 1010000 293624463 292614464
D Mac HFS 1011552 293626015 292614464
D Mac HFS 1013400 293627863 292614464
D Mac HFS 1015504 293629967 292614464
D Mac HFS 1015840 293630303 292614464
D Mac HFS 1017736 293632199 292614464
D Mac HFS 1018104 293632567 292614464
D Mac HFS 1018688 293633151 292614464
D Mac HFS 1020480 293634943 292614464
D Mac HFS 1021352 293635815 292614464
D Mac HFS 1022328 293636791 292614464
D Mac HFS 1022936 293637399 292614464
D Mac HFS 1023256 293637719 292614464
D Mac HFS 1023584 293638047 292614464
D Mac HFS 1024904 293639367 292614464
D Mac HFS 1025288 293639751 292614464
D Mac HFS 1025464 293639927 292614464
D Mac HFS 1026095 293640558 292614464
D MS Data 149383904 149386783 2880 [EFISECTOR]
D MS Data 149387723 149393896 6174
D MS Data 149393896 149400069 6174 [Boot]
D MS Data 173916696 173919575 2880 [EFISECTOR]
D MS Data 173919576 173922455 2880 [EFISECTOR]
D Mac HFS 196270356 294293643 98023288
D Mac HFS 196273461 294296748 98023288
D Mac HFS 196273589 294296876 98023288
D Mac HFS 196273765 294297052 98023288
D Mac HFS 196273853 294297140 98023288
D Mac HFS 196273949 294297236 98023288
D Mac HFS 196274197 294297484 98023288
D Mac HFS 196274381 294297668 98023288
D Mac HFS 196274517 294297804 98023288
D Mac HFS 196274709 294297996 98023288
D Mac HFS 196274877 294298164 98023288
D Mac HFS 196274997 294298284 98023288
D Mac HFS 196275109 294298396 98023288
D Mac HFS 196275213 294298500 98023288
D Mac HFS 196275381 294298668 98023288
D Mac HFS 196275661 294298948 98023288
D Mac HFS 196275821 294299108 98023288
D Mac HFS 196275917 294299204 98023288
D Mac HFS 196276141 294299428 98023288
D Mac HFS 196276245 294299532 98023288
D Mac HFS 196276381 294299668 98023288
D Mac HFS 196276549 294299836 98023288
D Mac HFS 196276637 294299924 98023288
D MS Data 261292840 418075424 156782585
D Mac HFS 291754572 293024107 1269536
D Mac HFS 291754640 293024175 1269536
D Mac HFS 291754712 293024247 1269536
D Mac HFS 291754816 293024351 1269536
D Mac HFS 291754888 293024423 1269536
D Mac HFS 291754968 293024503 1269536
D Mac HFS 291755040 293024575 1269536
D Mac HFS 291755112 293024647 1269536
D Mac HFS 291755184 293024719 1269536
D Mac HFS 291755264 293024799 1269536
D Mac HFS 291755336 293024871 1269536
D Mac HFS 291755416 293024951 1269536
D Mac HFS 291755488 293025023 1269536
D Mac HFS 291755592 293025127 1269536
D Mac HFS 291755664 293025199 1269536
D Mac HFS 291755768 293025303 1269536
D Mac HFS 291755840 293025375 1269536
D Mac HFS 291755944 293025479 1269536
D Mac HFS 291756016 293025551 1269536
D Mac HFS 291756120 293025655 1269536
D Mac HFS 291756192 293025727 1269536
D Mac HFS 291756296 293025831 1269536
D Mac HFS 291756335 293025870 1269536
D Mac HFS 291756407 293025942 1269536
D Mac HFS 291756487 293026022 1269536
D Mac HFS 291756559 293026094 1269536
D Mac HFS 291756639 293026174 1269536
D Mac HFS 291756711 293026246 1269536
D Mac HFS 291756791 293026326 1269536
D Mac HFS 291756863 293026398 1269536
D Mac HFS 291756943 293026478 1269536
D Mac HFS 291757015 293026550 1269536
D Mac HFS 291757095 293026630 1269536
D Mac HFS 291757167 293026702 1269536
D Mac HFS 291757247 293026782 1269536
D Mac HFS 291757319 293026854 1269536
D Mac HFS 291757399 293026934 1269536
D Mac HFS 291757471 293027006 1269536
D Mac HFS 291757575 293027110 1269536
