Leopard installation password loop

I have attempted to install Leopard on my MacBookPro, but after installation get in the password/username loop referred to elsewhere (http://support.apple.com/kb/HT1710). Advice elsewhere on this site says to archive and install, but I don't see that option anywhere throughout installation process. When I follow the directions in the website page cited above, there's never a place to select "options", just "customize," which doesn't include an archive and install choice. Please advise!

How much free space is left on your drive? Is it getting low?
Installing software from an original distribution disc to an empty hard drive, which is called a "clean install," is a best practice recommended by security organizations, such as NIST and US-CERT.
Backup your home folder and applications, I tend to prefer reinstalling applications, and then on the first restart, be ready with your backup (leave off during install) and let MA import your home account safely.

Similar Messages

  • Mac OX Snow Leopard installation from DVD failed

    I tried to install the new OS Mac OS X Snow Leopard 10.6.3 (bought today) on my iMac. But is constantly failed (message: installation failed) and now it's in a loop where I can't get out. Because the only action there is is to try it again. What should I do?

    What specific iMac model do you have? Does it meet these requirements?
    Snow Leopard General requirements
    Mac computer with an Intel processor
    1GB of memory
    5GB of available disk space
    DVD drive for installation
    Some features require a compatible Internet service provider; fees may apply.
    Some features require Apple’s MobileMe service; fees and terms apply.
    To shut down the computer press and hold in the Power button until the computer shuts off. When you restart the computer you can eject the DVD as follows:
    Five ways to eject a stuck CD or DVD from the optical drive
    Ejecting the stuck disc can usually be done in one of the following ways:
    1. Restart the computer and after the chime press and hold down the left mouse button until the disc ejects.
    2. Press the Eject button on your keyboard.
    3. Click on the Eject button in the menubar.
    4. Press COMMAND-E.
    5. If none of the above work try this: Open the Terminal application in your Utilities folder. At the prompt enter or paste the following:
         /usr/bin/drutil eject
    If this fails then try this:
    Boot the computer into Single-user Mode. At the prompt enter the same command as used above. To restart the computer enter "reboot" at the prompt without quotes.
    If you are currently running Leopard and it's still working then do this:
    Repair the Hard Drive and Permissions
    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. After DU loads select your hard drive entry (mfgr.'s ID and drive size) from the the left side list.  In the DU status area you will see an entry for the S.M.A.R.T. status of the hard drive.  If it does not say "Verified" then the hard drive is failing or failed. (SMART status is not reported on external Firewire or USB drives.) If the drive is "Verified" then select your OS X volume from the list on the left (sub-entry below the drive entry,) click on the First Aid tab, then click on the Repair Disk button. If DU reports any errors that have been fixed, then re-run Repair Disk until no errors are reported. If no errors are reported click on the Repair Permissions button. Wait until the operation completes, then quit DU and return to the installer.
    If DU reports errors it cannot fix, then you will need Disk Warrior and/or Tech Tool Pro to repair the drive. If you don't have either of them or if neither of them can fix the drive, then you will need to reformat the drive and reinstall OS X.
    If all is OK then reboot from your Snow Leopard DVD and try the installation again.
    BTW, I encourage you to make a cloned backup of your current working system before trying to upgrade.

  • Mac-Windows-Connection failes after Snow Leopard Installation

    I am dealing with 4 PCs at home – an IMac, a MacBookPro, a Dell Dimension and a Dell Precision Workstation. Before I installed Snow Leopard I could connect easily from my Macs to my PC via “Connect with Server” and the “sudo pico /etc/hosts” hint to rename my Windows-PC to real names (e.g. Dimension and Precision). After the installation I am prompted in OS X to give my account name and password again! And, of course, I don’t work anymore (wrong user name or password error). Because I put those information in long ago, I am not quite sure if I am putting the wrong Name/Password info in or if something happened during the Snow Leopard installation. I was never quite sure if “Name” meant the name of my Windows account I want to log into, or my Mac user name or a combination of both or the Server /Name thing, e.g. Dimension\Name. Just for info: My Windows-PCs can still connect without a problem to both Macs.
    Any help is appreciated what information exactly to put in that **** Name/Password box that appears if I want to connect to a Windows-PC from my Mac. Or what else could have happened during the Snow Leopard installation that cut of the former available ability to connect to my Windows-PC from OS X.

