Partitioning harddrive with bootcamp...

How long should it take to partition my hard drive with bootcamp for windows... Its been over 30mins and it hasn't completed....
My computer turned off display during it, would that have interfered?

It takes a lot less than 30 minutes, click on the Apple Menu and open Force Quit, don't do anything, just see if Boot Camp Assistant is running normally, or not responding.

Similar Messages

  • How to eliminate windows partition created with bootcamp

    Instrucdtions for how to eliminate a windows partition created with bootcamp.  thanks

    Go back and reread and open the application you used.
    though most Mac Pro owners choose to dedicate a drive to Windows.
    Even Disk Utility will remove and then stretch the adjoining partiton it is best to use Boot Camp Assistant.
    Best place to ask, Boot Camp forum, of course.

  • Can't partition HD with Bootcamp Assistant on brand new iMac

    I just got a 27" 1TB brand new iMac three days ago. After copying over all my files from my previous computer (PC), installing some software packages and configured the Mac the way I want it, yesterday I wanted to partition 80GB out of remaining 330GB with bootcamp assistant to install Windows 7. After one hour it stopped with an error message that it wasn't able to move some files and I would need to re-format the HD and start again.
    Is there really no other way? It took me two days to get to where I am.

    It should only take less than a minute.
    So just use OS X software to clone what you have to another hard drive, then do an erase and restore.
    And backup before starting is at the top of the list of things to do to prepare.
    http://www.apple.com/support/bootcamp - re-read the pdf guide linked at the top and other tech articles.
    And you really do want bootable clone image of Mac OS anyway, in addition to or in place of TimeMachine, so no loss in doing so. It isn't as if you will lose or have to redo.
    It needed contiguous free space and no files at the end of the disk. But installers and updates do scatter files and fragment free space a lot and can leave files locked where they can't be moved.
    SuperDuper
    Carbon Copy Cloner
    iDefrag
    iPartition
    Apple Disk Utility Restore
    And you can have OS X on multiple hard drives, plus it really helps for doing the type of maintenance and repairs needed for updates and proper running.

  • When I move a harddrive with Bootcamp from my mac pro to my macbook, windows doesn't work

    I have a 13" Intel Core 2 Duo MacBook and the topcase-keyboard doesn't work and so for some reason, it makes it impossible for me to install windows on the bootcamp partition. While the windows installer is running, it doesn't recognize usb keyboards. So I decided to install windows 7 professional on that same drive using my Mac Pro. The installation worked perfectly.
    Then I take that harddrive and I move it back to my MacBook and windows won't start up correctly, stating that something has changed (of course!...duh).
    Can anyone help me with a workaround for this?
    Has anyone had similar problems moving a windows partition in bootcamp from one mac to another?
    How can I install windows on a MacBook without a working topcase?
    I've posted this question to the Snow Leopard community because that's the OS I'm using.

    With the Lion it is essentially unnecessary to resort to external driver disks. What's more, most of those disks are incompatible with the OS and should not be used. The system already carries a wide variety of printer description files (aka PPDs, which is what modern printing systems use as "drivers") for a lot of brands. And there was an HP printer update just two days ago.
    Just checked in mine and did indeed find that the HP OfficeJet 6200 Series, with or without Fax, is covered with the latest update.
    So just go thru the motions of creating a proper printer instance:
    Make sure the Mac "sees" the printer on the network.
    System Preferences / Print & Scan
    Click on the + button on the left column
    Select the appropriate type of printer, will use IP for the rest of this
    Select HP Jetdirect - Socket, default for HP network printers
    Type the IP address or look it up
    Name the printer for easy identification on the print dialog
    Let the Mac identify the printer model or manually choose the driver
    Click Add.
    Once the instance pops up in the list, can click on Options & Supplies for further config.

  • Partitioning harddrive with time machine?

    I've just purchased a macbook along with a 500 gb hard drive to accompany it and to store my loads and loads of music files that would otherwise clog the space on my computer. I've come to the realization though that I would like to use time machine to backup my files, but seeing as I only have 160 gb's on my computer it seems pointless to utilize this whole hard drive for time machine solely. I would much rather put my music files on the hard drive outside of the realm of time machine. I realize that this way my music files would not be backed up with time machine, but having them archived on the hard drive would be safe enough for me anyway since I have all the cds if something were to go wrong. Is there anyway that I can use an external hard drive for both time machine and file storing?
    thanks!