D Mac HFS 291757647 293027182 1269536
D Mac HFS 291757751 293027286 1269536
D Mac HFS 291757823 293027358 1269536
D Mac HFS 291757903 293027438 1269536
D Mac HFS 291757975 293027510 1269536
D Mac HFS 291758079 293027614 1269536
D Mac HFS 291758151 293027686 1269536
D Mac HFS 291758231 293027766 1269536
D Mac HFS 291758303 293027838 1269536
D Mac HFS 291758383 293027918 1269536
D Mac HFS 291758455 293027990 1269536
D Mac HFS 291758535 293028070 1269536
D Mac HFS 291758607 293028142 1269536
D Mac HFS 291758687 293028222 1269536
D Mac HFS 291758759 293028294 1269536
D Mac HFS 291758839 293028374 1269536
D Mac HFS 291758911 293028446 1269536
D Mac HFS 291759015 293028550 1269536
D Mac HFS 291759087 293028622 1269536
D Mac HFS 291759167 293028702 1269536
D Mac HFS 291759239 293028774 1269536
D Mac HFS 291759319 293028854 1269536
D Mac HFS 291759391 293028926 1269536
D Mac HFS 291759471 293029006 1269536
D Mac HFS 291759543 293029078 1269536
D Mac HFS 291759623 293029158 1269536
D Mac HFS 291759695 293029230 1269536
D Mac HFS 291759775 293029310 1269536
D Mac HFS 291759847 293029382 1269536
D Mac HFS 291759927 293029462 1269536
D Mac HFS 291759999 293029534 1269536
D Mac HFS 291760079 293029614 1269536
D Mac HFS 291760151 293029686 1269536
D Mac HFS 291760231 293029766 1269536
D Mac HFS 291760303 293029838 1269536
D Mac HFS 291760383 293029918 1269536
D Mac HFS 291760455 293029990 1269536
D Mac HFS 291760535 293030070 1269536
D Mac HFS 291760607 293030142 1269536
D Mac HFS 291760687 293030222 1269536
D Mac HFS 291760759 293030294 1269536
D Mac HFS 291760839 293030374 1269536
D Mac HFS 291760911 293030446 1269536
D Mac HFS 291760991 293030526 1269536
D Mac HFS 291761063 293030598 1269536
D Mac HFS 291761143 293030678 1269536
D Mac HFS 291761215 293030750 1269536
D Mac HFS 291761295 293030830 1269536
D Mac HFS 291761367 293030902 1269536
D Mac HFS 291761447 293030982 1269536
D Mac HFS 291761519 293031054 1269536
D Mac HFS 291761599 293031134 1269536
D Mac HFS 291761671 293031206 1269536
D Mac HFS 291761751 293031286 1269536
D Mac HFS 291761823 293031358 1269536
D Mac HFS 291761903 293031438 1269536
D Mac HFS 291761975 293031510 1269536
D Mac HFS 291762055 293031590 1269536
D Mac HFS 291762127 293031662 1269536
D Mac HFS 291762207 293031742 1269536
D Mac HFS 291762279 293031814 1269536
D Mac HFS 291762359 293031894 1269536
D Mac HFS 291762431 293031966 1269536
D Mac HFS 291762511 293032046 1269536
D Mac HFS 291762583 293032118 1269536
D Mac HFS 291762663 293032198 1269536
D Mac HFS 291762735 293032270 1269536
D Mac HFS 291762815 293032350 1269536
D Mac HFS 291762887 293032422 1269536
D Mac HFS 291762967 293032502 1269536
D Mac HFS 291763039 293032574 1269536
D Mac HFS 291763119 293032654 1269536
D Mac HFS 291763191 293032726 1269536
D Mac HFS 291763271 293032806 1269536
D Mac HFS 291763343 293032878 1269536
D Mac HFS 291763423 293032958 1269536
D Mac HFS 291763495 293033030 1269536
D Mac HFS 291763575 293033110 1269536
D Mac HFS 291763647 293033182 1269536
D Mac HFS 291763727 293033262 1269536
D Mac HFS 291763799 293033334 1269536
D Mac HFS 291763879 293033414 1269536
D Mac HFS 291763951 293033486 1269536
D Mac HFS 291764031 293033566 1269536
D Mac HFS 291764103 293033638 1269536
D Mac HFS 291764183 293033718 1269536
D Mac HFS 291764255 293033790 1269536
D Mac HFS 291764335 293033870 1269536
