System partition

Hi,
Could any body help, regarding how to make system partition. I have 3000N200 B2G model. Also I would like to downgrade to windows XP. Is it possilble in this model. Please help me.
Thanks
Shan

I got a strange problem here:
If I install build 9879 on a Samsung 840EVO SSD, then after roughly 2 days, the system drive(e.g. the C: drive) will become a RAW partition.
Tried to reinstall a few times, but the problem seems to be consistent -- roughly 2 days then system drive becomes RAW.
There were no such problem in build 9860.
HI
To resolve this issue for a system that does not recognize the boot drive,
a third party utility must be used to disable PUIS  >HDAT2_5.ISO

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    http://www.dreamension.net

    I am getting the exact same issue as the original post, however strangely only with one model of computer (HP Compaq 6300 Pro tower desktops).
    We are using SCCM 2012 SP1 but are not using PXE, USB media only.
    Same symptoms, running a deployment task sequence for x64 Windows 7 Enterprise makes it all the way through the Apply OS step which installs a .wim I've captured previously and fails when attempting to copy down the WinPE environment to continue the task
    sequence.
    All boot images have been updated to WinPE 4.0 and have the according driver packs added. My format and partition step creates 1 partition to use the whole drive. We do not use a separate partition for system reserved because our FDE product does not play
    well with encrypting that partition because it is not an active partition.
    Running the initial attempt from an x64 boot key results in failure, but running on an x86 boot key that requires the x64 boot image for deployment will complete. After the initial failure from the x64 key, the machine can't even be deployed from an x86
    boot key because it still fails to write to the partition. No combination of diskpart and format from the command prompt has been able to get it deployed yet.
    Any other ideas or steps to troubleshoot? I'm open to anything because this is hindering our ability to fully migrate to our 2012 environment.

  • How to restore Windows boot after resizing system partition ?

    I have an fairly new HP Pavilion 14-n228ca notebook which I intend to use mostly for Linux, but still wish to occasionally run the WIndows 8.1 that it shipped with.
    I installed CentOS 6.5 using the dual-boot procedure I have used many times in the past with XP and Vista, viz. resize the main NTFS filesystem, delete the partition and recreate it smaller at the exact same start byte.
    Normally (on XP,Vista) Windows boots from GRUB, but here I get an error "file \Boot\BCD - missing or contains errors"
    F9 at boot gets me a hardware boot menu, where I have a choice of "OS boot manager", EFI file, or "notebook hard drive". The last gets me GRUB. The first drops me to a repair menu where I can try autorepair, which fails, or a command
    line.
    The command line allows me to run diskpart and assign a drive letter to the system partition, at which point I can run chkfs successfully and access files.
    If I try "bootrec /rebuildbcd" it finds one valid volume at \\?\GLOBALROOT\Device\HardDiskVolume4\Windows but then says "system cannot find the file specified"
    How can I restore the ability to boot the Windows partition, preferably without messing up the Linux one ?

    I have an fairly new HP Pavilion 14-n228ca notebook which I intend to use mostly for Linux, but still wish to occasionally run the WIndows 8.1 that it shipped with.
    I installed CentOS 6.5 using the dual-boot procedure I have used many times in the past with XP and Vista, viz. resize the main NTFS filesystem, delete the partition and recreate it smaller at the exact same start byte.
    Normally (on XP,Vista) Windows boots from GRUB, but here I get an error "file \Boot\BCD - missing or contains errors"
    F9 at boot gets me a hardware boot menu, where I have a choice of "OS boot manager", EFI file, or "notebook hard drive". The last gets me GRUB. The first drops me to a repair menu where I can try autorepair, which fails, or a command line.
    The command line allows me to run diskpart and assign a drive letter to the system partition, at which point I can run chkfs successfully and access files.
    If I try "bootrec /rebuildbcd" it finds one valid volume at \\?\GLOBALROOT\Device\HardDiskVolume4\Windows but then says "system cannot find the file specified"
    How can I restore the ability to boot the Windows partition, preferably without messing up the Linux one ?
    assuming your recovery partition is still extant, you can run that and go back to factory
    backup files first natually
    use a virtual machine linux or cloud
    Corsair Carbide 300R with TX850V2
    Asus M5A99FX PRO R2.0 CFX/SLI
    AMD Phenom II 965 C3 Black Edition @ 4.0 GHz
    G.SKILL RipjawsX DDR3-2133 8 GB
    EVGA GTX 660 Ti FTW Signature 2 (GK104 Kepler)
    Asus PA238QR IPS LED HDMI DP 1080p
    ST2000DM001 & Windows 8.1 Professional x64
    Microsoft Wireless Desktop 2000 & Wacom Bamboo CHT470M
    Place your rig specifics into your signature like I have, makes it 100x easier to understand!
    Hardcore Games Legendary is the Only Way to Play!