    Paul Quemades wrote:
    Hi. Not sure if this is relevant but...I'm not sure about the extra space needed for back ups. I just got a new external drive, a G MINI 500 GB. The 500 GBs aren't the space quota you actually have available for storage as it takes something like 35 for operation. When I backed up my system, calculated on the Mac at 210 GB, onto the Drive, that same amount was what was subtracted from the available space,neither more nor less.
    The 2-3 times is because Time Machine stores multiple copies of your system-kind of.
    See: http://arstechnica.com/reviews/os/mac-os-x-10-5.ars/14 for details.

  • Can I write from a mac partition to a windows partition made with bootcamp?

    I already tried using chmod in terminal, is there something I'm missing there? or is there a different setting I have to change?

    Real easy you need NTFS driver for OS X from Paragon.
    BootChamp
    http://www.macupdate.com/app/mac/28468/bootchamp
    MacDrive
    http://www.mediafour.com/updates/macdrive
    Paragon HFS
    http://www.paragon-software.com/home/hfs-windows/
    Paragon NTFS
    http://www.paragon-software.com/home/ntfs-mac/

  • I'm getting this error with bootcamp "The startup disk does not have enough space to be partitioned"

    Here's the story...
    I had a dual boot configuration on my mac with Mac OS X Lion and Windows XP (made with bootcamp).
    I decided to reinstall windows.
    I deleted the windows partition using BootCamp.
    Tried to recreate the Windows partition with Boot Camp and got: "The startup disk does not have enough space to be partitioned  You must have at least 10 GB of free space available"
    After reading several posts on this forum I decided to defrag the hard drive and try again. 
    The defrag did not work and I'm still getting the error, I have 22 gb of free space on my drive.
    Any suggestions?
    Also, I tried repair disk and repair permissions
    Hmm, my external harddrive says on the box "OS X 10.5.8 or higher (32-bit kernel only)"  Could the 32-bit requirement be an issue? Is lion 64-bit?

    Boot Camp must be able to allocate a contiguous block of space on the drive. If it cannot find 10 GBs of contiguous space, then you cannot create the Windows partition.
    You will have to backup your OS X partition to an external drive, boot from the external drive, use Disk Utility to repartition and reformat your hard drive back to a single volume, then restore your backup to the internal hard drive.
    Get an empty external hard drive and clone your internal drive to the external one.
    Boot from the external hard drive.
    Erase the internal hard drive.
    Restore the external clone to the internal hard drive.
    Clone the internal drive to the external drive
    Open Disk Utility from the Utilities folder.
    Select the destination volume from the left side list.
    Click on the Restore tab in the DU main window.
    Check the box labeled Erase destination.
    Select the destination volume from the left side list and drag it to the Destination entry field.
    Select the source volume from the left side list and drag it to the Source entry field.
    Double-check you got it right, then click on the Restore button.
    Destination means the external backup drive. Source means the internal startup drive.
    Restart the computer and after the chime press and hold down the OPTION key until the boot manager appears.  Select the icon for the external drive and click on the downward pointing arrow button.
    After startup do the following:
    Erase internal hard drive
    Open Disk Utility in your Utilities folder.
    After DU loads select your internal 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.
    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.  Do not quit Disk Utility.
    Restore the clone to the internal hard drive
    Select the destination volume from the left side list.
    Click on the Restore tab in the DU main window.
    Check the box labeled Erase destination.
    Select the destination volume from the left side list and drag it to the Destination entry field.
    Select the source volume from the left side list and drag it to the Source entry field.
    Double-check you got it right, then click on the Restore button.
    Destination means the internal hard drive. Source means the external startup drive.
    Note that the Source and Destination drives are swapped for this last procedure.

  • I have a MacBook Pro 15" and my warranty just ran out! I partitioned my harddrive into two partitions, one with Snow Leopard and the other with microsoft.This morning I turned on my Macbook Pro and it will not boot into Snow Leopard.

    Good Morning,
    I have a MacBook Pro 15" and my warranty just ran out! I partitioned my harddrive into two partitions, one with Snow Leopard and the other with microsoft.This morning I turned on my Macbook Pro and it will not boot into Snow Leopard. I shut it off took out the battery, reinstalled the battery. Then I put in the Snow Leopard CD and booted up to disk utility and The Snow Leopard partion would not show up?? I do see the microsoft partion.
    I also rebooted holding down the shift key and still no Snow Leopard
    Could you please tell me what I can do, what keys do I press on restart any advice to get Snow leopard back.
    thank you.

