Reformat Disk to Run Boot Camp.  How?

I am trying to load boot camp and partition my hard drive but everytime I set it to partition I get this warning:
"The disk cannot be partitioned because some files cannot be moved.
Back up the disk and use Disk Utility to format it as a single Mac OS Extended (Journaled) volume. Restore your information to the disk and try using Boot Camp Assistant again."
I have tried to do this by using the Erase function in Disk Utility but the options to select format are dulled so I can't click them. I have repaired the Disk permitions and have tried to repair the disk but this options is also dulled and can't be selected. I have tried doing this in both Safe Mode and in normal mode But non of this works.
Looking on the discussion board it has been suggested that you need to restart the computer with the installer DVD and doing that way. I don't know if I've missed something or if I just have a mental black because I haven't had to do this in a while, but how do you do this reformat?
Any help would be appreciated
Kim

That's the thing I've restarted the computer with the install disk and I don't get any options to choose languages. All that happens is that the file for the install disk opens as though I were to install Lepard. I've done this and opened disk utility but Volume Format is still dulled in the Erase tab.
Is this what you meant? Or do I have to restart while holding down a key or something? I'm really sorry to sound neady but everything I try is not working would you be able to make the instructions step by step and very specific.
Kim

Similar Messages

  • How much disk space is needed to run Boot Camp using Windows XP?

    How much disk space is needed to run Boot Camp using Windows XP?

    The hatter wrote:
    But you can't install XP if you have a new Mac.
    Try running XP in a VM or aquire Windows 7 which is the only one supported now.
    And you will need more like 60GB for Windows 7, so I would skip on 20GB just to be safe.
    20G is a fine minimum for XP, I was not responding to any inquiry about Win 7.

  • How do i uninstall Vista when i can't run Boot Camp Assistant Beta?

    Recently, i posted a topic on how i can uninstall windows on my mac but as i tired to run Boot camp assistant, i got a message saying "Boot Camp Assistant Beta has expired"
    PLEASE HELP!
    I really want to get rid of Windows!
    Thanks

    manually change the time myself?
    Yes. The beta assistant won't run unless the time is manually set backwards.
    (42532)

  • How to partition in order to run Boot Camp

    I have an iMac 9.1 Intel Core 2 Duo running Mac OS X 10.6.8.
    I have also downloaded the correct version of Boot Camp and saved to an external USB formatted for MS-DOS (FAT32).
    I am running Boot Camp Assistant. Problem is when I get to the option where I am to download the software to install the Boot Camp drivers (I select "Download the Windows support software for this Mac" because I do not have the Mac OS X installation disc that came with my iMac), it tells me the following:
    "The startup disk cannot be partitioned or restored to a single partition. The startup disk must be formatted as a single Mac OS Extended (Journaled) volume already partitioned by Boot Camp Assistant for installing Windows."

    It is not giving you that message because you do not have the original start up disc for your Mac.  It is giving you that message because you have more than one partition on the boot drive in your Mac.  The way that BootCamp works is that it creates the required partitions on your Mac boot drive.  Due to limitations of Windows, you can only have up to 4 primary partitions on your drive, and the Boot Camp installation process wants to use at least 3 of those.  If you already have more than one partition on the drive, they can't guarantee that you will be able to access all your partitions properly, so it tells you that you need to re-create a single partition on your boot drive.
    If you have a good system clone, you should still be able to use the Disk Utility to restore the drive back to a single partition.  Doing this could cause corruption if not done properly, that is why I suggest having a good clone before you try.

  • Possible to use Leopard disk to install Boot Camp on 10.4.1 ?

    I have a MacBook Pro running 10.4.1, and I have a number of Mac programs that are not yet compatible with Leopard. I would like to install Boot Camp, but I can't install Leopard until those programs are updated. I have already purchased Leopard (but haven't installed it), so I do have the Leopard disk. (I was asleep at the wheel and didn't download the Boot Camp beta before it was pulled.)
    Is it possible for me to use the Leopard disk to install Boot Camp on my 10.4.1 system now, but wait to make the Leopard OS upgrade later?
    Thanks

    Ah. There may be other mirrors around.
    You may be able to install just Boot Camp Assistant from the Leopard DVD, but I'd be a little suspicious about how well it would work, and whether it would cause other problems. You should certainly be able to use the Leopard DVD instead of burning a drivers CD.
    If you can't locate a copy of Tiger BCA, you might want to look at some of the posts that describe doing all of this manually - mostly that's creating a partition that Windows can use. Disk Utility will want to erase the entire drive to add a partition, though, which you may not be willing to do. Some third-party partition utilities claim to be able to do this without a reformat. Regardless of what path you take, be sure you have a good backup of anything not easily reinstalled or restored from other places!
    Doug

  • Can you run Boot Camp and Fusion at the same time?

