Must re-install Leopard

On advice from Applecare, I need to re-install leopard on my Intel iMac.
Can you point me to a document or a thread that gives a good recipe for doing that and also for restoring all my current settings, applications, application support files, etc so that I can get back to my current working environment efficiently?
I do have external disk resources I can use for backups and also have a Time machine disk.

How to Perform an Archive and Install
An Archive and Install will NOT erase your hard drive, but you must have sufficient free space for a second OS X installation which could be from 3-9 GBs depending upon the version of OS X and selected installation options. The free space requirement is over and above normal free space requirements which should be at least 6-10 GBs. Read all the linked references carefully before proceeding.
1. Be sure to use Disk Utility first to repair the disk before performing the Archive and Install.
Repairing the Hard Drive and Permissions
Boot from your OS X 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 Installer menu (Utilities menu for Tiger.) 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, then quit DU and return to the installer.
2. Do not proceed with an Archive and Install if DU reports errors it cannot fix. In that case use Disk Warrior and/or TechTool Pro to repair the hard drive. If neither can repair the drive, then you will have to erase the drive and reinstall from scratch.
3. Boot from your OS X Installer disc. After the installer loads select your language and click on the Continue button. When you reach the screen to select a destination drive click once on the destination drive then click on the Option button. Select the Archive and Install option. You have an option to preserve users and network preferences. Only select this option if you are sure you have no corrupted files in your user accounts. Otherwise leave this option unchecked. Click on the OK button and continue with the OS X Installation.
4. Upon completion of the Archive and Install you will have a Previous System Folder in the root directory. You should retain the PSF until you are sure you do not need to manually transfer any items from the PSF to your newly installed system.
5. After moving any items you want to keep from the PSF you should delete it. You can back it up if you prefer, but you must delete it from the hard drive.
6. You can now download a Combo Updater directly from Apple's download site to update your new system to the desired version as well as install any security or other updates. You can also do this using Software Update.

Similar Messages

  • I have an iMAC G5 PowerPC (not Intel) running10.5.8.  I sync my iphone to iTunes - but just learned I must have Snow Leopard to do so.   Yet I can't install Snow Leopard as the G5 is not Intel.   What do I do?  How do I move music

    I have an iMAC G5 PowerPC (not Intel) running10.5.8.  I sync my iphone to iTunes - but just learned I must have Snow Leopard to do so for my new iPhone 5S.     Yet I can't install Snow Leopard as the G5 is not Intel.   What do I do?  How do I move music and pics?  And keep them synced up as I purchase more? 

    Sorry, but that is correct. You need Snow Leopard to sync your phone and the latest version of iTunes and you old G5 cannot run that.

  • 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

  • Installing leopard from .dmg file not dvd

    i have a mac pro that has 10.4 and would like to install 10.5. The thing is i don't have leopard on DVD it's a .dmg. Is it possible to install leopard onto my 10.4 mac pro without burning a dvd?
    thanks
    jason

    Some things to keep in mind:
    1) the only way to install the OS (that I'm aware of) is by using a DVD
    2) the DVD you're using MUST belong to that machine OR be a retail copy. The DVD from another computer will NOT work.
    ~Lyssa

  • Installing Leopard on new hard drive

    Want to replace HD on my dual 1.8 G5.
    How do I go about starting, formatting and installing Leopard on a new blank drive.
    My old drive is backed up on an external using TimeMachine.
    After install I plan to pick and choose what to replace from TimeMachine.
    Thanks for any help.

    First:
    Extended Hard Drive Preparation
    1. Open Disk Utility in your Utilities folder. If you need to reformat your startup volume, then you must boot from your OS X 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 Installer menu (Utilities menu for Tiger or Leopard.)
    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. Set the number of partitions from the dropdown menu (use 1 partition unless you wish to make more.) Set the format type to Mac OS Extended (Journaled.) Click on the Options button, set the partition scheme to GUID (only required for Intel Macs) then click on the OK button. Click on the Partition button and wait until the volume(s) mount on the Desktop.
    4. Select the volume you just created (this is the sub-entry under the drive entry) from the left side list. Click on the Erase tab in the DU main window.
    5. Set the format type to Mac OS Extended (Journaled.) Click on the Options button, check the button for Zero Data and click on OK to return to the Erase window.
    6. Click on the Erase button. The format process can take up to several hours depending upon the drive size.
    Quit DU and return to the installer. Have your TM backup drive already connected. When installing you will be provided the opportunity to restore an old system from a TM backup. I believe this will appear after completing the Setup Assistant.
    If your old drive is still functional then you can put it in an external enclosure, boot from it and clone it to the new drive after the new drive has been prepped per the above.