    Have you restarted holding down the Opt key?  That procedure should give you a gray screen with all of the partitions that exist.  Then select the SL partition for boot.  Also go to System Preferences and Startup Disk, unlock the lock and select the SL partition as the default boot partition, then relock.

  • Installing windows 7 with bootcamp on mac pro yosemite 10.10: 'your disk could not be partitioned'

    I have been trying to no avail to install windows 7 on my new macbook pro
    with bootcamp in yosemite 10.10
    i continually get the message  'your disk could not be partitioned', does anyone know how to tackle this? *I am including the screenshot
    and when i try to partition my 250GB drive giving 80GB to the windows partition it just errors,
    i have tried rebooting and verifying my disk and repairing and there's no progress or change.. any ideas would be greatly appreciated

    Hi nicoczyz,
    Welcome to the Support Communities!  The steps you have taken to troubleshoot the issue of not being able to create a Windows partition are good ones.  The resource below provides another possible scenario that may be the issue here.  It's not the exact error message as your screen shot and the article references Windows 8, but the troubleshooting steps are still relevant:
    Boot Camp: Partition alert message when using Boot Camp Assistant - Apple Support
    http://support.apple.com/en-us/HT203913
    This symptom may occur if you have partitions on your startup drive in addition to the following:
    one OS X partition
    one Boot Camp partition
    one OS X Recovery partition (normally not visible in Disk Utility)
    If Boot Camp Assistant detects a Microsoft Reserved (MSR) or Windows Recovery partition on your hard drive, you may see this message.  The Boot Camp Assistant cannot continue until the extra partition is removed.
    Microsoft Reserved and Windows Recovery partitions can be identified as unmounted partitions with the name "disk0s3" or "disk0s5" in Disk Utility. To remove these partitions, use OS X Disk Utility.
    Important: Deleting the wrong partition can cause data loss. Be sure to back up both your OS X files and Windows files before attempting this procedure.
    Open Disk Utility from the Utilities folder.
    Click the Partition tab.
    Look for an extra partition named “disk0s3" or “disk0s5”. Select this partition so it is highlighted.
    Click the Remove Partition button ( - ).
    Make sure the partition you selected is noted in the sheet that appears.
    Click Remove.
    When Disk Utility finishes, close the Disk Utility window to quit the app. The Boot Camp Assistant can now be used to reinstall or update your existing Windows partition.
    Set up a Windows partition on your Mac - Apple Support
    http://support.apple.com/en-us/HT204009
    Before you can install Windows your Mac, you need to create and then format a Windows partition.
    Setting up a Windows partition is one of the steps for installing Windows on your Mac. Use Boot Camp Assistant to create the partition, then use the Windows installer to format it.Create the Windows partition
    To create the Windows partition, open Boot Camp Assistant and follow the onscreen instructions. Boot Camp Assistant is in the Utilities folder of your Applications folder. 
    Use only Boot Camp Assistant to create the partition. If you partition with another app and then use Boot Camp Assistant, the drive with the partition could be erased.
    Boot Camp Assistant creates the partition only if the drive is formatted as Mac OS Extended (Journaled) and doesn't already have a partition created by Boot Camp Assistant. If Boot Camp Assistant sees other partitions, it may warn you that the startup disk cannot be partitioned.
    If you need help determining the best size of the partition, refer to your Windows documentation. For Windows 8, the partition should be at least 30 GB. 
    If Boot Camp Assistant says that verification failed, repair the drive using Disk Utility. If that doesn't help, back up your drive and reinstall OS X.
    The drive you're partitioning must be an internal drive. If you have more than one internal drive and the drive you're partitioning is not in the first drive bay, remove the drives in the lower-numbered bays, then reinstall them after installing Windows. A Fusion Drive is treated as one drive, and the Windows partition is created on the disk drive instead of the flash drive (SSD).
    Format the Windows partition
    Use the Windows installer to format the Windows partition that Boot Camp Assistant created. When you're asked where to install Windows, select the partition named "BOOTCAMP":
    Then click Format to begin formatting the partition using the NTFS file system. If you're installing Windows 7 or Windows 8.0, you won't see the Format option until you click "Drive options (advanced)":
    If the installer says that it couldn't create a new partition or locate an existing one, disconnect any Thunderbolt storage devices connected to your Mac. Reconnect them after installing Windows.
    If you see “No Boot Disk Attached” when starting up your Mac, the Windows partition probably isn't formatted correctly. Remove the partition, then repeat the previous steps for creating and formatting the partition.
    Modify the Windows partition
    Remove the partition, change its size, or change its name.
    Remove the partition
    Use Boot Camp Assistant to safely remove Windows and the Windows partition from your Mac, restoring your startup drive to a single Mac partition. You may want to back up your information first, because removing the partition erases all of the data it contains.
    Open Boot Camp Assistant.
    Select “Remove Windows 7 or later version," then click Continue.
    Do one of the following:
    If your Mac has a single internal disk, click Restore.
    If your Mac has multiple internal disks, select the Windows disk, select “Restore disk to a single OS X partition,” then click Continue.
    Change the size of the partition
    It's not possible to change the size of the partition after installing Windows, but you can remove the partition and create a new partition of the correct size. Don't try to resize your partition with Windows or a third-party app.Change the name of the partition
    You can rename the Windows partition from within Windows. For instructions, refer to your Windows documentation.
    Information about products not manufactured by Apple, or independent websites not controlled or tested by Apple, is provided without recommendation or endorsement. Apple assumes no responsibility with regard to the selection, performance, or use of third-party websites or products. Apple makes no representations regarding third-party website accuracy or reliability. Risks are inherent in the use of the Internet. Contact the vendor for additional information.
    Last Modified: Dec 22, 2014
    I hope this information helps ....
    - Judy