  • Windows 7 Ultimate isn't installing on my iMac. Setup was unable to create a new system partition or locate an existing system partition

    I have a 21.5" iMac (Late 2012) running OS X Mavericks. I'm trying to install Windows 7 Ultimate via Bootcamp but whenever i get to the setup part it goes wrong
    These are the steps I followed
    I selected all the options since I didn't have the drivers or an install disk
    it copied the Windows 7 iso image, downloaded the support software, and saved the support software to the flash drive (8GB)
    I selected a partition size - I gave windows roughly 100GB
    and I let it install
    Right now I'm at the part where it says " where do you want to install windows? I selected the bootcamp partition and formatted it. It now says
    "Setup was unable to create a new system partition or locate an existing system partition. See the Setup log files for more information"
    WHAT DO I DO?

    I had to read the apple instructions several times before they started to make sense.  I burned my iso onto a DVD and had the required USB for support software.  Are you trying to use the single USB method?
    This article has a lot of info on the single usb method

  • OK to use fdisk/100% "SOLARIS System" partition for RAID6 Virtual Drive?

    Solaris newb, here - I am configuring an x4270 with 16 135 GB drives. Basic approach is
    D0, D1: RAID 1 (Boot volume, Solaris, Oracle Software)
    D2-D13: RAID 6 (Oracle dB files)
    D14, D15: global spares
    After configuring the RAID's w/WebBIOS Utility, I am now trying to format/partition the RAID 6 Virtual Drive, which shows up as 1.327 TB 'Optimal' in the MegaRAID Storage Manager. After hunting around the ether for advice on how to do this, I came across http://docs.oracle.com/cd/E23824_01/html/821-1459/disksxadd-50.html#disksxadd-54639
    "Creating a Solaris fdisk Partition That Spans the Entire Drive"
    which is painfully simple: after 'format', just do an 'fdisk' and accept the default 100% "SOLARIS System" partition. After doing this, partition>print and prtvtoc show this:
    partition> print
    Current partition table (original):
    Total disk cylinders available: 59125 + 2 (reserved cylinders)
    Part Tag Flag Cylinders Size Blocks
    0 unassigned wm 0 0 (0/0/0) 0
    1 unassigned wm 0 0 (0/0/0) 0
    2 backup wu 0 - 59124 1.33TB (59125/0/0) 2849529375
    3 unassigned wm 0 0 (0/0/0) 0
    4 unassigned wm 0 0 (0/0/0) 0
    5 unassigned wm 0 0 (0/0/0) 0
    6 unassigned wm 0 0 (0/0/0) 0
    7 unassigned wm 0 0 (0/0/0) 0
    8 boot wu 0 - 0 23.53MB (1/0/0) 48195
    9 unassigned wm 0 0 (0/0/0) 0
    # prtvtoc /dev/dsk/c0t1d0s2
    * /dev/dsk/c0t1d0s2 partition map
    * Dimensions:
    * 512 bytes/sector
    * 189 sectors/track
    * 255 tracks/cylinder
    * 48195 sectors/cylinder
    * 59127 cylinders
    * 59125 accessible cylinders
    * Flags:
    * 1: unmountable
    * 10: read-only
    * Unallocated space:
    * First Sector Last
    * Sector Count Sector
    * 48195 2849481180 2849529374
    * First Sector Last
    * Partition Tag Flags Sector Count Sector Mount Directory
    2 5 01 0 2849529375 2849529374
    8 1 01 0 48195 48194
    My question: is there anything inherently wrong with this default partitioning? Database is for OLTP & fairly small (<200 GB), with about 140 GB being LOB images.
    Thanks,
    Barry