  • I can't install leopard on my powerbook G4

    I have all of the system requirements needed to run leopard 10.5 on my computer. First I bought leopard and cleared the disk verification, I get the "base system error." I called for support for 2 hours and the man said it was an error on the installation disk. However, after exchanging it for a new disk I encountered the same error. So I took my laptop down to the store and a genius said it was a problem with the hard drive and that once I got it back leopard would be installed with a new HD. NO, despite the claims on the terms of the apple care contract they had not installed the most recent version of OS X, which I paid for. When I got my laptop back after 2 weeks of ordeals of shop repair, i get back what appears to be my RAM in a bag and a now scratched leopard disk. So I try to install leopard in the store and once I put the disk in the screen turns black with the pin wheel of death. Now it won't even make it to the installation phase! What is going on! They took it back and now I'm out of a computer for another week. So I would appreciate it if anyone knows anything about my problem and what happens if apple is unable to fix my computer. Do I get a new computer that is able to run leopard like apple claims? Do I ask for a refund of my 2000 dollars I paid for the computer? Thank you. <Edited by Moderator>

    +"I can't see that it's too much to ask to be able to use those purchases as I wish, do you?"+
    You are entitled to use the software that came with your computer +on that computer+. Period. Each machine comes with it's own software. If you want to upgrade the software that came with the computer, you have to pay for the new software. So, in this regard, yes, it's too much to ask. "Piracy" is an accepted term for misusing software in violation of the EULA which you must agree to when you install the software. If you violate the terms of that agreement, you are acting illegally. If you don't want to call it piracy, how about stealing? Ripping off? Whatever. Prisons are full of people who figured the law did not apply to them or that the law was "wrong" or "excessive". But it's still the law....

  • Need help removing Snow Leopard and Installing Leopard

    Snow Leopard was a waste of time and money. Time I could have used for much more productive work.
    How can I remove snow leopard and reinstall leopard. I have the installation disc for Leopard. Can I simply install it over the top of snow leopard?
    That would solve my problem for one machine (the iMac) but how do I go back to leopard if I don't have the disk? I suppose there is dmg somewhere but I haven't looked so I apologize in advance if the answer is obvious.

    Insert leopard install disk-select install.
    It will wipe the drive and install Leopard-all data will be gone.
    You must have a legitimate, legal copy of leopard.
    If you backed up the leopard dvd, you would have to burn it or figure a way to do a network install.

  • Strange Java message on installing Leopard

    I just installed Leopard on my iMac G5 and went through all of the updates and ran DiskWarrior 4.1. Everything works fine except for a message that keeps popping up with the following text:
    "Uncaught exception in main method:
    java.lang.NoSuchMethodError:
    javax.security.sasl.Sasl.setSaslServerFactory(Ljavax/
    security/sasl/saslServerFactory;)V"
    Any idea what app is doing this and how to get rid of it? It's very annoying.
    Thanks

    Thanks for your input nerowolfe and a brody. I followed your thread, a brody, but didn't really get anywhere. I took a look at console and saw the following message repeating endlessly:
    4/21/08 7:25:07 AM com.apple.SystemStarter[27] Break on _THE_PROCESS_HAS_FORKED_AND_YOU_CANNOT_USE_THIS_COREFOUNDATION_FUNCTIONALITY___Y OU_MUST_EXEC_() to debug.
    4/21/08 7:25:07 AM com.apple.SystemStarter[27] The process has forked and you cannot use this CoreFoundation functionality safely. You MUST exec().
    Versions 5.0 and 1.4.2 of J2SE appear to be installed. I'm not sure where to get another copy or which one to reinstall.
    Am I getting warm? Is the console message relevant?