D Mac HFS 291764407 293033942 1269536
D Mac HFS 291764487 293034022 1269536
D Mac HFS 291764559 293034094 1269536
D Mac HFS 291764639 293034174 1269536
D Mac HFS 291764711 293034246 1269536
D Mac HFS 291764791 293034326 1269536
D Mac HFS 291764863 293034398 1269536
D Mac HFS 291764943 293034478 1269536
D Mac HFS 291765015 293034550 1269536
D Mac HFS 291765095 293034630 1269536
D Mac HFS 291765167 293034702 1269536
D Mac HFS 291765247 293034782 1269536
D Mac HFS 291765319 293034854 1269536
D Mac HFS 291765399 293034934 1269536
D Mac HFS 291765471 293035006 1269536
D Mac HFS 291765551 293035086 1269536
D Mac HFS 291765623 293035158 1269536
D Mac HFS 291765703 293035238 1269536
D Mac HFS 291765775 293035310 1269536
D Mac HFS 291765855 293035390 1269536
D Mac HFS 291765927 293035462 1269536
D Mac HFS 291766007 293035542 1269536
D Mac HFS 291766079 293035614 1269536
D Mac HFS 291766159 293035694 1269536
D Mac HFS 291766231 293035766 1269536
D Mac HFS 291766311 293035846 1269536
D Mac HFS 291766383 293035918 1269536
D Mac HFS 291766463 293035998 1269536
D Mac HFS 291766535 293036070 1269536
D Mac HFS 291766615 293036150 1269536
D Mac HFS 291766687 293036222 1269536
D Mac HFS 291766767 293036302 1269536
D Mac HFS 291766839 293036374 1269536
D Mac HFS 291766919 293036454 1269536
D Mac HFS 291766991 293036526 1269536
D Mac HFS 291767071 293036606 1269536
D Mac HFS 291767143 293036678 1269536
D Mac HFS 291767223 293036758 1269536
D Mac HFS 291767295 293036830 1269536
D Mac HFS 291767375 293036910 1269536
D Mac HFS 291767447 293036982 1269536
D Mac HFS 291767551 293037086 1269536
D Mac HFS 291767623 293037158 1269536
D Mac HFS 291767727 293037262 1269536
D Mac HFS 291767799 293037334 1269536
D Mac HFS 291767879 293037414 1269536
D Mac HFS 291767951 293037486 1269536
D Mac HFS 291768031 293037566 1269536
D Mac HFS 291768103 293037638 1269536
D Mac HFS 291768183 293037718 1269536
D Mac HFS 291768255 293037790 1269536
D Mac HFS 291768335 293037870 1269536
D Mac HFS 291768407 293037942 1269536
D Mac HFS 291768487 293038022 1269536
D Mac HFS 291768559 293038094 1269536
D Mac HFS 291768631 293038166 1269536
D Mac HFS 291768703 293038238 1269536
D Mac HFS 291768783 293038318 1269536
D Mac HFS 291768855 293038390 1269536
D Mac HFS 291768935 293038470 1269536
D Mac HFS 291769007 293038542 1269536
D Mac HFS 291769079 293038614 1269536
D Mac HFS 291769151 293038686 1269536
D Mac HFS 291769231 293038766 1269536
D Mac HFS 291769303 293038838 1269536
D Mac HFS 291769383 293038918 1269536
D Mac HFS 291769455 293038990 1269536
D Mac HFS 291769527 293039062 1269536
D Mac HFS 291769599 293039134 1269536
D Mac HFS 291769679 293039214 1269536
D Mac HFS 291769751 293039286 1269536
D Mac HFS 291769831 293039366 1269536
D Mac HFS 291769903 293039438 1269536
D Mac HFS 291769975 293039510 1269536
D Mac HFS 291770047 293039582 1269536
D Mac HFS 291770127 293039662 1269536
D Mac HFS 291770199 293039734 1269536
D Mac HFS 291770271 293039806 1269536
D Mac HFS 291770343 293039878 1269536
D Mac HFS 291770423 293039958 1269536
D Mac HFS 291770495 293040030 1269536
D Mac HFS 291770567 293040102 1269536
D Mac HFS 291770639 293040174 1269536
D Mac HFS 291770719 293040254 1269536
D Mac HFS 291770791 293040326 1269536
D Mac HFS 291770871 293040406 1269536
D Mac HFS 291770943 293040478 1269536
