Leopard install quitting

Hi,
I have tried to install Leopard from an original DVD, from an image on an external FW drive and from a copy of the install DVD. In all cases the media checks out ok but part way through the install the install fails (at this point doing a clean install since an earlier attempt to archive and install failed and killed things) with the message that there was a problem inserting files into "Volumes/Macintosh HD" with a message to contact the software manufacturer. Does this indicate a problem with the hard drive (which is an original)? I have also tried installing with machine in target mode from another computer with a similar response.
Thanks

Have you tried taking the original install disc that came with your computer and run disc utilities to verify and repair the HD? I'd also recommend repairing permissions before trying again. It's possible that a piece of hardware on your machine is marginal and this might fix things for you.

Similar Messages

  • How do you make a back-up copy of the OSX Leopard Install Disk 1?

    I'd like to make a back-up copy of +Leopard Install Disk #1+ but I only have one DVD read/write machine onboard the Mac Pro.
    Can I insert the Leopard DVD, copy it to my desktop, remove it from the drive, insert a blank DVD and burn the contents to the blank DVD?
    I'm trying to create a simple bootable Leopard DVD that will enable me to (a) boot up, then restore my System HD from a Time Machine Archive; and/or (b) run +Disk Utility+ from a source other than the main System HD if necessary.
    I know I can do these things from the original Leopard Install DVD but I'm trying to preserve it and use it as little as possible in the event I need to reinstall Leopard.

    In addition to Malcolm's instructions I want to point out that you need a Dual Layer
    DVD+R (or -R) for this. Those are quite flaky and some might not work or not work well when you burn them. I was recommended Verbatim DL DVD+R as being reliable. try those.
    also, instead of burning to a copy of the install Disk 1 to a DVD you can clone it to a partition on your hard drive. Just make a small partition, insert the DVD, select it in Disk Utility and click on "restore" tab. select the DVD as the source and the partition as the target and hit "restore". this will give you a very fast bootable installer right on your hard drive.

  • Just had Snow Leopard installed.  Iphoto won't open.  I'm supposed to photograph 300 people on Friday.

    I have no idea why Iphoto won't work.  The icon bounces once, and then does nothing although I see the details at the top of the screen.
    I've used it extensively since I had Snow Leopard installed last week.  Did not upgrade to iphoto11 after much negative feedback from my photographer pals.
    I did notice that when I opened a couple of photographs to edit them that once in a while a green or red background appeared, but it was random and only happened on a couple of photos.
    I have tried Shutting Down the computer, force quit iphoto a few times........Nothing.
    I am 3 hours away from an Apple store and have the largest assignment of my year in less than 48 hours.
    Can anyone help me out?  Many thanks.

    Thanks for sharing so much of your life story, though I'm not sure what relevance it has to your issue, which, I believe is that you can't open iPhoto.
    Option 1
    Back Up and try rebuild the library: hold down the command and option (or alt) keys while launching iPhoto. Use the resulting dialogue to rebuild. Choose to Rebuild iPhoto Library Database from automatic backup.
    If that fails:
    Option 2
    Download iPhoto Library Manager and use its rebuild function. This will create a new library based on data in the albumdata.xml file. Not everything will be brought over - no slideshows, books or calendars, for instance - but it should get all your albums and keywords back.
    Because this process creates an entirely new library and leaves your old one untouched, it is non-destructive, and if you're not happy with the results you can simply return to your old one. .
    Regards
    TD

  • Leopard Install Disc Won't Mount on PowerMac G4

    I'm having problems installing Leopard and am looking for advice. My internal DVD reader won't mount the installation disc - this has been a long-standing issue with my DVD drive: it can read some DVDs but not others. This is only the second time I've had trouble reading an actual Apple-manufactured DVD, though. (The first time, it was iLife - I eventually got around the problem by using a third-party DVD drive to install iLife, and that worked fine.) This time, though, while trying to install Leopard from the external DVD drive, the installation failed halfway through. This happened twice in a row, and I had to go back to my original system discs that came with the computer and reinstall the original system (10.2) in order to get my computer working again.
    Now, I have two questions that arise from this. One, is this DVD-reading problem on my internal drive something that can be fixed with a Firmware update or something? I've searched without success. Or does the drive have to be replaced completely?
    Second, is the problem with trying to install from the external DVD drive likely to be an issue with the Leopard install disc being a dual layer disc (if it is - I have no idea), and maybe the reason it fails halfway through is because my external DVD drive is only able to read one layer of the DVD? Or am I completely barking up the wrong tree with this one? Is it just a bad idea to try and install from an external DVD drive, full stop?
    Colour me baffled! Any advice gratefully received.