    Hi,
    I had boot camp installed on my mac pro and loved it. I decided to get greedy and install Fusion using the boot camp partition. The Fusion install went ok but then Microsoft started to get fussy. Every time I would do something on Fusion it would ask me to "Re-activate Windows" when I logged into boot camp. Maybe if I saw Fusion fully working I wouldn't want to run boot camp any more but I think I want to have the option to run either. Right now I only have 1 gig real memory on my mac pro and Fusion seems a little slow compared to native boot camp. Can I run both boot camp and fusion without having to buy two native copies of Windows XP pro? I don't want a "sensible" answer, I want an answer that takes into account how Microsoft treats this re-activation situation.
    I guess Leopard might make this all obsolete, but until then .....
    ... Flash Gordon

    You need to make sure to install VMware Tools into your virtual machine (while booted into Windows via Fusion). Once you do this you shouldn't have to continually activate Windows when going back and forth from Boot Camp to Fusion. I've seen this discussed over on the VMware Fusion discussion boards, so you may want to look there for more details.
    Also, if Windows starts telling you it's been activated too many times, you can call Microsoft and they'll give you an alternate activation key. The phone number is listed on the Windows error screen. I had to do it and they were very accommodating. I just told them I was running Windows in a virtual machine, and there were almost no questions asked.
    You don't need to buy 2 copies of Windows to run both Boot Camp and VMFusion.

  • Running Boot Camp Assistant after NetRestore

    In our environment we are running OS X Server 10.6.8, and our labs have Snow Leopard Macs that are running Boot Camp with Windows 7 on a second hard drive. I want to be able to deploy a NetRestore image and have it automatically partition the second hard drive for Boot Camp and install Windows 7 afterwards. Is there a way I can automate the Boot Camp process, or at least have the Boot Camp Assistant open post-install?

    Cheers ^^
    You have no idea how many hours I've been trying to get round this 'broken' problem.
    Just ignored that part, formated, then re-formatted in windows and installed no problem.
    I guess it's plainly obvious to you guys, but not so to those of us struggling with 2 OS's
    thanks again.

  • HT3986 I accidentally removed lion on boot camp how can I recover

    I accidentally removed my Mac operating system when installing windows 7 on boot camp how can I recover

    Welcome to Apple Support Communities
    If you have a Mid 2010 MacBook, you can use Internet Recovery to reinstall OS X > http://support.apple.com/kb/HT4718
    Start your MacBook holding Command, Option (Alt) and R keys. Then, open Disk Utility, choose your hard drive at the top of the sidebar, go to Erase tab and erase the disk. Then, close Disk Utility and reinstall OS X.
    You will have to install Windows again after installing Mac OS X Lion. Follow these steps to reinstall Windows > http://manuals.info.apple.com/en_US/boot_camp_install-setup_10.7.pdf
    If you have an old MacBook, use the Snow Leopard DVD to reinstall Mac OS X. Start your computer holding the C key while your computer is starting. Select the language, go to Utilities menu > Disk Utility, and follow the steps I have given you

  • While i was running boot camp to install windows 7 i had to cancel operation. Now my mac comes up black screen with a curser at top

    while i was running boot camp to install windows 7 i had to cancel operation. Now my mac comes up black screen with a curser at top

    First of all, start your Mac with the Alt key pressed until the boot manager apears. If your keyboard is wireless probably you should press the power button at the same time you start the Mac.
    After, go to Bootcamp Assistant and remove the windows partition and do all the process again.
    Remember to remove all the USB/Firewire/Thunderbolt devices that are attached to the Mac during the windows installation.
    Once windows boots for first time, install windows support software with all the drivers.
    IMPORTANT: If the windows partition doesn't boot correctly (Black screen with white blinking cursos at the left top corner) do this steps to boot windows:
    1- Start the Windows Installation DVD at system start.
    2- Click on Repair System, not install.
    3- Select Command Prompt
    4- Run these 3 commands: (Press enter for each command)
         Bootrec.exe /FixMbr
         Bootrec.exe /FixBoot
          Bootrec.exe /RebuildBcd
    5- Exit command line (type exit)
    6- Click on Restart button.
    7- Boot the Mac and you will see that It automaticaly loads windows
    Tell us how it goes!!
    PS: Sorry for my bad english!!!

  • Running Boot Camp partition via a VM?

    Can someone comment on their experiences running Boot Camp through their VM software?
    Does it prevent you from booting into the Boot Camp partition?
    I know you have to install the tools for your VM onto the Boot Camp partition to keep your activation active? What happens if one uninstalls the VM? Can the tools be uninstalled to and the Boot Camp partition work like normal again?
    Most importantly, can running the Boot Camp partition through a VM cause any damage?