  • Has anyone figured a way to use the Magic Trackpad with Windows 7 on a partitioned disc using Bootcamp?

    Has anyone figured a way to use the magic trackpad with Windows 7 on a partitioned disc using Bootcamp?

    Yes. After Windows/Bootcamp discovers  your bluetooth device (Magic Trackpad or Mouse, be sure to make it discoverable), right click, with your wired mouse, of course, on the icon and select Properties.
    Then check the mouse drivers box and your device should work. (I located this solution on another thread)
    It works for both the Magic Mouse and Magic Trackpad.
    Must admit, the solution was not intuitive within the Windows environment. But we all must remember. It IS Windows, after all.
    Another thing. Keep in mind that the gestures on these devices that work just dandy in OSX do not carry over into Windows.
    It's Windows.

  • Bootcamp partition restriction with vmware fusion

    I have a 2 TB hard drive on my iMac that I was going to use to install windows. Using bootcamp, all went well. I put Vmware Fusion on and it worked well. Later I thought it might be nice to have 2 partitions on this hard drive so I re-partitioned the hard drive (not using bootcamp) and then installed windows, again no problem. The problem occurs when I then put on Vmware Fusion. Seems that program is very sensitive to the bootcamp created partition and to use any other program causes Vmware Fusion to fail. Doing some research, I thought I read that bootcamp will ONLY create one partition, no option for two partitions. My question is: Am I reading this correctly? Can bootcamp only make one partition? Is there a hack around this? I hate having a 2 TB hard drive with only one partition.

    Hi again,
    Boot Camp is a (very limited) utility for creating a non-mac partition on a Mac volume (by Apple). That's why it'll allow to create only 1 partition on a Mac OS hard drive.
    This has to be on the HD where there is Mac OS X already - so you can't use BootCamp on your 2nd HD.
    If you install 2nd macOS on the 2TB HD, start from there & then partition it with BC, then you should be able to start a bootcamped windows from there.
    VMware doesn't have to be used with the help of BootCamp - I have both Parallels & VMware installed without the BootCamp.
    As a matter of fact you can install Parallels & VMware from an .iso image (which you can't use with BC) - but Windows has to be installed the same way as with BS = it will take ± 1hour to install.
    Also - you can store the resulting 'file' (which in my case I'm storing on my external 'My Book' 2TB hard drive) on any HD which is connected to your iMac.
    The 'file' is stored as 'Windows 7.vmwarevm' - my is 13Gb actual size but with-in the win7 I have on it the size is = 40Gb {Local Disc (C:)}.
    All these 'Virtual Machines' are automatically compressed by the VMware application.

  • HT3986 installing windows 7 with bootcamp It doesn't install, telling me that the partition made by bootcamp is not formatted in NSFT. What to do now?

    after having made a partition for windows 7 with bootcamp, it couldn't be installed with the message that the partition needs to be formatted in NSFT.
    What to do now?

