How to creat a recovery partition

i mistakely delecte my recovery partition without creating a recovery disc and right now i want to retore system to factory setting. Can any one help me on how to creat recovery partion or if downloadable how can i download it or any solution on to recover my system back to its original factory settings.

Hi,
There is no download of the Recovery Partition available, however this partition will be re-created when you reinstall the OS using Recovery Discs.
As you don't have these, you can order a replacement set of Recovery Discs using the link below.
http://h10025.www1.hp.com/ewfrf/wc/document?docname=c00810334&cc=us&lc=en&dlc=en
If you have any problem with this link, order them directly from HP.
If you live in the US, contact HP Here.
If you are in another part of the world, start Here.
Regards,
DP-K
****Click the White thumb to say thanks****
****Please mark Accept As Solution if it solves your problem****
****I don't work for HP****
Microsoft MVP - Windows Experience

Similar Messages

  • How do I create a recovery partition on an HP EliteBook 2760p using Windows 7 64-bit Professional

    I have an HP EliteBook 2760p using Windows 7 - 64-bit Professional
    My original problem is that I couldn't create the Repair Disc
    I found out that the problem was with a file that was on the recovery partition
    I backed up the recovery partition from the same make and model computer
    I reformatted the partition and recovered the backup to the reformatted partition
    It didn't work
    How do I create the recovery partition  I have the 2 disks that came with the tablet PC

    If you do a factory restore using HP recovery discs it will put everything back including recovery partition. I don't know if any way to manually re-create the recovery partition.
    NOTE: back up your files as Factory Restore wipes ALL data.

  • How can I create a recovery partition to use Find my Mac?

    I want to activate Find my Mac on my MBP.  The iCloud system preference says I don't have a recovery partition that's required for it.  It apparently didn't install when I upgraded to Mountain Lion.
    How can I retroactively create a recovery partition?  There are no other partitions on the drive (other than the Macintosh HD, of course).
    Thanks.
    Rob

    FIRST, assuming you do not have another Mac of the same model with a working restore, I would suggest using your Lion, mountaint lion or Maverick install to create a bootable system on a flash drive.  You will need a DMG image created with Disk Utility from that stick to recreate the restore partition on your mac.
    Once you create the bootable USB stick, Use it to log in and follow the below process to back up the restore partition.  Then, save the DMG back up anywhere and finish the walk through on your normal operating partition.
    Close Disk Utility if it is open.
    Open Terminal
    Enter the command below
    defaults write com.apple.DiskUtility DUDebugMenuEnabled -bool true
    Now open Disk Utility and pull down the Debug menu
    Click Show Every Partition
    Now, select the Recovery Partition and create a new image.
    NOTE: The Recovery Partition will need to be made in Read Only format if you wish to restore the image normally with disk utility or by software such as Deploy Studio.  If you take an image with Deploy Studio and want it to restore the Recovery Drive normally, you will need to adjust the Work Flow for Image Capture to use the Read Only format.  It will slow things down.  If you dont use the read only format, the .dmg will not scan properly. This is most likely because the recovery drive already hosts compressed files. That said, this guide WILL restore from even a compressed .dmg image.  HERE IS THE WALK THROUGH FOR RESTORING A SCANNED READ ONLY FORMATTED .DMG.
    Copy the Recover HD.DMG image to a flash drive
    The following must be on an Administrator account
    Next, Log on to the admin account of the computer you wish to restore the MLTI Recovery Partition.
    Copy the Recovery HD.DMG from your Flash drive to the HD
    Enter the following command in terminal
    diskutil list
    If there is no partition for the restore drive listed, then use Disk Utility to create a GUID Partition keeping in mind the size of the original restore partition. (19 gigs for the MLTI Version of the restore drive)
    Open Terminal and enter the following command
    sudo asr -noverify -source (PATH FOR DMG IMAGE HERE) -target (PATH FOR RECOVERY HD PARTITION HERE) -erase -noprompt
    NOTES: You must replace the () and everything in between with the respective path. You can simple drag and drop the source (your .dmg) and your target (the drive to be restored) while you are typing in terminal.
    Enter admin password
    In terminal Type the following command
    diskutil list
    note which disk and slice is the restore partition. It should be /dev/disk0s3, but it could vary a bit.
    Now, run the following in terminal
    sudo asr adjust --target /dev/disk0s3 --settype "Apple_Boot"
    REMEMBER: you may need to replace /dev/disk0s3 with your new restore partition's designation.
    Enter Admin Password when prompted
    Restart.
    Don't forget to enter the following terminal command into the machine you took the Recovery HD image from.
    defaults write com.apple.DiskUtility DUDebugMenuEnabled -bool false

  • How do I create 2 Recovery partitions: one for Lion and one for Mountain Lion?