    It seems to be hanging, it's actually listed as Not Responding by the force quit menu.
    Though I did just check the HD in Disk Utility, and it seems like there is a Windows Partition of the correct size, so I am starting to think BCA just crashed after successfully partioning.

  • Intel iMac running boot camp success

    I am looking at replacing my HS PC Lab and I am debating if I want to replace the labe with 17" iMac Intel machines and running boot camp on the iMac to get to my windows applications. Is there anybody out there that has purchased the Intel iMacs and run boot camp for windows applcations for the entire school day? If so, what is your success rate? Are you running Windows 2000, Windows XP Pro, or Windows Vista? I have heard of schools doing this for 1 hour a day and are happy with it.

    Hi there.... my 5 cent is:
    I use OSX for as much as possible.
    I use bootcamp with Windows XP for gaming, and get "native" PC speed. With the present version of Bootcamp I have had no issues at all. The iMac just works as a PC (but looks so MUCH better)..
    I use Parallels desktop with Windows XP for all other "non gaming" windows applications with only a small impact on speed. All other for me however means only a piece of GPS software for my PocketPC - not available in OSX version....
    If you want style and versatility - go for the Mac
    iMac 20" Core Duo, 2 GB Ram, 256 Mb Video   Mac OS X (10.4.8)  

  • New mac book pro - to run boot camp or not?

    hi,
    im a brand new mac user and have had a brief browse of some problems that others have encountered with boot camp and possible crashes during partitioning...
    i'm not sure if anyone can help but i was wondering if it would be safest to run boot camp and partition my hard drive before i even use my new mbp? or to not run it at all - i will only be using windows to play the odd computer game, for everything else i will use my mbp as it was originally intended.
    what is the level of risk involved with boot camp? ...should i just run it before any data is saved onto the drive and hope for the best...?
    or fork out the cash for the mac versions of the each game (3 max)?
    i just don't want to screw it up, as my brother has had similar problems with his... and i've been saving for months!
    thanks for reading this far and thankyou for your help in advance!

    Boot Camp works beautifully if you follow directions. BC is merely an installer (and a good one). Windows works perfectly well on a Mac (better than some PCs). Windows is Windows - it has it's needs. If you are familiar with Windows no problem. Or - if you are willing to learn - no problem. There IS wisdom in installing BC right away. I found that if I install BC right after OS X, it is a good idea. As soon as I loaded the OSX updates there was potential trouble in that the updates were placed right in the spot where I needed my partition to go - requiring the Apple equivalent of a defrag. This happens rarely, but it does happen. Install OS X > Open BootCamp & Install > Partition for Windows > Update OS X - you'll be fine.

  • How to run Boot Camp on External Hard Drive?

    I use my mid-2012 11" MacBook Air for gaming and school work. My hard drive is filling up fast, and I was hoping I could use an external hard drive and Boot Camp to run Windows for my games, thus freeing up most of my hard drive.
    My questions are:
    1) Is this possible?
    2) What equipment would I need to do it?
    3) What would I be looking for in an external hard drive for this purpose?
    4) If I did this, would I be able to unplug and replug my external hard drive without causing a problem?
    5) What version of Windows should I use?
    The program I will be using for my games is Steam.

    For the MacBook Pro Retina and Windows 8.1 the setup procedure was the following:
    Step -1: Make sure your Thunderbot drive works, stable and reliable.
    Step 0. Make sure you have a complete Time Machine backup of you Mac OS hard drive. Seriously. Very easy to mess things up completely.
    Step 1. Get a Windows 8.1 64 bit iso. You might want to try it out first before committing money to it. For that you can download an official 90 day Windows 8.1 Enterprise evaluation from Microsoft. It's somewhat hidden from mainstream experience, but search engines help you there.
    It is important to use 64 bit, as 32 bit will not work.
    Step 2. Get a USB flash drive. 8 GB USB flash drive worked fine for me.
    Step 3. On Window box or from virtualized Windows machine make a bootable setup USB. I have used Rufus for that. Make sure you have selected "GTP partition scheme for UEFI computer" and FAT32.
    I've tried MBR partition scheme, but it hasn't worked for me.
    Step 4. Once bootable setup USB is created, shutdown everything. Plugin your external thunderbolt drive and bootable setup USB flash drive. Hold ALT (Option key) to choose from what thing to boot.
    Step 5. If you are lucky you will see yellow "EFI Boot". Yellow usually meens 'external'. That meens you are going to boot into setup from USB flash drive. Go for it.
    Step 6. In 5-10 minutes you should get into Window setup. Whenever you are asked, always choose "Custom" or so, till you get to the hard drive selection screen. You should see list of many partitions coming from 2 drives - one internal and one external.
    WARNING: Be super careful here!!!!!
    Step 7. Convince Windows to install itself on the drive that is external. You might have to delete all of the partitions of the external drive and leave it completely unpartitioned. This will make Windows autoconvert it's partition scheme to GTP.
    WARNING: Think twice before deleting any partitions; do not delete any partitions on your internal drive.
    Step 8. Let Windows install itself. I recommend turning off windows autoupdate for now, especially drivers part of it, since Windows 8.1 autoudate seams to be pushing buggy drivers at the moment.
    Step 9. If you are SUPER lucky after reboot (and holding ALT/Option) you should see gray "EFI boot" that will boot Windows from external drive.
    Step 10. Download and install Apple latest bootcamp drivers, things should work normally once those drivers are installed.
    Step 11. Enjoy!