D Mac HFS 293024104 294293639 1269536
D Mac HFS 293024172 294293707 1269536
D Mac HFS 293024244 294293779 1269536
D Mac HFS 293024348 294293883 1269536
D Mac HFS 293024420 294293955 1269536
D Mac HFS 293024500 294294035 1269536
D Mac HFS 293024572 294294107 1269536
D Mac HFS 293024644 294294179 1269536
D Mac HFS 293024716 294294251 1269536
D Mac HFS 293024796 294294331 1269536
D Mac HFS 293024868 294294403 1269536
D Mac HFS 293024948 294294483 1269536
D Mac HFS 293025020 294294555 1269536
D Mac HFS 293025124 294294659 1269536
D Mac HFS 293025196 294294731 1269536
D Mac HFS 293025300 294294835 1269536
D Mac HFS 293025372 294294907 1269536
D Mac HFS 293025476 294295011 1269536
D Mac HFS 293025548 294295083 1269536
D Mac HFS 293025652 294295187 1269536
D Mac HFS 293025724 294295259 1269536
D Mac HFS 293025828 294295363 1269536
D Mac HFS 293025867 294295402 1269536
D Mac HFS 293025939 294295474 1269536
D Mac HFS 293026019 294295554 1269536
D Mac HFS 293026091 294295626 1269536
D Mac HFS 293026171 294295706 1269536
D Mac HFS 293026243 294295778 1269536
D Mac HFS 293026323 294295858 1269536
D Mac HFS 293026395 294295930 1269536
D Mac HFS 293026475 294296010 1269536
D Mac HFS 293026547 294296082 1269536
D Mac HFS 293026627 294296162 1269536
D Mac HFS 293026699 294296234 1269536
D Mac HFS 293026779 294296314 1269536
D Mac HFS 293026851 294296386 1269536
D Mac HFS 293026931 294296466 1269536
D Mac HFS 293027003 294296538 1269536
D Mac HFS 293027107 294296642 1269536
D Mac HFS 293027179 294296714 1269536
D Mac HFS 293027283 294296818 1269536
D Mac HFS 293027355 294296890 1269536
D Mac HFS 293027435 294296970 1269536
D Mac HFS 293027507 294297042 1269536
D Mac HFS 293027611 294297146 1269536
D Mac HFS 293027683 294297218 1269536
D Mac HFS 293027763 294297298 1269536
D Mac HFS 293027835 294297370 1269536
D Mac HFS 293027915 294297450 1269536
D Mac HFS 293027987 294297522 1269536
D Mac HFS 293028067 294297602 1269536
D Mac HFS 293028139 294297674 1269536
D Mac HFS 293028219 294297754 1269536
D Mac HFS 293028291 294297826 1269536
D Mac HFS 293028371 294297906 1269536
D Mac HFS 293028443 294297978 1269536
D Mac HFS 293028547 294298082 1269536
D Mac HFS 293028619 294298154 1269536
D Mac HFS 293028699 294298234 1269536
D Mac HFS 293028771 294298306 1269536
D Mac HFS 293028851 294298386 1269536
D Mac HFS 293028923 294298458 1269536
D Mac HFS 293029003 294298538 1269536
D Mac HFS 293029075 294298610 1269536
D Mac HFS 293029155 294298690 1269536
D Mac HFS 293029227 294298762 1269536
D Mac HFS 293029307 294298842 1269536
D Mac HFS 293029379 294298914 1269536
D Mac HFS 293029459 294298994 1269536
D Mac HFS 293029531 294299066 1269536
D Mac HFS 293029611 294299146 1269536
D Mac HFS 293029683 294299218 1269536
D Mac HFS 293029763 294299298 1269536
D Mac HFS 293029835 294299370 1269536
D Mac HFS 293029915 294299450 1269536
D Mac HFS 293029987 294299522 1269536
D Mac HFS 293030067 294299602 1269536
D Mac HFS 293030139 294299674 1269536
D Mac HFS 293030219 294299754 1269536
D Mac HFS 293030291 294299826 1269536
D Mac HFS 293030371 294299906 1269536
D Mac HFS 293030443 294299978 1269536
D Mac HFS 293030523 294300058 1269536
D Mac HFS 293030595 294300130 1269536
D Mac HFS 293030675 294300210 1269536
D Mac HFS 293030747 294300282 1269536
D Mac HFS 293030827 294300362 1269536
D Mac HFS 293030899 294300434 1269536