    Well that is basically the question:
    How do I create 2 recovery partitions: one for Lion and one for Mountain Lion?
    Reason is that I would like to keep the option to return to Lion, or even better, have a seperate partition for eacht?

    can I access my programs from the other partition, so I can save space ...
    No, as far as I know, each one is completely separate - especially if you're dealing with two different versions of OS's.
    is it possible to safely make an extra partion on a running drive (it is my main computer ...) The disk is large enough ...
    how large would this have to be
    I've personally never done it on a running drive - have read it's possible, but don't want to suggest it since I've never done it and wouldn't be sure about the steps. This is how I got to two partitions on my iMac:
    Originally, I had just one partition with Snow Leopard. I used CCC to clone that to an external drive. Booted into that drive and used DU to partition and erase the internal. I then cloned the new clone back. Also cloned the same thing to the other partition which I then upgraded to Lion. So I had two OS's - SL and Lion. I've now decided to clone my SL to an external drive for occasional use and installed ML on that partition - so now I have Lion and ML.
    There are two ways to get a "fresh" install: either download the OS again and install it on a partition of your choice or, as I've done as well, copy the installer to a safe place so you don't need to download it again. It does include whatever apps/software is included in the OS.  I've designated two smaller partitions on externals as my "fresh" installs of both Lion and ML for emergency or reinstall purposes (this is my way of dealing with not having install DVDs) - I took the time to install it there and then slowly add fresh installs of my important apps (either via download or install CD) - don't bother with the little/less used stuff, a current copy of that can be downloaded if and when I need it. I don't really update those two - that can also be done if/when I need it since that'll always change.
    So, yesterday, I decided I wanted to start fresh with ML - booted into my fresh install of Lion (on external), wiped the SL partition on my internal and installed Lion. Decided to download a fresh copy of the ML installer and installed that. Then ran Software Update. After that, repaired permissions. Then I methodically opened every third party app and checked for updates - installed those where necessary. After all that, I simply copied (drag 'n drop) my entire Documents folder (which contains all my important data,, photos, etc) over from another backup.
    This took a while, but mostly because of the long download times; the installs weren't all that bad. I should be running a really clean system now, especially since nothing was ported over except my Documents folder.

  • How to put a recovery partition on the hard drive

    How can I create a recovery partition on the hard drive of my laptop. I had to reinstall the whole system, and tried to use the HP recovery software they sent me but it quit when it was about three quarters the way finished. I had to use a copy of windows 8 to put the system back on my laptop. After I got it all straighten out, I updated it to windows 8.1 and it seems like the computer runs a lot faster with windows 8.1 on it. Now I need to find away to install a recovery partition on my hard drive.
    Thank You
    Garry Crist

    When requesting assistance, please provide the complete model name and/or product number of the HP computer in question. HP/Compaq makes thousands of models of computers. Without this information it may be difficult or impossible to assist you in resolving your issue.
    The above requested information can be found on the bottom of the computer or inside the battery compartment. Please do not include the serial number. Please enter the model/product information into HP's Online Consumer Support page and/or post it here for our review.
    A Recover partition is something the factory places on the computer. It is an image of the factory installation and the software required to restore the computer to a factory like state using that image. You will not be able to create a Recovery partition on your computer unless you use the HP Recovery Discs to return the computer to a factory like state. Please note the HP Recovery Discs and the resulting HP Recovery partition will only contain an image of Windows 8 that cannot be updated to reflect the installation of Window 8.1.
    My suggestion is to use the Windows "System Image Backup" utility to create an exact image of the Windows 8.1 partition as it currently is. If your computer developes an issue or you need to replace the hard drive, all you have to do is "restore" the image to the computer. You will need to use an external USB hard drive or other media to store the image. Please see Windows 8.1 Tip: Use System Image Backup for instructions on creating and storing a "Windows - System Image Backup."
    If you have any further questions, please don't hesitate to ask.
    Please click the white KUDOS star to show your appreciation
    Frank
    {------------ Please click the "White Kudos" Thumbs Up to say THANKS for helping.
    Please click the "Accept As Solution" on my post, if my assistance has solved your issue. ------------V
    This is a user supported forum. I am a volunteer and I don't work for HP.
    HP 15t-j100 (on loan from HP)
    HP 13 Split x2 (on loan from HP)
    HP Slate8 Pro (on loan from HP)
    HP a1632x - Windows 7, 4GB RAM, AMD Radeon HD 6450
    HP p6130y - Windows 7, 8GB RAM, AMD Radeon HD 6450
    HP p6320y - Windows 7, 8GB RAM, NVIDIA GT 240
    HP p7-1026 - Windows 7, 6GB RAM, AMD Radeon HD 6450
    HP p6787c - Windows 7, 8GB RAM, NVIDIA GT 240

  • 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.