  • Installing Leopard with a blank disk?

    I have an iMac G5 with a formatted HDD. I was just wondering if anyone knows how I can install leopard - I tried installing by holding down option but nothing happens. I've also tried booting while holding down the letter c but nothing happens. The CD spins but that's it.
    Anyone have any ideas? Thanks for any advice

    Hi
    1. What Install Disk?
    +(you can only install Leopard on that iMac using the black retail Leopard Disk and not from a computer specific gray Leopard disk set)+
    2. What is the HD's Partition Map Scheme and how is it Formatted?
    +(the Partition Map Scheme must be Apple Partition Map" for a PowerPC-based iMac and the Format must be Mac OS Extended (Journaled)+
    Dennis

  • Installing leopard osx on imac g4

    I recently was given an 15 inch iMac G4 with 256 MB RAM and 800 MHz processor and was running OS X 10.3.9. I upgraded the RAM to 512 MB and installed Leopard using a firewire connection with my MacBook. I can boot from the MacBook Leopard but the iMac will not boot or seem to find the Hard Drive. I can see the Hard Drive on my MacBook with Leopard installed on it. All I get on my iMac is a "finder" with a question mark. Is there any suggestions or tips about how I can get my iMac to run properly using Leopard????

    You can't do it that way, because one Mac is Intel and the other is PowerPC. And it's not because the OS installation is different. It's because of something more obscure called the +partition map scheme+ of the hard drive.
    For a drive to be bootable on a PowerPC Mac, the +partition map scheme+ needs to be +Apple Partition Map+. For an Intel Mac, it is called +GUID Partition Table+. An Intel Mac can actually boot a drive that is either +Apple Partition Map+ or +GUID Partition Table+; however, when you run Installer to do a Mac OS X installation, if you are using an Intel Mac (such as a MacBook) to run the installation, it will insist that the +partition map scheme+ of the drive is +GUID Partition Table+.
    Therefore, because you used FireWire Target Disk Mode to run the installation from the MacBook targeting the iMac hard drive (as its external drive), the +partition map scheme+ ended up being +GUID Partition Table+. A PowerPC Mac that has Tiger or later can access a drive that is +GUID Partition Table+, but can only boot the drive if it is +Apple Partition Map+.
    What you may be able to do instead, is the following.
    Use the MacBook to install a fresh Leopard installation onto an external drive. Restart from it and run Software Update, and make sure it is working. Then restart from the MacBook's own drive again.
    Connect the iMac using FireWire Target Disk Mode to the MacBook as you did before. Use the MacBook to erase the iMac's hard drive using Disk Utility. Instead of using the Erase tab, use the Partition tab. Reset the +Volume Scheme+ to *1 Partition*. Click the Options button, and select *Apple Partition Map* there as the +partition map scheme+. Back on the main window, name the volume and set the format to *Mac OS Extended (Journaled)*, and Apply it.
    Now, you have the iMac's hard drive with the proper +partition map scheme+ and format. Use a cloning utility, such as Carbon Copy Cloner or SuperDuper, to clone the fresh Leopard installation from the external drive to the iMac's hard drive. Since cloning is done at the volume level, not the drive level, you should get a bootable clone of the Leopard installation on a drive that can be booted by a PowerPC Mac.
    Leopard is universal so I think the above method will work. However, there may be complications such as the proper drivers for an 800 MHz iMac G4 not being present in the Leopard installation, because Apple does not officially support that model with Leopard.
    Note: To be legal, the Leopard license you are using must not be currently used on another Mac. If the MacBook is currently using that Leopard license, you should not do it for legal reasons.

  • Problem with syncing after installing Leopard 10.5.8

    I have a PowerBook G4. I just installed Leopard 10.5.8. Ran all the available updates and so far there are a few bugs that I can't fix. I need some help please.
    1. When syncing to mobileMe, the computer gets caught in a loop and the round arrows at the top right of the screen never stops spinning. Also, when you bring the pointer to the top of the page, it seems frozen and the wheel starts. The time has also frozen.
    2. When syncing to iTunes with my iPhone, it also gets stuck in that sync loop.
    I'm assuming that there is something going on with MobileMe or with syncing. I can't find anything on this. Can anyone shed some light.

