How can I partition, clone the boot disk, no cd?

How am I going to partition my boot disk? I only have the OS that came on the hard drive, no cd.
Tried start up c key on tiger 10.4 but it did not start from that cd where I thought perhaps I could administer this partitioning.
And further, how can I clone once done, no cd.

Let me see if I have this straight:
You want to partition your boot disk. That's it right?
All you need to do is clone your boot drive to another partition, disk, external, etc. You can use either superduper! (recommended), carbon copy cloner, or even just use osx disk utility.
http://www.shirt-pocket.com/SuperDuper/SuperDuperDescription.html
http://www.macupdate.com/info.php/id/7032/carbon-copy-cloner
Once you clone your boot drive, make sure it boots up first. Then if everything is good, re-partition the boot disk (erase) into however many partitions you need in Disk utility.
Then boot up from your clone you just made, open for example superduper, and clone back to your new partitioned drive. Bootup from the new partition drive, and you are set.
You don't need the CD to partition or even clone using DU.

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    [Silverkeeper|http://www.lacie.com/silverkeeper> (free) - version 2 has some issues (references: [1|http://www.macintouch.com/readerreports/backup/index.html#d12jan2009],
    [2|http://www.macintouch.com/readerreports/backup/index.html#d13jan2009]) and it is recommended Tiger users stick with 1.1.4.
    [Kappy's Backup Software Recommendations|http://discussions.apple.com/message.jspa?messageID=9065665#906 5665]
    [Overview of Mac OS X Backup Programs|http://8help.osu.edu/1247.html]

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  • How to back up a ZFS boot disk ?

    Hello all,
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    With UFS, I had to play with the vfstab a bit to allow booting off the secondary disk, but this is not necessary with ZFS.
    How can I perform such a backup of my ZFS boot disk ?
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    # installboot /usr/platform/`uname -i`/lib/fs/zfs/bootblk /dev/rdsk/c1t1d0s0
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    OK, this post requires some clarification.
    First, thanks to robert.cohen and rogerfujii for giving some elements.
    The objective is to make a backup of the boot disk on another disk of the same machine. The backup must be bootable just like the original disk.
    The reason for doing this instead of (or, even better, in addition to) mirroring the boot disk is to be able to quickly recover a stable operating system in case anything gets corrupted on the boot disk. Corruption includes hardware failures, but also any software corruption which could be caused by a virus, an attacker or an operator mistake (rm -rf ...).
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         - Detach the main boot disk from the mirror
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    This solution has many advantages, including simplicity and using no dirty tricks. However, it has two major drawbacks:
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    - There is no easy way to access the backup disk data without rebooting.
    So if you accidentally lose one file on the boot disk, you cannot easily recover it from the backup.
    This is because the pool name is the same on both disks, therefore effectively preventing any pool import.
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    It is more complex and dependent on the disk layout and ZFS implementation changes, but overall offers more flexibility.
    It may need some additions if there are other disks than the boot disk with ZFS pools (I have not tested that case yet).
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    1. Backup disk partitioning
    - Clean up ZFS information from the backup disk:
    The first and last megabyte of the backup disk, which hold ZFS information (plus other stuff) are erased:
    dd if=/dev/zero seek=<backup disk #blocks minus 2048> count=2048 of=/dev/rdsk/<backup disk>s2
    dd if=/dev/zero count=2048 of=/dev/rdsk/<backup disk>s2
    - Label and partition the backup disk in SMI :
    format -e <backup disk>
         label
         0          -> SMI label
         y
         (If more questions asked: press Enter 3 times.)
         partition
         (Create a single parition, number 0, filling the whole disk)
         label
         0
         y
         quit
         quit
    2. Data copy
    - Create the target ZFS pool:
    zpool create -f -o failmode=continue -R /mnt -m legacy rbackup <backup disk>s0
    Note: the chosen pool name is here "rbackup".
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    zfs snapshot -r rpool@today
    - Copy the data :
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    - Remove the snapshot, plus its copy on the backup disk :
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    zfs destroy -r rpool@today
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    /mnt/etc/dumpadm.conf
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    - Note the name of the current boot filesystem:
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    # df -k /
    Filesystem kbytes used avail capacity Mounted on
    rpool/ROOT/root 31457280 4726390 26646966 16% /
    - Configure the boot filesystem on the backup pool:
    zpool set bootfs=rbackup/ROOT/root rbackup
    Note: "rbackup/ROOT/root" is derived from the main boot filesystem name "rpool/ROOT/root".
    - Copy the ZFS boot block to the backup disk:
    installboot -F zfs /usr/platform/`uname -i`/lib/fs/zfs/bootblk /dev/rdsk/<backup disk>s0
    5. Cleaning up
    - Detach the target pool:
    zpool export rbackup
    I hope this howto will be useful to those like me who need to change all their habits while migrating to ZFS.
    Regards.
    HL

  • I Just purchased a used MacBook Air but it has no OS, how can I re-load the OS?

    I Just purchased a used MacBook Air but it has no OS, how can I re-load the OS?

    It depends on which operating system was on it when it was released.  Older MBAs need disks or a special thumb drive to boot for OS recovery.
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    **Click the KUDOS star on left to say Thanks**
    Make it easier for other people to find solutions by marking a Reply 'Accept as Solution' if it solves your problem.
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  • How can I copy all the files from my iMac to an external drive so they remain as 'regular accessible files'? I want to clean my dive

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  • How can I partition my external hard drive supporting mac OS in one partition and windows OS in another?

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  • Changing partition size of boot disk

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