Is booting from Tiger install disk possible to repair disk?

I have leopard 10.5.3 installed and updated, but I don't have the install disks on me, just the Tiger install disks. Can I boot from the Tiger install disks and repair the HD?

repair disk - yes,
repair permissions - no.
you can also repair disk without using an install DVD at all.
boot into single user mode by holding command+s at the chime on restart. at the prompt enter
/sbin/fsck -fy
that's the command to run "repair disk". when it's done type
reboot
to restart normally.

Similar Messages

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             with your computer.  Insert the disc into the optical drive and restart the computer.
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             button. When the menu bar appears select Disk Utility from the Utilities menu.
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             partitions to one (1) from the Partitions drop down menu, click on Options button
             and select GUID, click on OK, then set the format type to MacOS Extended
             (Journaled, if supported), then click on the Apply button.
         3. When the formatting has completed quit DU and return to the installer.  Proceed
             with the OS X installation and follow the directions included with the installer.
         4. When the installation has completed your computer will Restart into the Setup
             Assistant. Be sure you configure your initial admin account with the exact same
             username and password that you used on your old drive. After you finish Setup
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  • Video Ram failed, won't boot from Leopard Install Disk

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    Any suggestions?

    Welcome to the Apple Discussions!
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    Hi,
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    Dave,
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    ;~)

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    Try resetting PRAM…
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  • Kernel panic when booting from Tiger install DVD

    Short version: When I try to boot up from the Tiger installation DVD, my Power Mac G5 gives me a kernel panic. Can anyone help?
    Here's the story:
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    The same Tiger DVD works fine on other computers, so I know it's not the disc. And the Power Mac itself handles everything else without problem.
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    [Apple docs: What's a kernel panic? (Mac OS X)|http://docs.info.apple.com/article.html?artnum=106227]
    [Topic : kmosx: Kernel Panics? Don't panic too !|http://discussions.apple.com/thread.jspa?threadID=121923]
    [X-Lab: Resolving Kernel Panics|http://www.thexlab.com/faqs/kernelpanics.html]
    [Tutorial: Avoiding and eliminating Kernel panics|http://www.macfixit.com/article.php?story=20060911080447777]
    [Tutorial: An introduction to reading Mac OS X crash reports|http://www.macfixit.com/article.php?story=20060309075929717]
    [12-Step Program to Isolate Freezes and/or Kernel Panics|http://macosg.com/group/viewtopic.php?t=800]

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  • Is there any way to browse a USB disk while booted from OSX install disk?

    My hard drive died on me the other day (the mac partition anyway) and I'm trying to use a data recovery program to get my data back. I have the application on my USB key, and I assumed I'd then be able to use the OS X installer disk to boot up and then run this program from the USB drive but the installer doesn't let me browse folders or quit... Is there any way to do this? I don't have another mac to firewire or anything so it's either this or order a recovery program on a bootable disk, which I really don't want to do as I need this done fast... Any suggestions?

    Your utility for data recovery usually should have come with a Mac bootable DVD with its own application on it. If it didn't, contact them for a disc that will boot your Mac with the utility on it. Your other option is to get a Firewire hard drive, partition it, and install the operating system there on one partition large enough for the operating system, while leaving the other partition large enough to recover the entire unbootable hard drive.
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  • Can't boot G5 even from OS install disk. Help?

    I've trolled the message boards 25 pages deep and searched all the "Can't boot my G5" threads and still haven't found anyone describing what my machine is doing so thought I'd start a new thread in the hopes someone can help me out.
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    I think to myself, "No worries I can just boot from my 2nd partition holding down the Option key to select it on the boot up screen". I always keep a partition with an OS on it for times like these. So I reboot, hold option key, select my other partition, things look OK. I get the grey screen with the Apple logo and I get the wheel animation turning. (Not beachball of death but the typical circular, almost sun ray configuration thing) At this point, usually the screen will go black for a moment before the desktop loads. However, in my case once the screen goes black after the load screen, it stays black. Now let me say the monitor does NOT turn off. There is a definite difference when I manually turn the monitor off. When off it's truly black. But this is like a power on black, not true black. (If you need me to explain this better feel free to ask me to clarify)
    So the untouched, pristine Tiger partition boot is a No Go. I figured I'd then give up on trying to put Leopard on my desktop machine (I use it on my laptop) and reinstall the original OS and system software from the system disk that came with my G5. I boot machine holding down eject button, place the disk in, close the drive door and shut down again by holding power button. Reboot holding C key and the same routine happens with booting from the disk. Gray Apple logo screen, sun ray circle moving, screen goes black on the attempted transition to desktop .. but stays black. I also tried booting with my Disk Warrior disk to no avail. Same thing happens. (Also tried booting from disks by selecting them manually from booting with Option key down) At first I wondered if it was a monitor issue. That maybe my desktop was up but there was an issue with the signal being passed to the monitor on the resolution jump. Thought perhaps hitting the Eject key on the keyboard when I had attempted to boot from the partition (not from disk on this test) would tell me if it was a monitor issue. If it was a monitor issue, the disk tray should open. But alas, no.
    So since I cannot boot normally from any partition or disk I decided to boot into single-user mode.
    I did the fsck -fy thing and it told me everything was ok. I had also previously installed applejack and I ran that and short of correcting a few permissions and dumping some unneeded caches it came back with a system OK.
    At my wits end I booted into target disk mode and ran Disk Warrior on both the original half installed OS partition and the back up emergency boot up partition from my laptop. Again, everything OK. Hoped against hope that I could actually install an OS onto my G5 from my laptop but I was only given the option of being able to do it from my laptop with the Leopard disk and it would only allow me to do it if I used Disk Utility to completely format that drive first. No, thanks.
    Re-attempt to boot G5. Failure. So now I turn to hardware. Disconnected everything beside the keyboard and mouse. Try again. Fail. Pulled a couple sticks of Crucial memory out of the machine and left the stock RAM. No dice. Pressed the small power unit reset button under the RAM slots. No change. Zapped the PRAM. Still nothing. Try to boot in Safe mode holding down shift key. Doesn't work.
    It seems to me if I can't even get the machine to boot from the Install disk that there is something going on that is much more major than software issues.
    Bad motherboard? Any ideas? Because I'm all out of ideas.