    Hi Eric,
    Could be many things, we should start with this...
    "Try Disk Utility
    1. Insert the Mac OS X Install disc, then restart the computer while holding the C key.
    2. When your computer finishes starting up from the disc, choose Disk Utility from the Installer menu at the top of the screen. (In Mac OS X 10.4 or later, you must select your language first.)
    Important: Do not click Continue in the first screen of the Installer. If you do, you must restart from the disc again to access Disk Utility.
    3. Click the First Aid tab.
    4. Select your Mac OS X volume.
    5. Click Repair. Disk Utility checks and repairs the disk."
    http://docs.info.apple.com/article.html?artnum=106214
    Then try a Safe Boot, (holding Shift key down at bootup), run Disk Utility in Applications>Utilities, then highlight your drive, click on Repair Permissions, reboot when it completes.
    (Safe boot may stay on the gray radian for a long time, let it go, it's trying to repair the Hard Drive.)
    See if the Disk is issuing any S.M.A.R.T errors in Disk Utility...
    http://support.apple.com/kb/PH7029
    Open Activity Monitor in Applications>Utilities, select All Processes & sort on CPU%, any indications there?
    How much RAM & free space do you have also, click on the Memory & Disk Usage Tabs.
    Open Console in Utilities & see if there are any clues or repeating messages when this happens.
    One way to test is to Safe Boot from the HD, (holding Shift key down at bootup), run Disk Utility in Applications>Utilities, then highlight your drive, click on Repair Permissions, Test for action in Safe Mode...
    Reboot, test again.
    If it only does it in Regular Boot, then it could be some 3rd party add-on, Check System Preferences>Accounts>Login Items window to see if it or something relevant is listed. Also look in System Preferences' Other row.
    Also look in these if they exist, some are invisible...
    /private/var/run/StartupItems
    /Library/StartupItems
    /System/Library/StartupItems
    /System/Library/LaunchDaemons
    /Library/LaunchDaemons

  • Can't get past setup assistant after installing leopard...

    i am having trouble getting past the setup assistant after installing leopard on my other computer which is a 1.25 ghz G4 desktop. Everything seems to be going fine then the setup assistant comes up and i go through the exercise of filling it out and at the end it says click on done and then you can use the computer. unfortunately it goes right back into the setup assistant like i had never gone there before. it is in some kind of loop. would it be wise to reinstall leopard? if so, does it know that it was installed already and rewrite over the first install? or is there something else i may try. i tried resetting the PRAM and some other things recommended but nothing seems to work. any help will be appreciated.
    thanks in advance...

    mr_magicman,
    I can imagine how frustrating this must be for you. It sounds like you went for the (default) Upgrade option.
    Okay, how about trying this:
    1. With the *OS X 10.5 Install Disk 1* still in the bay, Restart your computer. Without access to menus, you'll have to use the power switch to turn it off. +[Alternatively, if you do have access to menus, select the Restart command (in the Apple menu) — always the preferred method.]+
    2. If you're using the power switch method, here, wait about 10 - 15 seconds then depress the power switch again for about 5 full seconds (or until you hear the computer come back to life). +[Alternatively, if you had selected the Restart command in Step 1, the computer will start up again on its own.]+ *Either way, as the computer starts up, press and keep pressing, the Mouse until the disk ejects.* By the way, if you're using a Mighty Mouse with a left and right option, press down on the left side only. Hopefully this will get you out of the loop caused by your Install DVD remaining in the drive.
    Finally, to be fair to you, I must tell you that there's a more suitable Forum for your particular kind of problem, viz., *Installation and Setup* (http://discussions.apple.com/forum.jspa?forumID=1219) I recommend you check out the questions/answers in that Forum in case your question has already been asked and answered.
    PS. If you do re-post your question in that Forum, don't forget to mention whether or not you internal hard disk has been backed up.
    GOOD LUCK!
    Bill

  • New Macbook Pro + Tiger Pre installed Leopard Connectivity Problems!!!