    I was able to see the other Windows XP computer and begin to connect. I was then presented with a login screen. I tried using the usual user name and password - no luck. I then formatted the user name as as follows:
    user name: computer name\user name
    password: as normal
    And it worked. Specifically in my case:
    user: cwy-pln2152\administrator
    password: planning
    This is what worked for me your mileage may vary.

  • Trouble booting from Leopard installation DVD

    I'm having some trouble booting from the Leopard installation DVD, I was wondering if anyone here could help.
    I want to reset my administrator password since OS X does not seem to be accepting it, and I heard that the best way to do this would be to boot from a Mac OS X installation DVD or CD and change some settings. When I start up my computer with the Leopard DVD in the drive, I hold down the 'C' key after the chime, and continue to hold it until the spinning gear appears.
    From there, the spinning gear stays on the screen, and nothing happens. I've heard that it takes a while for the screen to come up, but I let it sit for over three hours and nothing happened. I also tried holding the Option key at startup and selecting the DVD, but the same thing happened. The DVD is in good shape and has no deep scratches, and it appears right away in the OS itself. I can't access the installer from the OS since it asks for my Administrator password, which it does not seem to be accepting. I also tried another solution to the Administrator password problem that involved typing some commands in Single User mode, but that did not help either.
    Any help would be greatly appreciated.

    what exactly did you try to do in single user mode?

  • How can I create a disk image of snow leopard installer disk from my Imac which runs it?

    how can I create a disk image of snow leopard installer disk from my Imac which runs it? It came without DVD installer, and I want to make a copy of it's OS installer but can't find out how.

    You need to have the disc in order to create disk image of snow leopard installer disc. What did your machine ship with? If something later than SL, then why? If earlier, then you can buy the SL installer disc and make the disk image.

  • After installing Leopard, my G4 will no longer boot in OS 9.22. (Classic still works, but I need it to boot in OS 9.)  Any clues about what the Leopard installer might have done to my machine that rendered OS 9 boot unusable? What can I do to fix it?

    After installing Leopard, my G4 will no longer boot in OS 9.22.
    (Classic still works, but I need it to boot in OS 9.)
    Any clues about what the Leopard installer might have done to my machine that rendered OS 9 boot unusable? (And what can I do to fix it?)
    Details:
    G4 Gigabit Ethernet
    Boot ROM version: 4.2.8fl
    Accelerator card added: 1.6 MHz
    1.5 Gig Ram
    I have erased the partition that had Leopard installed on it.
    I zapped the pram.
    In Open Firmware, I "reset-nvram", and then "reset-all"
    I tried to reinstall G4 FW Update 4.2.8, but that must be done when booted from OS 9, and of course, that's the problem: it won't boot into 9.
    I tried restarting from 9.2.1 DVD.
    I tried restarting from an external firewire drive containing OS 9.2.2.
    I tried moving a fresh OS 9.2.2 system folder into an empty partition on an internal hard drive. (Partition was created WITH OS 9 drivers installed.)
    All attempts to boot into OS 9 give me the same results - grey screen - no spinning beach ball, no icons or logos - just a blank grey screen.
    This machine still works fine in OS 10.3 and 10.4, and it worked fine for many years booting into OS 9, until I installed Leopard, and I haven't been able to boot into OS 9 since then, although I have done considerable research online and tried many things.
    I have since learned that this machine does not support Leopard - 10.5. Fine, but how did it break 9.2.2?
    Any help greatly appreciated.