    I do not know for sure, but as the Leopard install DVD has a capacity of over 7GB it may well be a dual-layer DVD.
    Assuming your G4 PowerMac otherwise meets the minimum requirements for Leopard (867 MHz or faster, 512 MB memory, 9GB free space on hard drive, etc.) it is possible there is a flaw in the DVD. When you attempted to install did the installer successfully verify the DVD? You could try using Disk Utility to verify the DVD.
    You might consider a new internal DVD drive. I had to replace the optical drive in my G5 when it failed. They are quite reasonably priced here: http://eshop.macsales.com/shop/optical-drives/superdrives/powermac/
    Do you have an external FireWire hard drive? Did you attempt to install Leopard on that drive?

  • Power outage during last minute of Leopard install

    During the last few minutes of my Leopard install into my new alum iMac (I was setting up the mac for the first time), my UPS started to squeal and then shut down and I lost power.
    Now when I turn on the iMac I get the message "The application Spotlight unexpectedly quit." I can't access the Finder and have no idea how to go through re-installing the OS. Inserting the Leopard CD does nothing.
    It looks like components of Leopard were installed because the desktop backgroup changed to the "galaxy".
    Can someone help me through this?
    Thanks, Sandy

    Hi Sandy
    Insert the Leopard DVD, restart the computer and keep the C key held down until you see the grey screen and Apple logo. It should then boot into the installation and let you go through the process again. You'll probably want to choose "Archive and Install" from the Options button when you get to the screen where you choose a drive.
    Unfortunately, I don't think there's a graceful way to shut down the computer in a power failure if it's in the middle of installing system components...
    Matt

  • Mac Pro can't find hard drive with Snow Leopard installed on

    Hello there,
    I have a three harddrive setup.
    Harddrive 1 is in bay 1 and has two partitions.
    1: For system and apps
    2: For Documents and stuff
    Hard drive 2+3 are in Bay 2+3 and are combined to a RAID 0 drive.
    Some time ago I installed Leopard and the brand new an formatted hard drive.
    It happened that it always took 2 start ups to run Leopard because always on the first time it didn t find the system on hard drive one. Pushing the 'D' button often helped.
    Of course that was nothing to work with, although I at least could get some work done, once I loaded Leopard successfully.
    So I tried Disk Utility, fsck without success.
    I also tried the way of using fdisk to mark the partion as active, which only resulted in now not being able to boot at all.
    Booting from DVD I also tried choosing my Leopard install on my hard drive as boot device (it has always shown up here) but still without success.
    I am afraid things are quite messed up, since there were a few things happening at one time, which I am not overly happy about now. (Installing new RAM, installing SNOW LEOPARD on the new harddrive 1 in bay one, having still the RAID with LEOPARD on in bays 2+3).
    I am already certain to do a fresh and complete reinstall of the system, I have my backup, but still there is some iTunes music and a few documents I haven't backed up yet, which I'd rather would not like to lose...
    Put it short:
    What could I do to get my system running at least once?
    Thanks a lot,
    max.

    After some research I found out about the nice TargetDiskMode which I used to save all my important data with my MacBook.
    http://support.apple.com/kb/HT1661
    Ready to perform a complete and fresh install now!
    Max.

  • Will Mac OS X Snow Leopard INSTALL on a IMAc g3 slot lOADER?

    will Mac OS X Snow Leopard INSTALL on a IMAc g3 slot lOADER?
    Message was edited by: Youngzink13

    That's what we needed.
    Officially your iMac--known as a "tray-loader" for its optical drive type--can go to Panther (10.3.X). Panther is quite better than Jaguar (10.2.8) that you now have. You probably need more RAM than 160MB for even Jaguar. I feel that 384MB is about min for that OS.
    The big problem is that the early iMacs came with painfully small hard drives --4 to 6 G--and OSX need a lot of free space on the disk for efficient performance. It's hard to keep a Jaguar system under 2G with a few useful apps installed.
    Bottom line: you'll spent money for a hard-to-find retail OS install disk, more RAM, and a bigger hard drive, and you'll still have a slow computer that will always struggle with modern web pages. If you want to upgrade and experiment as a hobby or learnign experience and you can afford the parts and time, by all means--go for it. However, if cost is an issue, throwing money at this unit is not cost-effective in terms of how much more yo ucan get from it.