    hey guys... well let me try for the 2nd time to post this before it loses connection and crashes!!!!
    on Friday i brought a new Macbook Pro 2.2ghz, for the last year i have been using a MAcbook 1.8ghz Core 2 Duo... worked flawless and loved it... but with Leopard out, i decided to take the plunge and move up to the next level and have something with better graphics and more features... so it seemed!
    i erased the hdd and installed Leopard, which i had purchased for my Macbook, but decided to hold till i got this...
    install went smoothly and got into OS and did the update center... started downloading... fine.... went and got a coffee... came back.... still on the first file of the update donwload.. hmmmmm weird.. normally be halfway or finished by now! i checked the wireless and noticed the send/receive was just hanging.. *not disconnected from the wireless router..* anyway i decided to hard reset the router and let it reconnect so it was fresh.. connected fine... started donwloading again.. same happened... anyway i left it donwload and do its stuff as i saw there was a key chain update which resolved some wireless issues.. great i thought.. Apple must have seen there is a problem and fixed it.. yay!!.......... heck no!
    rebooted the laptop after install was done... SAME problem... not only that... i couldnt be on iChat/MSN for more than 5-10 minutes before it decided that it was going to fall asleep and stop doing anything before realizing that ****... someone is still wanting some connectivity.... by that time its disconnected/timed out from server/webpages... Webpages take about 15-30 seconds to load on intermitent basis...
    Next is the bandwidth... i usually download between 180-205kb/s in Tiger on Macbook... in leopard im lucky to break the 100kb/s barrier for more than 30 seconds before it goes to 10-30kb/second!!!!!!!!! and upload speed is killed too!!!
    i have read through various threads on the boards and have entered different tcp/rwin commands and turned off ipv6 in wireless but still same happens... no airport2 file either to remove..
    i'm really annoyed as it seems from wanting to go to a better laptop ive only gone and brought defective hardware which i dont understand why Apple didn't test this prior to release
    FIX IT quick please, i feel like taking this thing back... what use is it if i cant browse the internet which is a basic function on any laptop now a days yet vital it works!
    maybe reinstalling Tiger is the only option left, there goes a weekend of installing programs/games/updates!!!!! annoyed

    cheers for reply dude
    will see how this gets on, also changed the channel to 6, see how that gets on..
    still seems slow loading pages tho.. test from speedguide from a uk server...
    683 kbps down (~0.68 Mbps, 83 KB/s) ↓
    31 kbps up (~0.03 Mbps, 4 KB/s) ↑
    pinging my router is
    PING 192.168.1.1 (192.168.1.1): 56 data bytes
    64 bytes from 192.168.1.1: icmp_seq=0 ttl=255 time=1.047 ms
    64 bytes from 192.168.1.1: icmp_seq=1 ttl=255 time=1.097 ms
    64 bytes from 192.168.1.1: icmp_seq=2 ttl=255 time=1.216 ms
    64 bytes from 192.168.1.1: icmp_seq=6 ttl=255 time=1.114 ms
    64 bytes from 192.168.1.1: icmp_seq=8 ttl=255 time=1.321 ms
    64 bytes from 192.168.1.1: icmp_seq=9 ttl=255 time=1.330 ms
    64 bytes from 192.168.1.1: icmp_seq=10 ttl=255 time=1.159 ms
    64 bytes from 192.168.1.1: icmp_seq=11 ttl=255 time=1.189 ms
    64 bytes from 192.168.1.1: icmp_seq=12 ttl=255 time=1.408 ms
    64 bytes from 192.168.1.1: icmp_seq=14 ttl=255 time=7.296 ms
    64 bytes from 192.168.1.1: icmp_seq=16 ttl=255 time=1.117 ms
    64 bytes from 192.168.1.1: icmp_seq=17 ttl=255 time=1.167 ms
    64 bytes from 192.168.1.1: icmp_seq=18 ttl=255 time=1.175 ms
    64 bytes from 192.168.1.1: icmp_seq=20 ttl=255 time=1.462 ms
    64 bytes from 192.168.1.1: icmp_seq=22 ttl=255 time=1.126 ms
    64 bytes from 192.168.1.1: icmp_seq=25 ttl=255 time=1.126 ms
    seems ok?
    Although RWIN TCP/IP analyzer seems to point out problems...
    MTU = 1442
    MTU is not fully optimized for broadband. Consider increasing your MTU to 1500 for better throughput. If you are using a router, it could be limiting your MTU regardless of Registry settings.
    MSS = 1402
    MSS is not optimized for broadband. Consider increasing your MTU value.
    Default TCP Receive Window (RWIN) = 65330
    RWIN Scaling (RFC1323) = 0 bits
    Unscaled TCP Receive Window = 65330
    For optimum performance, consider changing RWIN to a multiple of MSS.
    Other RWIN values that might work well with your current MTU/MSS:
    515936 (MSS x 46 * scale factor of 8)
    257968 (MSS x 46 * scale factor of 4)
    128984 (MSS x 46 * scale factor of 2)
    64492 (MSS x 46)
    Your TCP Window limits you to: 2613 kbps (327 KBytes/s) @ 200ms
    Your TCP Window limits you to: 1045 kbps (131 KBytes/s) @ 500ms
    MTU Discovery (RFC1191) = ON
    Time to live left = 45 hops
    TTL value is ok.
    Timestamps (RFC1323) = ON
    Note: Timestamps add 12 bytes to the TCP header of each packet, reducing the space available for useful data.