D Mac HFS 293030979 294300514 1269536
D Mac HFS 293031051 294300586 1269536
D Mac HFS 293031131 294300666 1269536
D Mac HFS 293031203 294300738 1269536
D Mac HFS 293031283 294300818 1269536
D Mac HFS 293031355 294300890 1269536
D Mac HFS 293031435 294300970 1269536
D Mac HFS 293031507 294301042 1269536
D Mac HFS 293031587 294301122 1269536
D Mac HFS 293031659 294301194 1269536
D Mac HFS 293031739 294301274 1269536
D Mac HFS 293031811 294301346 1269536
D Mac HFS 293031891 294301426 1269536
D Mac HFS 293031963 294301498 1269536
D Mac HFS 293032043 294301578 1269536
D Mac HFS 293032115 294301650 1269536
D Mac HFS 293032195 294301730 1269536
D Mac HFS 293032267 294301802 1269536
D Mac HFS 293032347 294301882 1269536
D Mac HFS 293032419 294301954 1269536
D Mac HFS 293032499 294302034 1269536
D Mac HFS 293032571 294302106 1269536
D Mac HFS 293032651 294302186 1269536
D Mac HFS 293032723 294302258 1269536
D Mac HFS 293032803 294302338 1269536
D Mac HFS 293032875 294302410 1269536
D Mac HFS 293032955 294302490 1269536
D Mac HFS 293033027 294302562 1269536
D Mac HFS 293033107 294302642 1269536
D Mac HFS 293033179 294302714 1269536
D Mac HFS 293033259 294302794 1269536
D Mac HFS 293033331 294302866 1269536
D Mac HFS 293033411 294302946 1269536
D Mac HFS 293033483 294303018 1269536
D Mac HFS 293033563 294303098 1269536
D Mac HFS 293033635 294303170 1269536
D Mac HFS 293033715 294303250 1269536
D Mac HFS 293033787 294303322 1269536
D Mac HFS 293033867 294303402 1269536
D Mac HFS 293033939 294303474 1269536
D Mac HFS 293034019 294303554 1269536
D Mac HFS 293034091 294303626 1269536
D Mac HFS 293034171 294303706 1269536
D Mac HFS 293034243 294303778 1269536
D Mac HFS 293034323 294303858 1269536
D Mac HFS 293034395 294303930 1269536
D Mac HFS 293034475 294304010 1269536
D Mac HFS 293034547 294304082 1269536
D Mac HFS 293034627 294304162 1269536
D Mac HFS 293034699 294304234 1269536
D Mac HFS 293034779 294304314 1269536
D Mac HFS 293034851 294304386 1269536
D Mac HFS 293034931 294304466 1269536
D Mac HFS 293035003 294304538 1269536
D Mac HFS 293035083 294304618 1269536
D Mac HFS 293035155 294304690 1269536
D Mac HFS 293035235 294304770 1269536
D Mac HFS 293035307 294304842 1269536
D Mac HFS 293035387 294304922 1269536
D Mac HFS 293035459 294304994 1269536
D Mac HFS 293035539 294305074 1269536
D Mac HFS 293035611 294305146 1269536
D Mac HFS 293035691 294305226 1269536
D Mac HFS 293035763 294305298 1269536
D Mac HFS 293035843 294305378 1269536
D Mac HFS 293035915 294305450 1269536
D Mac HFS 293035995 294305530 1269536
D Mac HFS 293036067 294305602 1269536
D Mac HFS 293036147 294305682 1269536
D Mac HFS 293036219 294305754 1269536
D Mac HFS 293036299 294305834 1269536
D Mac HFS 293036371 294305906 1269536
D Mac HFS 293036451 294305986 1269536
D Mac HFS 293036523 294306058 1269536
D Mac HFS 293036603 294306138 1269536
D Mac HFS 293036675 294306210 1269536
D Mac HFS 293036755 294306290 1269536
D Mac HFS 293036827 294306362 1269536
D Mac HFS 293036907 294306442 1269536
D Mac HFS 293036979 294306514 1269536
D Mac HFS 293037083 294306618 1269536
D Mac HFS 293037155 294306690 1269536
D Mac HFS 293037259 294306794 1269536
D Mac HFS 293037331 294306866 1269536
D Mac HFS 293037411 294306946 1269536
D Mac HFS 293037483 294307018 1269536
D Mac HFS 293037563 294307098 1269536