  • My MACBOOK Pro turned out to be Snow Leopard, and later upgraded to LION. And update the EFI, I would like to replace the Snow Leopard, EFI can not boot, how do? How to use the Snow Leopard install disk to reduce EFI?

    My MACBOOK Pro turned out to be Snow Leopard, and later upgraded toLION. And update the EFI, I would like to replace the Snow Leopard, EFIcan not boot, how do? How to use the Snow Leopard install disk to reduce EFI?

    Do you mean some of your software does not work in Lion? Do you want to return to using Snow Leopard? If so, then do this:
    Downgrade Lion to Snow Leopard
    1.  Boot from your Snow Leopard Installer Disc. After the installer loads select your language and click on the Continue button.  When the menu bar appears select Disk Utility from the Utilities menu.
    2. After DU loads select your hard drive (this is the entry with the mfgr.'s ID and size) from the left side list. Note the SMART status of the drive in DU's status area.  If it does not say "Verified" then the drive is failing or has failed and will need replacing.  SMART info will not be reported  on external drives. Otherwise, click on the Partition tab in the DU main window.
    3. Under the Volume Scheme heading set the number of partitions from the drop down menu to one. Set the format type to Mac OS Extended (Journaled.) Click on the Options button, set the partition scheme to GUID then click on the OK button. Click on the Partition button and wait until the process has completed.
    4. Quit DU and return to the installer. Install Snow Leopard.
    This will erase the whole drive so be sure to backup your files if you don't have a backup already. If you have performed a TM backup using Lion be aware that you cannot restore from that backup in Snow Leopard (see below.) I suggest you make a separate backup using Carbon Copy Cloner 3.4.1.
    If you have Snow Leopard Time Machine backups, do a full system restore per #14 in Time Machine - Frequently Asked Questions.  If you have subsequent backups from Lion, you can restore newer items selectively, via the "Star Wars" display, per #15 there, but be careful; some Snow Leopard apps may not work with the Lion files.

  • Safari DNS after Leopard install

    Hi,
    Hope this hasn't been asked. Prior to Leopard install, when I typed an address into Safari (and it wasn't in Bookmarks already), I would type "Fark" and it opened. Now, it has a search page provided by Verizon, who is my provider. A Clunky search page comes up. It appears I have to change DNS settings. Any suggestions?
    Thanks, Joe

    thanks for the reply;
    I can quit safari fine; no need to force quit; I get a white screen and nothing happens.
    I can quit safari normally;
    I restart it and get the same white screen
    However when I restart my Mac , safari works fine.
    This process happens every morning;  I close the cover  to my Mac at night, and try to start it the following day.

  • 2011 27" iMac cannot boot from a slow leopard install DVD

    I just got a new iMac 27". It came with Lion preinstalled. I wanted to install Snow Leopard on the 2nd hard drive and it wont let me boot from the DVD or run the Snow Leopard install from the DVD when running under lion. When I try to boot from the DVD I get a kernel panic. I am also having problems with computer not waking from sleep. I think I should return this computer as defective. Anyone else have this kernel panic problem?

    As stated, you can't use SL on the Mac, so the kernel panics should subside if you're not trying to boot from SL. However, there are plenty of other posts re. freezing/not waking after sleep.
    So, if you do want to run SL, you could try to find one that still has SL installed (and you'd get the free upgrade to Lion) - there are quite a few refurbished units at the Apple Store. If you're within the 14 days and purchased it at an Apple store, you can return it and could order a refurb with SL (or find a new one at a reseller who bought up the left over stock). That's what I've usually done.

  • Clean Leopard Install - Can't get Photos back in Right (tripling, etc)

    Hi. I did a clean Leopard install then loaded my iLife '06. I have my "iPhoto Library" on my external. This contains folders 'originals', 'modified', 'data', and other accoutremonts. In iPhoto, I selected "Import" and thought things were going well till I saw 1) triple copies of each photo 2) no import of my tags for each photo, albums, folders, etc. I see 2000, 2001, 2002, etc. but no 'Canada Vacation', etc.
    So, knowing I still had them on my external, I deleted over 10,000 photos from iPhoto to start anew. Then I figured the triples were coming from 'originals', 'modified', 'data' so I tried just importing "originals". This put only 1 copy of the photo in iPhoto, but it's a jumbled mess with no tags, sections, etc.
    I checked the help section but am still not 'getting it'. Could someone point me in the right direction or explain what I should do here to get my iPhoto back to where it was pristine/organized? I'm befuddled.