  • Creating a recovery partition

    Hi,
    Can i create a recovery partition like the ones in the laptop of HP. If so please explain how to do it if not please can you point me to the right direction.
    Thank you.

    Hi,
    Sadly to say, you need to replace the HDD in your machine. Hope you can retrieve your data from it. There are few tips and instructions how to replace a dead HDDon the Internet, here are few of them:
      http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=wRkFDFguT5A
      http://www.techsupportforum.com/forums/f6/new-hard-disk-installation-to-replace-dead-disk-however-34...
    Good luck.
    BH
    **Click the KUDOS thumb up on the 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.

  • How to recover the recovery partition after delete all hard disk partitions

    hallo
    how to recover the recovery partition after delete all hard disk partitions in toshiba satellite pro c850-1fn ?
    note that : I did not work recovery disc or usb to my laptop.
    I have need of your help.

    Satellite Pro C850-1FN (PSCBXE-01700EEN)
    Restore the hard disk to its original out-of-the-box contents using Toshiba recovery media. All of the original partitions will be restored, including the recovery partition.
    If no recovery discs were created, you can obtain them from Toshiba.
       Toshiba Europe Backup Media Online Shop
    For instructions, see the section Restoring the pre-installed software from your created Recovery Media on p. 4-18 of the User's Manual (attached).
    -Jerry

  • How to build a recovery partition for mavericks?

    How do I create a recovery partition or disk for Mavericks?

    Suggestions for the capacity of a USB flash memory stick are in the 8GB+ range.
    Methods of how to create bootable OS X 10.9.x system on a USB flash vary a little...
    results of search: https://www.google.com/#q=Mac+OS+X+Mavericks+USB+key
    This one suggests get third-party utility to help do it [ http://diskmakerx.com/ ]
    and tells of a way without it, by use of Terminal utility in the OS X:
    http://arstechnica.com/apple/2013/10/how-to-make-your-own-bootable-os-x-10-9-mav ericks-usb-install-drive/
    http://www.macworld.com/article/2056561/how-to-make-a-bootable-mavericks-install -drive.html
    http://lifehacker.com/how-to-create-an-os-x-mavericks-usb-installation-drive-145 0280026
    So there are a few ways that fairly much have you go the same direction.
    Good luck & happy computing!

  • How to install a recovery partition

    After installing 10.10.1 - 14B25 I no longer have a recovery partition.  The OS X 10.10.1 works fine but I am lost on how to add a recovery partition.  Some help on how to after the fact create an OS X 10.10 .1 recovery partition will be appreciated.   I failed to save the 10.10 installer

    BINGO....  I downloaded the full installer 5 GB and ran it over my 10.10.1 Macintosh HD with no Recover Partition.  Bingo, I now have my primary HD back with an updated 10.10.1 Recover Partition
    Kappy,
    I though your assessment was correct; however, it worked for me and I did NOT have to erase my Macintosh HD
    All is well again and it was a time consuming learning experience and I now have a 10.10.1 Recovery Partition

  • How to create and drop partitions automatically?

    How to create and drop partitions automatically?
    The environment is Oracle 10g(10.2.0.3) on the RHEL4.0 system.
    I want to partition the MESSAGE table by date (NUMTODSINTERVAL(1,'DAY') ). One partition per day. Because the table is huge, only 2 partitions (today and yesterday's data) are necessary to be kept online. All the partitions that earlier than the previous day will be backed up and then dropped. I want to make the partition creating and dropping jobs run automatically. How to do it?
    Thank you

    junez wrote:
    How to create and drop partitions automatically?
    The environment is Oracle 10g(10.2.0.3) on the RHEL4.0 system.
    I want to partition the MESSAGE table by date (NUMTODSINTERVAL(1,'DAY') ). One partition per day. Because the table is huge, only 2 partitions (today and yesterday's data) are necessary to be kept online. All the partitions that earlier than the previous day will be backed up and then dropped. I want to make the partition creating and dropping jobs run automatically. How to do it?With 11g, new partitions can automatically be created.
    With 10g, you need to do that yourself. I prefer to create a "buffer" of future partitions - in case the job whose task it is to add new partitions gets held up or stuck. Or the job queue is full due to some problem and it does not get the chance to execute in time.
    I dislike your partitioning criteria. I prefer using the date directly and not mangling it to something else. If a specific day has a large volume of data, then another option is to use hourly date ranged partitions. With local partitioned indexes and the date time range used for querying, this can be quite effective performance wise.
    As for partitioning maintenance - I use a custom written partitionManager PL/SQL package that provides an interface for adding daily and hourly partitions to a table. Input parameters are for example name of the table, start date and the number of partitions to add. Similarly it provides interfaces for aging partitions - again by specifying a table and a date-time to use as the starting point, back into time, for removing old partitions.
    I typically call this code from the actual application code itself - so before a new partition will be used for example, the app code will first ensure that it has a partition to use. This is safer than a separate job as the dependency is resolved where and when it is needed - and not done as a separate task.
    For example - you should have a procedure/package that provides an app the means to log a message into your MESSAGE table. As part of an autonomous transaction, this procedure can check if the required partition exists, before attempting to insert a message into the table.
    Where this approach is not possible, a DBMS_JOB can be used to create future partitions - but as I mentioned, rather have it add a bunch of future (empty) partitions in case something goes pear shape with the job mechanism.