  • What does it take to run Boot Camp, Fusion or Parallels

    I am wondering about upgrading to Leopard to use Boot Camp, Fusion or Parallels. I have found that a significant amount of software that I want to run is not available in a Mac version. The other issue is that many programs I already have for Windows would be very expensive to replace with a Mac version. Thus I want to run a Windows operating system on my MacBook. I do not want to suffer from slow performance because the hardware is not robust enough. I would appreciate some honest chatter about what I need hardware wise to make this thing fly.
    1 How much main memory should I have? I currently have 1GB.
    2 How big should the hard drive be? I currently have a 75 GB drive with 45 GB available.
    3 Anyone that has run Windows or runs both; am I simply better off buying a new HP and running Windows programs on a native Windows computer? I hate this alternative. However, I would rather use my computer than spend time trying to figure out why it is not working.
    Thanx in advance

    1. Parallels (and probably Fusion) should run in Tiger, though you would almost certainly want 2GB of RAM. With Leopard, 2GB would be the absolute minimum, I think, for Parallels and Fusion. With Leopard and Boot Camp, 1GB should not be a problem, but it shouldn't cost much to upgrade to 2GB which will be better.
    2. Since you have 45GB available, you should be ok with Parallels or Fusion. With Boot Camp, you would probably be limited to about a 20GB Windows partition, but that is conceivably plenty. If you decide on Boot Camp, you would also want to back up your hard drive before installing Leopard, and then do an erase and install, not an upgrade or an archive and install, lest you both use too much disk space and/or run into the "some files could not be moved" problem. When installing Leopard, you may also want to select the option to not install languages and/or printer drivers, to save some disk space.
    3. I don't see why you should buy an HP unless it has a graphics card and you feel you need a graphics card.
    Boot Camp will run faster than Fusion or Parallels, but this is only relevant if your software is computation or resource intensive. Also, with Fusion or Parallels you would be limited to a smaller amount of Windows RAM, which, however, is also mainly relevant only if your software is memory intensive. With Boot Camp, you will get decent performance, but Leopard will take up more disk space, and Windows will require more disk space. This is why I supplied the disk-saving tip above, even though you don't currently have a lot of free disk space.

  • Lost disk space after Boot Camp partion crash

    I was partitioning my 160GB (I have about 70GB free space) with the Boot Camp assistant, when my computer kernel panicked. I had to restart, and when I logged in again I was missing about 10GB of space. I did an "Erase Free Space" w/ Disk Utility, but to no avail. Anyone know how to fix this?
    Thanks in advance.

    Also note, that you can partition your HD with Disk-Utility running off the Install Disk to create a FAT partition for bootcamp. The next time you run Bootcamp it will allow you to use that partition to install WIndows.
    I went through 3 Kernel Panics, trying to create the FAT Partition with the boot camp asssistant, always having to fix the HD with the method above.

Maybe you are looking for

  • Full Screen Preview for playback?

    I just want to preview my video clips in full screen.  Sometime I seem to have the View --->  Video Out  --->  "Digital Cinema Desktop Preview - Main" feature enabled, but most of the time it's greyed out.  What the ****? Mark

  • Exporting Images

    Hello everyone..... I'm using an old version of Flash: Flash MX (when Macromedia was still selling it). I'm trying to export Images, but can't figure out how to get the exact image as I'm seeing on my screen in Flash. I've tried Export Image, but it

  • My iMac will not recognize the factory speakers or any external hard ware until I restart the computer.

    Hey all, I have a relatively new iMac (Purchased Dec 2011) that runs on OS 10.7.3.  Currently we are having problems with the computer recognizing any plug-ins when we first turn the computer on (including all USB or Firewire hard ware and builtin sp

  • Error messages trying to install

    Hello I had Photoshop CS working fine and then yesterday when opening the software it just froze - at the beginning where it says loading plug-ins. I attempted to uninstall it, but it wouldn't, so I have manually removed the Photoshop folder in my x8

  • Photos heading has gone?

    new iMac and Mybook drive, had problems getting the drive to wake up ect- but ive always been able to see my Photos stored on my Mybook drive threw my network on my Apple Tv downstairs attachted to my main tv! this morning when i go into Computers ic