    I fixed my problem by accident. I merely dragged my "iPhoto Library" from my external to "pictures" in my home directory.

  • Creating a backup before Leopard install

    Is it possible to back up my entire 80gb imac startup drive to one of my firewire drives with assurance that I can go back to that system if my Leopard install goes haywire? My first attempt to install Leopard failed with some un-useful error message and I was concerned that I might have gotten too far to go back. It seems to have rebooted fine back to 10.4.10, but my other startup drive is 10.2.8 and I'd hate to have to startup from that

    Make a bootable clone backup on the FW drive. I use LaCie Silverkeeper 1.1.4.
    Most important! Test the bootable clone. Restart your computer with the Option key pressed and your external drive should appear as one of the bootable options. Select its icon and click on it. Only after you boot up and see that the clone is indeed a clone, do you really know that you are safe from any kind of installation problem.
    I would also strongly suggest removing the external drive connectio from your computer before installing Leopard to be absolutely sure nothing can happen to it.

  • I have a copy of Windows 7, and I am trying to bring up Boot Camp on my MacBook with Snow Leopard. But my Snow Leopard install disk is too old for Windows 7, so attempted Boot Camp install of drivers fails.

    I have a copy of Windows 7, and I am trying to bring up Boot Camp on my MacBook with Snow Leopard. But my Snow Leopard install disk is too old for Windows 7, so attempted Boot Camp install of drivers fails.
    I have hand-installed the NVidia graphics driver, and I have keyboard, minimal trackpad, and hardwire to internet all working. So the WIndows machine is usable. But I am hurting for wi-fi, better trackpad, and whatever else is delivered by Boot Camp. I can't use any of the Boot Camp upgrades because I do not have XP or Vista.

    While we all have MacBooks in this forum not all of us use Boot Camp. There's a Boot Camp Support Community where everybody uses Boot Camp. You should also post this question there.
    https://discussions.apple.com/community/windows_software/boot_camp

  • How do I install snow leopard on a 2.1 ghz macbook with 10.5.8 Leopard installed?  I have a 10.6.2 unstall disk.  It says it can't install snow leopard on this computer.

    How do I install Snow Leopard on my Macbook 2.1 ghz, with 10.5.8 Leopard installed?
    I have the install disk for Snow Leopard 10.6.2, but when using it for installation, it
    states that "Snow Leopard cannot be installed on this computer"!
    I understand some features of iOS5 cannot be used unless my iMac and Macbook have
    10.7 Lion installed.  Correct?

    It sounds like your Snow Leopard install disk is the disk that came with another model of Mac (grey lable with no pictures). If so, that's not legal and won't work. You need a retail (white label with the picture of a snow leopard) copy of the installer for each system that didn't come with Snow Leopard.
    Regards.

  • Making a copy of Leopard Install Disk

    Hi there,
    A while back I copied the contents of my Leopard install disk by simply dragging the files from the Disk into a new folder on my Desktop with the idea of making a back up copy in case I lost my original DVD. So recently my G4 started to slow up a little so I decided to de-clog it by doing a clean erase and install. However when I double click the "Install Mac OS X.app" icon and a dialogue appears saying:
    "The application "Install Mac OS X" cannot be used from this volume. To install Mac OS X, please use the application provided on the Mac OS X installation disc."
    So I went to find my original disk and it has simply disappeared.
    So my question is If I make a disk image of the copied Leopard disk files that are on my desktop then burn it, can I install then from that Disk.
    All and any help would be greatly appreciated.
    Thank you

    Unfortunately, your drag & drop backup copy of the OS X install disc is no good. An install disc, like all bootable Mac OS X volumes, contains a bunch of hidden files and directories that are essential for booting, and a Finder drag & drop copy misses all of those. So the backup you thought you made is incomplete, and there's nothing you can do to fix it.
    You'll have to get your hands on a replacement set of install discs. If it was a retail Leopard DVD your only option (if it is truly lost) will to be to buy another one, I'm afraid to say.
    In the future, a good way to make a backup copy of the Leopard install disc is to use Disk Utility to make a disk image of it. You can then burn a copy of the disk image to a DVD+R DL disc if you want, and boot from that.

Maybe you are looking for