D Mac HFS 293037635 294307170 1269536
D Mac HFS 293037715 294307250 1269536
D Mac HFS 293037787 294307322 1269536
D Mac HFS 293037867 294307402 1269536
D Mac HFS 293037939 294307474 1269536
D Mac HFS 293038019 294307554 1269536
D Mac HFS 293038091 294307626 1269536
D Mac HFS 293038163 294307698 1269536
D Mac HFS 293038235 294307770 1269536
D Mac HFS 293038315 294307850 1269536
D Mac HFS 293038387 294307922 1269536
D Mac HFS 293038467 294308002 1269536
D Mac HFS 293038539 294308074 1269536
D Mac HFS 293038611 294308146 1269536
D Mac HFS 293038683 294308218 1269536
D Mac HFS 293038763 294308298 1269536
D Mac HFS 293038835 294308370 1269536
D Mac HFS 293038915 294308450 1269536
D Mac HFS 293038987 294308522 1269536
D Mac HFS 293039059 294308594 1269536
D Mac HFS 293039131 294308666 1269536
D Mac HFS 293039211 294308746 1269536
D Mac HFS 293039283 294308818 1269536
D Mac HFS 293039363 294308898 1269536
D Mac HFS 293039435 294308970 1269536
D Mac HFS 293039507 294309042 1269536
D Mac HFS 293039579 294309114 1269536
D Mac HFS 293039659 294309194 1269536
D Mac HFS 293039731 294309266 1269536
D Mac HFS 293039803 294309338 1269536
D Mac HFS 293039875 294309410 1269536
D Mac HFS 293039955 294309490 1269536
D Mac HFS 293040027 294309562 1269536
D Mac HFS 293040099 294309634 1269536
D Mac HFS 293040171 294309706 1269536
D Mac HFS 293040251 294309786 1269536
D Mac HFS 293040323 294309858 1269536
D Mac HFS 293040403 294309938 1269536
D Mac HFS 293040475 294310010 1269536
D Mac HFS 294293636 295563171 1269536
D Mac HFS 294293640 392316927 98023288
D MS Data 294295552 392579071 98283520
D Mac HFS 294296745 392320032 98023288
D Mac HFS 294296873 392320160 98023288
D Mac HFS 294297049 392320336 98023288
D Mac HFS 294297137 392320424 98023288
D Mac HFS 294297233 392320520 98023288
D Mac HFS 294297481 392320768 98023288
D Mac HFS 294297665 392320952 98023288
D Mac HFS 294297801 392321088 98023288
D Mac HFS 294297993 392321280 98023288
D Mac HFS 294298161 392321448 98023288
D Mac HFS 294298281 392321568 98023288
D Mac HFS 294298393 392321680 98023288
D Mac HFS 294298497 392321784 98023288
D Mac HFS 294298665 392321952 98023288
D Mac HFS 294298945 392322232 98023288
D Mac HFS 294299105 392322392 98023288
D Mac HFS 294299201 392322488 98023288
D Mac HFS 294299425 392322712 98023288
D Mac HFS 294299529 392322816 98023288
D Mac HFS 294299665 392322952 98023288
D Mac HFS 294299833 392323120 98023288
D Mac HFS 294299921 392323208 98023288
D MS Data 315991993 413646776 97654784
D MS Data 331921785 429576568 97654784
D MS Data 333451264 490233848 156782585
D MS Data 392579072 490233855 97654784
D Mac HFS 393099998 401488607 8388610 [ D^A]
D MS Data 395878787 395884960 6174
D MS Data 395884960 395891133 6174 [Boot]
D Mac HFS 401488604 409877213 8388610 [ D^A]
D MS Data 401956715 401959594 2880 [NO NAME]
D MS Data 403749891 403756064 6174
D MS Data 403756064 403762237 6174 [Boot]
D MS Data 405916539 405937277 20739 [NO NAME]
D MS Data 414752979 414759152 6174
D MS Data 414759152 414765325 6174 [Boot]
D MS Data 414759187 414765360 6174
D MS Data 414765360 414771533 6174 [Boot]
D MS Data 414771536 414774415 2880 [EFISECTOR]
D MS Data 414774416 414777295 2880 [EFISECTOR]
D MS Data 471619240 471622119 2880 [BOOTTEST]
D Mac HFS 488965176 490234711 1269536
Structure: Ok. Use Up/Down Arrow keys to select partition.