    Thanks for checking in, BDAQua.
    Problem solved.
    In the docs that came with my Powerlogix accelerator card, I found this sentence buried:
    "If you reset the PRAM, the NVRAM code for OS9 compatibility is cleared, so you will have to boot from the Firmawre Update CD and perform this process again in order to boot in OS9."
    The "process" it's referring to is the process of setting up the NVRAM for booting into OS9 from the CD.
    Fortunately, I was able to find the disk, and it worked as expected. I can now, once again boot into OS9.
    Conclusion: My (unadvised) attempt to load Leopard on this old machine apparently reset the PRAM on the accelerator card and cleared the NVRAM code for OS9 boot. Although I did attempt to reset the NVRAM via Open Firmware, it did not reset it on the accelerator card.
    So, thank you BDAQua, for your "Ah yes" . . . that's all I needed to steer me in the right direction.
    Gratefully,
    tupester

  • Snow Leopard installation on Mac Mini has failed

    Hi,
    Does anyone know whether Snow Leopard checks what hard disk is installed in order to satisfy installation requirements as I've fitted an SSD Hard Disk Drive in my Macintel Mac Mini and installing Snow Leopard has failed (no longer boots into any Operating System previous nor upgraded. (Mac OS X 10.5.8 previously installed)).
    Thank you for any advice.
    Best Regards.

    It may not have anything to do with a new drive installation. Snow Leopard has just "bricked" my Intel Mac Mini hard drive - the original one. The first attempt at installation failed, so I tried an erase and instal. It seemed to work - briefly but when I tried to restore apps and settings from a Time Machine back-up it "hung" with only one minute of restoration to go. Now the HD appears to have failed, since it is unable to find any system folder and booting up via the Snow Leopard disc and bringing up the disc utility shows a greyed-out HD drive.
    Some people on the MacBook Pro forum report a similar problem with the hard drive after Snow Leopard installation.

  • Leopard installation hard drive issues

    I recently bought a iBook G4 (2005 model) on eBay under the impression it was just missing an OS. Armed with a copy of Leopard (yes I bought it ) I tried to boot it up for the first time.
    The first time I was faced with the Open Firmware screen, and errors that seemed consistnat with a faulty airport connection. I took it all apart and removed the airport card, then while booting I pressed Option to get the list of boot options. Booted to the Leopard DVD and after a disk check it seemed like it was working fine.
    However just as it was about to begin the actual install process it cacked out with a massive Installation Failed! message. The install log said the error "Could not unmount" was to be blamed. Tried using the disk utility to verify the drives but it spent ages doing nothing. Repair wouldnt work and neither would erase, they gave me the same issue.
    So that was it for the night. Gave up to try another day. Next morning trying to do the same thing after changing nothing, I was faced with the "You must restart your computer" message just after the language select screen on the install DVD. Why did this suddently change?
    Took the harddrive out to check the connection was ok, seemed fine so put it back (didnt get the chance to plug it into my pc like I hoped, was missing the right adapter). Now with everything back in place, if I press Option on boot I dont even get a list of harddrives/cd drives anymore... just the two arrows and other than that a blank screen.
    If I try to hold C while I boot to go straight to the disk then it shows the white loading page with the apple logo, but after an hour it hadnt moved on from there. The whole time the hard drive is making a loud clicking noise.
    It seems each move I make I go backwards a little. Who has some suggestions that dont involve paying a spotty berk in the local shop $300 just so he can crack open Google, find this support post and fix it for me at a profit
    I believe the HDD may be fried, but dont know how to check. It seemed to recognize it in the Disk Utility the time I got that far, but dont know why it no longer recognizes it.
    Message was edited by: pjsturgeon

    For us it was Versions cannot be switched off (decreases security).  No "Save As" in many Apps, no Bounce in Mail.  10.7 felt “dumbed down” to us.  We will try later, (10.8 maybe).
    This is what we did in our office, from Kappy:
    To switch from 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.