  • How to create a new partition

    i just got a new thinkpa. i would like to know how to create a new partition. 
    i tried partition magic 8.0 and it gave me BSoDs. please let me know. thanks. 
    thinkpad t400 t9400
    2gb ram
    windows sp3
    160gb 7200 rpm

    folivio wrote:
    I'm not an expert, but I partitioned the C: drive and made a partition for Windows 8. It worked perfectly as a multi-boot setup.
    A word of caution...Make sure that you want to make it a permanent change. When I removed the Win 8 partition and tried to restore my system to factory settings, I could not get the F2 during restart to work. F2 now brings up the multi-boot screen. So I tried to restore using the DVD Restore Set I made before I did anything to the partitions. I was able to boot to the DVD Restore Set by using the F12 key during restart and selecting the BDDVD drive. It looked like it was going to work, but after it loaded the minmum Windows files and I clicked on Restore, I got an error stating that the partition had changed and I could not restore.
    I contacted tech support and they are sending me a disc to restore the system.
    Regards
    Thanks for the heads up. I'd like to use the SSD for installing Windows 8. It seems to have about 25GB free. Isn't that a better place to install the OS? I am not sure why the bigger drive is marked as C: and the small, faster one as D: :-(

  • How i do restoring recovery partition on ThinkPad x201

    Where can I find the missing files recovery partition? The previous owner of the laptop corrupled one file for recovery partition in the folder "factoryrecovery", effectively removing it.
    contents of the folder "factoryrecovery":
    Name:                                       Size:
    bcdinfo.txt                                4 015
    cdrivebackup.swm          63 299 584  <- this file maybe corrupted....
    cdrivebackup2.swm   2 147 460 280
    cdrivebackup3.swm   1 102 545 040
    RECOVERY.INI                          955
    sdrivebackup.wim         266 014 847
    service_done.ini                            19
    Machine: Lenovo ThinkPad x201 Type: 3626-W6E S/N: R9-35L6X 10/04

    If you do a factory restore using HP recovery discs it will put everything back including recovery partition. I don't know if any way to manually re-create the recovery partition.
    NOTE: back up your files as Factory Restore wipes ALL data.

  • How do I create a recovery partition when restoring from Time Machine?

    I am planning to replace the HDD in my Macbook Pro with an SSD. I've used Time Machine to backup my HDD (running Mountain Lion) but am trying to find the best way to restore my Time Machine backup to the new SSD once installed.
    Given that the new SSD will not have a bootable OS X Recovery partition, I have created a bootable OS X Recovery drive on a USB thumb drive using OS X Recovery Assistant.
    In order to ensure that the new SSD has the OS X Recovery parition, should I:
         (1) reinstall Mountain Lion on the SSD then recover my data from Time Machine; or
         (2) can I simply use the Restore from Time Machine option in OS X Recovery to do it all at once.
    I can't seem to work out whether option (2) will create the OS X Recovery partition on the new SSD or just recover the system partition.

    Turns out the OS X Recovery partition is only created on a fresh install of OS X. Restoring via Time Machine will not do the trick.

  • How to create Lion recovery boot usb WITHOUT recovery partition?

    I give up.  I can't find the answer to this.  So, I'll just ask and hope.
    I have a mid-2011 mini that was upgraded to Lion.  However, it had a Bootcamp partition running Windows 7.
    Apparently, whoever upgraded my machine didn't create a recovery boot disk before upgrading. 
    So, I have no recovery partition and apparently no ability to create a recovery boot usb without one.
    Apple's ******** support policy is to completely wipe the hard drive and reinstall everything--which is simply not going to happen.

    Eric. wrote:
    Have you tried this?
    http://support.apple.com/kb/DL1433
    I made one on a USB flash drive.
    Problem with that solution is that:
    Note: In order to create an external Lion Recovery using the Lion Recovery Assistant, the Mac must have an existing Recovery HD.
    If you kept a copy of the installer, then open it up, and restore the InstallESD.dmg to an empty partition or flash drive. Do note that doesn't give you the Recovery HD, but you won't need one since you can reinstall w/o downloading anything but additional components from Apple's servers.

Maybe you are looking for