    Start again and follow the Bootcamp installation instructions http://www.apple.com/support/bootcamp/. You can print he instructions from within Bootcamp Assistant.

  • How should I upgrade hard drive with bootcamp partition & Parallels too

    I need to replace the hard drive in my 24" iMac (model 8,1 - early 2008).  My major concern is how to deal with my Windows XP in Parallels using a Bootcamp partition.  I have yet to find software that runs in OSX 7 (Lion) that will clone both the OSX partition and the Bootcamp NTFS partition.  It would appear that the most practical approach would be to use bootcamp assistant to remove the NTSF bootcamp partition and then clone just the OSX partition to my new drive and then recreate the bootcamp and parallels installations and reinstall Windows XP from scratch.   Seems rather inelegant, so I'm hoping someone has advice based on experience.  I'm truly hoping there is a more elegant way and any suggestions are appreciated.

    Kinda sticky, but there is a way.  You'll need three separate tools for the job:
    The External Hard Disk: Indispensable.  Get one that's at least 2x bigger than your current internal drive.  You'll need it as an interim storage point
    Winclone:  This free software will allow you to image the Boot Camp volume.  Since the developers closed shop, it's off to MacUpdate for a copy. Run it and clone the data to the external drive
    Carbon Copy Cloner 3.4.3: Same as above, but for your OS X volume.  This essentially puts a slick front-end on Disk Utility's cloning powers, but it really works well.  Get it at http://www.bombich.com/
    As for restoring the volumes:
    Restore the Mac side first from Snow Leopard, using the created image from CCC.  Let it take up the full of the new drive
    Now, run Boot Camp Assistant to size up a new Windows volume. You should not need to reload Windows--that's where Winclone comes in.
    Use Winclone to recover the XP side now, and if necessary, resize the volume.
    If done correctly, you'll keep XP as you update to Lion on the Mac side--but you can't upgrade the drivers past 3.2.
    Nate

  • Can't create Windows partition with BootCamp

    When I try to create Windows partition with BootCamp I get the same error, no matter what size the partition is set to : "This disk cannot be partitioned because some files cannot be moved" and then keeps giving instructions about formatting the disk as a single partition (after performing a full backup I assume), and then try using BootCamp again.
    Does that mean I have to erase and reinstall OS X to be able to do that ? Cause I just did that and I have the same problem. I'm not reinstalling again, it took me an entire day to reinstall all my softwares and run all the updates... Plus it reminds me too much of my Windows days... I'm not supposed to do that on a Mac anyway
    Back to the topic... are there any services that need to be stopped during partitioning ? Any software installed that could prevent that ?
    What could cause this problem ?

    Weird thing is I had no trouble making a partition using BootCamp before I restored OS X, and I had the same softwares installed... or maybe I did that before I installed some of them... Could this be related to any software I have installed ?
    And judging by your suggestions I would say that the "iDefrag" option is the only way out of the two to make this work. Sounds a little extreme if you ask me... What happens on the first attempt of creating the partition that would make me choose backing up and/or defragmenting ? ... You don't have to answer that if it's too complicated...
    Same thing happened on my other MBP... so as far as I'm concerned, I can only restore one more time and try to make the partition right after first startup. If that fails, then it means it could have been software related... Or maybe restore again, install one more software/utility I use and try partitioning again... and again, and again, until it fails...that way I'll know what caused it...
    Just kidding...
    Thank you for the suggestions anyway !

  • Upgrading hard drive with bootcamp partition

    On my MacBook i've got a Lion partition and a Bootcamp partition with the Windows 8 Consumer preview. Would it be possible to copy the partitions from my current drive to a bigger drive and extend each the partitions to make use of the extra space? I would rather not have to reinstall both Lion and Windows as I've got all the apps and settings i like on Lion and getting an OpenGL graphics driver to work (so i could play Minecraft) and installing VB6 was a huge hassle.

    You can clone both the Mac and the Boot Camp Partitions separately to external drives then back clone to the new drive after installation. Be sure to clone the Mac Partition with Carbon Copy Cloner which can copy the lion recovery partition also. After having the clone of the Mac installed then set up anew Boot Camp partition but don't install any Windows OS. Clone the original Boot Camp partition with Winclone or Paragon HDM 12 themn back clone this to the newly creaed BootCamp partition.
    You might want to scan the Boot Camp section of these forums for comments on this process.
    https://discussions.apple.com/community/windows_software/boot_camp

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