  • Upgrade HDD using Time Machine, but no Snow Leopard DVD, only Leopard installation DVD = kernel error on startup

    Hi guys and girls.
    Background
    I have a MacBook Pro (March 2009 vintage).  It was loaded with OS X Leopard on a 250GB HDD.  When Snow Leopard was released, I upgraded using a DVD bought from Apple.  In time, I added an external USB HDD to use for Time Machine Backups.  I am now, however, knocking up against the capacity limit of the original hard drive.
    Given the above, plus the fact that I no longer appear to have the Snow Leopard DVD (upgrade version I believe) - what is the recommended way to get back to my old setup (files, OS, settings etc), but with my new, larger HDD?
    So far I have tried:
    1. Formatting new HDD as Mac OS Extended (journaled), GUID partition having booted using my original (Leopard) installation DVD.  I then selected the latest Time Machine (Snow Leopard) backup.  After a couple of hours of restoring from that backup, the system restarted, but had kernel errors on bootup.
    2. As above, but when formatting, chose to zero all data.  This had the same end result.
    Questions:
    1. Are the kernel errors I'm experiencing due to the mismatch of booting off Leopard and restoring a Snow Leopard backup?
    2. Would finding my (or even a) Snow Leopard upgrade DVD help?  If so, how?
    3. What am I doing wrong generally?  I do like to try to understand these things!
    4. As above, what is the recommended way of doing what I'm trying to do, given the limitations of release DVDs etc.
    Many thanks

    Simplest thing would be to buy the retail SL installation disc ($20 USD) and use it to do the migration. There might be an issue trying to use a SL TM version with Leopard.

  • OS X 10.5 Leopard - Installation error message "No software to install"

    Hello,
    I am trying to upgrade my Intel iMac (Early 2006) from OS X 10.4.11 to Leopard OS X 10.5.
    I insert the Leopard DVD and installation begins after restarting. The DVD consistency check runs fine but as soon as installation commences a yellow exclamation mark appears on the screen and informs me that installation could not complete as there is "no software to install".
    - I have checked the DVD for scratches: No scratches.
    - I have changed the RAM: Error messages occur regardless of the RAM configuration. (I have 2 x 1Gb RAM memory sticks installed, from Kingston memory). I went back to the original iMac RAM installed (2 x 512Mb RAM sticks) and the same error message appears.
    I restart the iMac using the Startup disk and return to OS X 10.4.11.
    Any hints on how to get the Leopard installation to work?
    Thanks,
    Ben

    treaders wrote:
    Success!
    I moved 21Gb of stored files from the hard drive I was trying to install Leopard on. Went from 29Gb of free space to 50Gb.
    For some reason the OS X 10.5 Leopard installation process liked this and Leopard installed.
    I thought only 9Gb of free space was required to install Leopard?
    Anyway, it worked.
    Excellent. I will be sure to bookmark this thread. One never knows when it may come in handy.
    The answer to your question is a little complicated and has been answered (approximately) elsewhere. Hopefully someone can point you at it.

  • FIX for Canon MP 600 after leopard installation

    I discovered a fix for the Canon MP 600 after the leopard installation. After many challenges and troubleshooting with no positive results I tried something that worked!
    Go to Applications on the HD, choose Utilities, Choose airport Utility.app. It will open and ask if you would like an update to the Airport Extreme Utility. Choose 'update' and follow instructions. I then went into the System Preferences, removed the MP 600 printer, downloaded the MP 600 driver from the Canon Website and installed it. I then rebooted the computer, went back to System Preferences, added in the MP 600 and all was working well.
    I hope this helps someone.

    on the 'rinting' topics, someone suggested throwing away all the drivers and downloading from the websiet. And it worked.
    thanks to all who thought about it

  • I have an old powerPC G4. dual 867 512 MB. my optical drive is having trouble reading my leopard installer.  I was going to try to use remote install but i don't have a network where I can connect both the mac and the windows laptop.  any suggestions?

    I'm just trying to revive my old PowerPC G4/ dual 867MHz 512MB.  Unfortunately I am unable to install from disc since my optical drive, although still working, is somehow not able to read the leopard installer.  I wanted to try the remote install option but have limited resources and don't have a network where I can have both the Mac desktop and windows laptop communicate.  I read somewhere that I can use a crossover cable to connect the two directly.  I'm still trying to see if I can get an external DVD-ROM as another option.  Any suggestions?