  • Installed Leopard...hate it...how do i go back?

    Installed Leopard and must say that this thing is far from read for prime time. It has corrupted image files and runs so slow that I'm now 2 days behind in just trying to get back to where I was.
    If you haven't installed it, don't!
    How do I go back to my earlier operating system without losing all of my files? Any help would be appreciated.

    Restore from the bootable backup/clone you made before upgrading. If you don't have one, you'll have to reinstall the Tiger stuff. Maybe an Archive & Install installation, saving user and network settings will work. I don't know because I've never tried it since I always follow best practices and have a bootable backup/clone.
    Get a bootable, external HD, and make a bootable backup/clone before upgrading/updating and ensure that works like the original. That allows you to revert to the previous good state without having to reinstall anything. Then, peruse these
    http://docs.info.apple.com/article.html?artnum=106941
    http://www.macmaps.com/upgradefaq.html
    http://www.macmaps.com/backup.html
    http://www.thexlab.com/faqs/installswupdates.html
    http://www.thexlab.com/faqs/backuprecovery.html

  • Missing 50GB's after installing Leopard on new HD-best way to re-install

    I installed Leopard on a G5 tower with 2 new 750 GB's seagate drives. Disk Utility shows a total capacity of 698.6 GB's out of 750 GB's so I am missing 50 GB's. Also first aide hangs up on Verify/repair disk permissions. It looks like I am dealing with an "erase" issue since their must be other files on the new drives that are causing problems, My new thoughts on this are:
    (1)For MacHD 2, in DU click on the "hard Drive(698.6 GB ST3750640AS)/security option-zero out data/erase
    (2) For MacHD 1 (Leopard) insert the installation disk/go to option-erase and install/ok
    Will this work or is there a better way to go about it.
    Thanks for looking at my Post
    Ron

    Ron Apra wrote:
    I installed Leopard on a G5 tower with 2 new 750 GB's seagate drives. Disk Utility shows a total capacity of 698.6 GB's out of 750 GB's so I am missing 50 GB's. Also first aide hangs up on Verify/repair disk permissions. It looks like I am dealing with an "erase" issue since their must be other files on the new drives that are causing problems, My new thoughts on this are:
    (1)For MacHD 2, in DU click on the "hard Drive(698.6 GB ST3750640AS)/security option-zero out data/erase
    (2) For MacHD 1 (Leopard) insert the installation disk/go to option-erase and install/ok
    Will this work or is there a better way to go about it.
    Thanks for looking at my Post
    Ron
    Most drives are listed as unformatted size and take advantage of the "1000" kilo which is really 1024.
    Also a system with folders, &c. takes up space with no actual files.
    Your "loss" of less than 10% is normal and expected.
    For example, the "250GB" HD on this MBP as reported by DU says:
    Total Capacity : 232.9 GB (250,059,350,016 Bytes)
    But I have not lost 17GB.
    Since your drive is 3 times the size of mine, I would expect to see a "loss" of 51 GB (3x17) which is exactly what you are reporting.

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