Partitioning internal hard drive

Hello all:
I'm a newbie musician. Gonna run Logic on an iMAC 24"
Since there is only one onboard hard drive, should I partition it? What size partitions are best?
I've heard that the boot data should be separate from applications. Correct?
JET...
PC   Windows 2000  
PC   Windows 2000  

There is no particular reason to partition the drive. It is all personal preference. As far as the Application theory, any of the apple applications must be maintained on the boot drive, otherwise you will have issues with software updates.
Glor

Similar Messages

  • How to Backup & Partition Internal Hard Drive

    I have a macbook pro 2.4ghz. I need to partition my hard drive to have a separate volume for photoshop scratch disk. How do I actually back up the drive prior to the reformatting? Do I create a bootable clone to restore the main volume.
    Specific steps would be very helpful. Thanks

    So, using Carbon Copy Cloner I first do a full copy of my internal drive (the one I will partition). This will copy any data files as well, correct? I then format the internal drive, creating the partition I need (making sure one is adequate to hold my back up/full copy). How do I then restore the full copy from the external drive to the internal partition? Does this include the OS or do I need to reinstall that and run for all of the updates, etc?
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    Cloning will copy your data files, OSX, OS9, updates, etc., everything. It makes a _complete, bootable duplicate_ of your internal drive when used in full copy mode. So you need to start off with the external firewire empty, or not care about anything on it because it will all get erased.
    First, repair permissions on your internal and make sure it is in a healthy condition. Then use CCC as I instructed in an earlier post and clone your internal to the external. Run Disk Utility and verify the external drive just to make sure there weren't any problems while cloning. Then go into your System Preferences, Startup Drive, select OSX that should now appear on your external, and restart. This does double duty of making sure that your clone really is bootable, and you are now working off your external drive so you can work on your internal drive from the external drive (no need for startup disks). Things should look pretty much identical to how they looked when you were working off your internal except your external drive will probably be positioned in the upper right hand corner instead of your internal.
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    At this stage you have one bootable internal partition with everything that used to be on that drive, and an external drive that is bootable. I find the latter very handy because Disk Utility requires you be booted from a different drive that that which you are repairing and using startup disks is slow.
    You also now have a backup of your internal drive. If you want to, in future you can use CCC in non-full mode to backup your main internal partition. It will just copy off modified files, but you can read the details in the CCC Readme.
    Brian

  • How to partition internal hard drive

    I have a G5 Tower with 10.4.11 installed on an internal hard drive with a single partition. In order to partition the drive I have booted from the installation disk, opened Disk Utility, and was surprised to not see an option to partition the hard drive. I think that this has worked in the past but it's not working now.
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    Well, in 10.4.11 Disk Utility you can only Partition if you erase everything!
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    Drive Genius 2…
    http://www.prosofteng.com/products/drive_genius.php
    iPartition...
    http://www.coriolis-systems.com/iPartition.php
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  • How do I clean/ reformat partitioned internal hard drive Windows 7 Side on MacBook Pro 17"

    Hello,
    I would like to clean up / reformat the Windows 7 side of my partitioned hard drive, and then re-install.  
    Any direction - advise will be appreciated.

    Have you tried booting directly to the Windows 7 DVD instead of running setup.exe from Boot Camp?  Hold down "Option" as soon as you hear the chime on restart, and eventually you'll be presented with available boot options.
    Otherwise, then, yes, Disk Utilities would be the way to go.  Mount your Boot Camp partition in the sidebar to the left, and then choose to Erase the partition as FAT32.  That should set you up to be able to write to that partition during the install process.
    But I recommend booting from the DVD directly first, though.
    HTH,
    S.

  • Partitioning Internal Hard Drive between Mac and Windows

    So I receently ordered a new MacBook to replace my old PC and my old Mac. With 2 GB of Video Ram (With the Nvidia 750M), I was hoping to be able to run my Steam Games decently (I understand that a Mac isn't going to run on max graphics or anything, but I figure it will do alright) using Boot Camp.
    My question is how would you guys recommend partitioning the 1 TB internal drive? I was hoping for a Mac and a PC System Partition with the majority of the storage space left as "shared" between them (I use Paragon NTFS for Mac, and MacDrive for PC, so I'm not sure what format would be most stable for the shared storage). What do you guys recommend?