    Your Mac doesn't need a crossover cable, it auto-switches...
    http://support.apple.com/kb/HT2274
    But I have no idea how that will help you install from a Windows computer.
    If you get an external DVD drive it needs to be Firewire & Mac bootable.
    Other solution...
    http://support.apple.com/kb/HT2274

  • Before I dispose of my imac caught in password loop

    Before I dipose of my imac I'm trying to uninstall 10.4 to erase my data (I have the install disk in the computer) but I'm caught in password loop. I am hoping that when I restart while pressing the "C" key that I will be offered an option to uninstall but instead I am asking to enter my password. When I enter it the computer restarts and takes me straight back to the password prompt again. I hope that someone can help!

    You may have a firmware password.  The prevents booting from a cd.
    Maybe your are getting the firmware password?  Do you see this image?
    http://support.apple.com/kb/HT1352

  • Keynote disappeared after leopard installation

    I AM HAVING SOME SERIOUS DATA LOSS AND PROGRAM LOCATION PROBLEMS AFTER LEOPARD INSTALLATION.
    I can not find my previous keynote application program , which was part of ilife08, where did go?
    same thing with adobe files , every program is trial version after LEOPARD INSTALLATION.

    Ahh, welcome to the wonderful world of wifi under Leopard. Maybe you weren't aware that tens of thousands of people have been having endless problems with wifi whilst using Leopard .... I just got back from holiday - full signal yet no internet. Connect using ethernet and there it is - working perfectly. The culprit? Apple's very own Airport extreme base station, the new one which I bought thinking my old one was on the blink - nope.
    Meanwhile Apple have not said a word about this in the last 8-10 weeks of utter misery for countless people - not a sausage. Many people are counting on 10.5.2 fixing this. I say don't count on it. Remember to complain to Apple as it is their own software/hardware that is at fault here. Meanwhile, they introduce a ... wifi laptop.... ooh the irony.

  • Snow Leopard Installation Disk Ejects - won't install

    A brand new Snow Leopard Installation disk would not be read in a MacBook Pro 15" so I just thought I'd share my solution.
    This installation disk was readable on every Mac that I tried except the one that I wanted to install Snow Leopard onto, which, by the way, could read other CDs and DVDs.
    I ran TechTool just to eliminate any problem it may be able to handle.
    The solution was to clean the DVD with a little dish soap and water and to blot it dry with a lint-free cloth. Once I was sure that the disk was totally dry I attempted the installation again and it worked.

    Hans, will that Pioneer cause problems with this Tiger app? One comment I read on one forum said that non-Apple disk drives have to be disabled to run Tiger, so I wonder if that would solve this problem. I appreciate all the time you've given me to help solve this problem. Like most projects, a lot more is involved that appears at first.

Maybe you are looking for

  • Exit or Enchancement for changing amount in vendor line item in MIRO

    Dear All, I want to change the amount in vendor line item which get posted through MIRO.System generated 2 line item in case of payment terms of retention is used. Requirement is that, in one line item of vendor, amount should get changed based on th

  • Any body know about Authority interface?

    Dear all, in the GlobalPlatform_Card_API_org.globalplatform_1.5, Authority interface has below information public interface Authority extends javacard.framework.Shareable This interface provides services to recover a cryptographic key and to sign dat

  • Account Problem?

    I'm a person who normally solves problems by waiting for them to magically disappear... So... yeah, that didn't work out too well. For the past month I've been having a problem getting on Skype. I log in to my account, and it goes through fine. It lo

  • Conditionally display items based on null LOV value

    Hello, I've seen several examples that do what I'd like to do but with different implementations. Perhaps someone can steer me in the right direction... I have a pop-up lov that pulls a list of names from various places. If, however, the name cannot

  • How do I reset the RESTRICTIONS Passcode on iPhone 4s

    My teenager got to this before I did! How do I reset the Restrictions Passcode on his iPhone? Will this even work to restrict web content? I could swear that I remember being able to do this via iTunes when the phone was plugged in, but that function