    Brother, Sound74, I thought I was the only one pulling the hair out of my chest one by one the past two days. Your situation is very similar to mine, and I'm just as clueless as you are. I started getting kernel panic screens, then nothing on boot, until finally I brought it to the local genius bar. They ran all the usual software/hardware tests, updated Tiger to 10.4.11, recommended I buy Leopard and do an erase-install. My computer, of course, was working absolutely fine by this point. I bought Leopard, came home, backed everything up, then tried to install the new OS. Like in your case, it just up and quit half-way through. Screen went black and a "No DVI Signal" message came on my display (it does this when I turn it on without first turning on the computer).
    So I thought, well, maybe it takes a really long time to erase-install, and the monitor is just waiting for things to kick back in. I've always upgrade-installed before, so I couldn't tell if this was normal or not. But about half an hour later, my fans kicked in so fast I thought I had a P-51 Mustang taking off in my studio. I waited a bit more and finally force-shut-down my system. Not knowing what to expect, I nervously tried to re-boot.
    Nothing. Zip. I can't safe boot, I can't boot from the installer disc, etc. The only thing I can do is the option-key thing whereby you choose the startup disc. And of course, it only gives the Leopard install disc as an option, because now the entire HD has been erased! But when I choose the Leopard disc, of course it doesn't work.
    So I have a nice $3000 paperweight sitting in my studio. I guess I'll have to bring it back to the Mac store, where if it costs more than $300 to fix, I'm going to say screw it and put that dough toward a new iMac.
    Sorry I couldn't provide any helpful info, but I just wanted you to know you're not alone in suffering the slings and arrows of outrageous technology.
    Keep me posted on any solutions you discover, and I'll do the same.
    Noochy1
    PS My applecare expired a month ago! AAAAARRRRGGGHHHH!!! **** Murphy and his stupid laws.

  • Leopard lost my external HD, how to boot from Tiger

    When I upgraded (?) to Panther, it wanted to do a backup to my external HD, but it was going to be to large, so I told it not to. The next day when I started up, I typed in the password to my external HD and got a window saying Device not found. I have been following the discussions af many others with the same problem, so I'm getting experimental
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    How do I boot from an install disk so I can get to my dock and Finder?

    David Tinker wrote:
    When I upgraded (?) to Panther, it wanted to do a backup to my external HD, but it was going to be to large, so I told it not to. The next day when I started up, I typed in the password to my external HD and got a window saying Device not found. I have been following the discussions af many others with the same problem, so I'm getting experimental
    I would like to boot from my Tiger disk, but when I insert it in the DVD drive and choose it in startup disk, it restarts, but wants to install. What I am trying to do is to boot from my Tiger disk, turn off password protection for the external, then go back to Leopard, hopefully to a useable external again.
    How do I boot from an install disk so I can get to my dock and Finder?
    You have the right idea. It would be easier if you had another computer with Tiger.
    Try this. Boot into the Tiger CD by holding down the "C" key but do not install anything, In the Utilities menu you should have an option to log in as a single user in the terminal mode.
    From there you can access the external HD and turn off the password. You will need the instructions how to do this in a terminal from the HD manufacturer or someone else on these boards who had done it before.

  • EMac won't start from startup install disk

    Aloha gang,
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    * putting in the disk, starting the computer and holding the C button
    * putting in the disk, starting the computer and holding the option button to choose the install disk
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    Oh yeah - I have tried using the original purchased media as well as backup copies of the media in all instances.
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    nalani:
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    It seems to me that the difficulty you are experiencing has to do with individual computers not responding appropriately to the discs from which you are trying to boot them. The disks themselves may not be the issue at all, since you have previously booted other computers from them.
    My first suggestion would be to check the computers themselves to see if they have issues that need to be corrected. If those computers are running previous versions of OS X and you have the install disks for them, see if you can boot from them and run Repair Disk. I would also check for hardware issues by running the appropriate Apple Hardware Test disk. BDAqua's suggestion to Resolve startup issues and perform disk maintenance with Disk Utility and fsck is appropriate, especially if you are unable to boot from an install disk to run Repair Disk.
    BDAqua's other suggestion also has merit. That is, using one of the computers that will boot the disk as Host, boot the recalcitrant computers into Firewire Target Disk Mode and run Repair Disk and if everything checks out OK, do the installation in that way.
    No one is questioning the legality of what you are doing. It is just that most of the users who post have a single user or family license at best, so your licensing situation is a bit rare around here.
    Please do post back with an update of how things go if you attempt any of the suggested approaches.
    Good luck.
    cornelius

  • Tiger install disk (10.4.6) MacBook Pro - possible upgrade from 10.3.9????

    Can I use the Tiger install disk (10.4.6) that came with my MacBook Pro to upgrade from 10.3.9 on my Powerbook to 10.4.6 on my Powerbook?

    You're welcome.
    Leopard requirements/10.5.x...
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