Use Left/Right Arrow keys to CHANGE partition characteristics:
P=Primary D=Deleted
Keys A: add partition, L: load backup, T: change type, P: list files,
Enter: to continue
NTFS found using backup sector, blocksize=4096, 49 GB / 46 GiB
And I have to P :list all MS Data
still same output
In all MS Data
Can't open filesystem. Filesystem seems damaged.
Only on sector "boot"
dr-xr-xr-x
0
0
0 16-Feb-2005 04:33 .
dr-xr-xr-x
0
0
0 16-Feb-2005 04:33 ..
dr-xr-xr-x
0
0
0 16-Feb-2005 04:33 System Volume Information -
Is there a size limit for hard drive boot partition?
I have been using Drive Genius to adjust the size of my boot partition larger. But it doesn't seem to allow for much increase, even though I deleted the second partition and tried to apply the disk space to DH1: (boot - there is a single partition on the hard drive now.)
It recognizes only 59.53gb and the drive is I think around 130gb. Anything beyond 59.53 is unusable since I deleted that second partition though I could probably get it back with a second partition.
Is this a Tiger issue or a Mac issue? It resized it bigger somewhat, so it seems to be something about the particular size. I want a really big space for my applications and so on.
Thanks. Didn't know where to post this question.You don't want to make a disc image. You want to clone to an external drive:
How to Clone Using Restore Option of Disk Utility
1. Open Disk Utility from the Utilities folder.
2. Select the backup or destination volume from the left side list.
3. Click on the Erase tab in the DU main window. Set the format type to Mac OS Extended (journaled, if available) and click on the Erase button. This step can be skipped if the destination has already been freshly erased.
4. Click on the Restore tab in the DU main window.
5. Select the backup or destination volume from the left side list and drag it to the Destination entry field.
6. Select the startup or source volume from the left side list and drag it to the Source entry field.
7. Double-check you got it right, then click on the Restore button.
Once you finish the clone open Startup Disk and set the clone as your startup volume, then click on the Restart button. You should now boot from the clone. You can then repartition the internal hard drive the way you want, then clone the external drive to the internal one. -
Screwed up MBR and boot partition, can't fix it [SOLVED]
Hi,
I have been defeated. Been trying to fix my computer the whole day and know I'm lost.
It's a long story, but my whole system got screwed when I tried installing windows on top of arch (I didn't get it to install, but I don't care anymore).
I was able to install GRUB2, I tried configuring it with grub.cfg , but when trying to boot it says it's missing kernel, boot partition has linux2.6, and I was using linux 3, I'm not really sure how to get the kernel I was using, should it be in my root partition? .
I'd like to get my system as it was before, I have root , var and home partitions and not sure how.
Thanks
Last edited by exuberant (2011-12-31 10:27:47)Thanks for your reply.
I was using Arch, I last updated a few days ago.
The kernel that's on the boot partition is from a debian live cd I had laying around.
It is not possible I have more than one boot partition. I have 1 hard drive, but plenty of free space.
Windows wanted to use the start of my disk, so I used gparted to move 20 gb free space at the beginning. Creating a partition in the beginning also caused all partitions numbers to move up (sda2->sda3), when I gave up on windows, I tried moving everything forward like it was before, but it didn't work. Then I remembered that when installing grub, installers check for other mount points, but that didn't work, and instead overwrote my boot partition. So know I've got a temporary debian system installed(sda9) and a boot partition that won't boot Arch.
This is my fdisk output: sda5 is arch sd6 var and sd7 home
Disk /dev/sda: 160.0 GB, 160041885696 bytes
255 heads, 63 sectors/track, 19457 cylinders
Units = cylinders of 16065 * 512 = 8225280 bytes
Sector size (logical/physical): 512 bytes / 512 bytes
I/O size (minimum/optimal): 512 bytes / 512 bytes
Disk identifier: 0x00000080
Device Boot Start End Blocks Id System
/dev/sda1 * 1 12 96358+ 83 Linux
/dev/sda2 13 401 3124642+ 82 Linux swap / Solaris
/dev/sda4 2744 14648 95619073 5 Extended
/dev/sda5 2744 4203 11719680 83 Linux
/dev/sda6 4239 5212 7815168 83 Linux
/dev/sda7 5227 10326 40957952 83 Linux
/dev/sda8 10393 13432 24411136 83 Linux
/dev/sda9 13432 14648 9764864 83 Linux
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