    Well,  let me start by saying that with the default Boot Camp tools, you probably won't be able to setup more than the 2 OS partitions on the internal drive of your notebook.  Not that it can't be done with other tools, but it is not a quick and easy setup to do, so if you are going to undertake it, please be prepared for issues, and do it from the beginning.  There is a decent thread on this forum about "repairing after you change your partitions" which has plenty of information about the problems you will be facing and how to work around most of them.
    Having said that, when I was using Boot Camp on my MBP with a 750GB drive, I gave 500GB to MacOS, and 250GB to Windows 7.  I also used Paragon's NTFS for MacOS driver, and Paragon's HFS+ for Windows driver (after having use MacDrive for several years).  This combination allowed both OSes full access to the entire 750GB drive, and I put my Thunderbird and FireFox profiles on the MacOS partition, but could access them from either OS that was booted.  That solution worked great for me for years (until I upgraded my MBP and opted to eliminate Boot Camp and only run VMs for Windows).
    With the proper drivers, either OS would be able to utilize your external drives, but keep in mind there are still some Mac utilities/apps which will only work with an HFS+ formatted partition,  just like there are some Windows programs that do the same with NTFS.  Personally I found that I would have to "share" my external drives with other Windows users more than Mac users, so I formatted most of mine NTFS, and just took the minor performance hit when accessing them under MacOS.

  • I've lost the use of Appleworks in 10.9.2. Is it possible to partition the internal hard drive of my MacBook Pro and install an older Mac OS (10.6.8) on the second partition with OS 10.9.2 on the other?

    I've lost the use of Appleworks by upgrading to 10.9.2.
    Is it possible to partition the internal hard drive of my MacBook Pro and install an older Mac OS (10.6.8) on the second partition with OS 10.9.2 on the other? I'd like to be able to boot to the older OS when I need Appleworks and  few other applications that aren't available on OS 10.9.2.
    Any suggestions?
    Thank you for your help.

    Hello again, WZZZ,
    Here's an update. I was successful in creating two partitions on my internal drive, and in installing OS 10.6.6 on the second partition, as per your guidence. I now have it up to 10.6.8 with all the security updates and AppleWorks. A great thing.
    Some thoughts:
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    • The partitioning took a long time in 'resizing the partition.' A few hours I think it was. Lots of progress bar watching.
    • If I had it to do again, I'd size the two partitions differently. My original data was occupying about 230 Gb of the 320 Gb disc. I made the new partitions share the space, about 230 and 75Gb. That left very little available space for the main disc. I ought to have put some breathing room in there. As it is, it's an incentive to clean up all those files, especially all those iTunes files. I now have about 10% of available space there and mean to continue deleting.
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    Appreciatively,
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  • Installing Windows 7 with boot camp as whole partition on 2nd internal hard drive

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    From my understanding, the Boot camp utility creates a new EFI bootrom with Master Boot Record (MBR) in FAT32 format. Therefore I could not boot back into Mac OS X without using boot camp in windows 7 as none of the boot combinations key worked.
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    If anyone can provide me with any help in regards to installing Windows 7 as a whole partition on a secondary internal hard drive. It'd be grealy appreciated. Thank you in advance.

    If you have driver issue, just pre-download the boot camp drivers and save them on an external drive or burn them onto a cd, you will be able to load drivers via the advanced installation option during windows setup, that is if your osx partition isn't actively preventing you from installing win7 on the BOOTCAMP Partition created by boot camp assistant, I find this rather ironic, took me 3 days to figure out this issue, I was stuck without being able to boot into anything beside the windows cd, which wasn't even helpful as I could not install windows as I did not want to delete my osx partition. I lost all my data becsuse of it, as I had no idea what was going on. I tried to recover the partition using testdisk, hfsprogs and gparted in ubuntu life cd but they dont support HFS+. As I could not access osx terminal (couldn't even boot into osx installation dvd with that dreaded MBR created by boot csmp). I could not use pdisk in terminal to restore the osx partition map. Though luck for me. Called applecare and they had no idea what the problem was, and as usual they orgsnised for hard drive replacement. But it was clearly a software issue.
    They will have to fix bay2 for me as I can no longer detect any hard disk connected to that bay.

  • Installing new internal hard drive.  How do I safely clone my existing BOOTCAMP partition?

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    Well yes and no.  I succeeded with the clone.  All of the information seems to be there.  However, it isn't showing in the system preferences - start up disk -- as a start up disk option.  Therefore I assume it didn't clone correctly, or at least not in a way to use it the way I was.  I am thinking it may be a better idea to just run Parallels or a similar software program.  I rarely use the software that has to run in Windows.  And maybe that will be the easiest way.  I think I will still have to change the way I have it because I assume if it isn't running as it was before now I must have done something wrong.
    I am unsure of where to go from here.  But know that I really do appreciate your help. 

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  • How to save iPhoto library (currently on partition of external hard drive) on to iMac's internal hard drive

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    I have tried various things such as  saving the iphoto library on the desktop and then dragging and dropping it into the iPhoto icon,
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    holding down the Option key.
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