    First off, RAID-5 or RAID-6 is fine for database performance unless you have some REALLY strict and REALLY astronomical performance requirements. Requirements that someone with lots of money is willing to pay to meet.
    You're running a single small x86 box with only onboard storage.
    So no, you're not operating in that type of environment.
    Here's what I'd do, based upon a whole lot of experience with Solaris 10 and not so much with Solaris 11, and also assuming this box is going to be around for a good long time as an Oracle DB server:
    1. Don't use SVM for your boot drives. Use the onboard RAID controller to make TWO 2-disk RAID-1 mirrors. Use these for TWO ZFS root pools. Why two? Because if you use live upgrade to patch the OS, you want to create a new boot environment in a separate ZFS pool. If you use live upgrade to create new boot environments in the same ZFS pool, you wind up with a ZFS clone/snapshot hell. If you use two separate root pools, each new boot environment is a pool-to-pool actual copy that gets patched, so there are no ZFS snapshot/clone dependencies between the boot environments. Those snapshot/clone dependencies can cause a lot of problems with full disk drives if you wind up with a string of boot environments, and at best they can be a complete pain in the buttocks to clean up - assuming live upgrade doesn't mess up the clones/snapshots so badly you CAN'T clean them up (yeah, it has been known to do just that...). You do your first install with a ZFS rpool, then create rpool2 on the other mirror. Each time you do an lucreate to create a new boot environment from the current boot environment, create the new boot environment in the rpool that ISN'T the one the current boot environment is located in. That makes for ZERO ZFS dependencies between boot environments (at least in Solaris 10. Although with separate rpools, I don't see how that could change....), and there's no software written that can screw up a dependency that doesn't exist.
    2. Create a third RAID-1 mirror either with the onboard RAID controller or ZFS, Use those two drives for home directories. You do NOT want home directories located on an rpool within a live upgrade boot environment. If you put home directories inside a live upgrade boot environment, 1) that can be a LOT of data that gets copied, 2) if you have to revert back to an old boot environment because the latest OS patches broke something, you'll also revert every user's home directory back.
    3. That leaves you 10 drives for a RAID-6 array for DB data. 8 data and two parity. Perfect. I'd use the onboard RAID controller if it supports RAID-6, otherwise I'd use ZFS and not bother with SVM.
    This also assumes you'd be pretty prompt in replacing any failed disks as there are no global spares. If there would be significant time before you'd even know you had a failed disk (days or weeks), let alone getting them replaced, I'd rethink that. In that case, if there were space I'd probably put home directories in the 10-disk RAID-6 drive, using ZFS to limit how big that ZFS file system could get. Then use the two drives freed up for spares.
    But if you're prompt in recognizing failed drives and getting them replaced, you probably don't need to do that. Although you might want to just for peace of mind if you do have the space in the RAID-6 pool.
    And yes, using four total disks for two OS root ZFS pools seems like overkill. But you'll be happy when four years from now you've had no problems doing OS upgrades when necessary, with minimal downtime needed for patching, and with the ability to revert to a previous OS patch level with a simple "luactivate BENAME; init 6" command.
    If you have two or more of these machines set up like that in a cluster with Oracle data on shared storage you could then do OS patching and upgrades with zero database downtime. Use lucreate to make new boot envs on each cluster member, update each new boot env, then do rolling "luactivate BENAME; init 6" reboots on each server, moving on to the next server after the previous one is back and fully operational after its reboot to a new boot environment.

  • This disk doesn't contain an EFI system partition. If you want to start up your computer with this disk or include it in a RAID set, back up your data and partition this disk.

    As stated above. I get this when I try to resize my HD. Was having issues with BootCamp so I removed it and got this.
    This disk doesn’t contain an EFI system partition. If you want to start up your computer with this disk or include it in a RAID set, back up your data and partition this disk.

    the same problem...
    any help?

  • Boot Camp - Setup was unable to create a new system partition....from Windows install

    Hi folks.  So I ran the boot camp wizard and made a USB install key for windows from that.  I boot to it and everything works until I get to the install.  I format the Boot Camp partition as indicated in the walkthrough and then I get "Setup was unable to create a new system partition or locate an existing system partition.  See the Setup log files for more information." from the Windows installer.  What do I do?   Thanks.              

    just to add to the mix. . . i just got a new macbook retina.
    Originally used a USB flash drive. Hit the same barrier described here.
    Spent a few hours with drive unplugging / replugging silliness. No progress. Went back into OSX to attempt using an external DVD drive. There is no option for that in Bootcamp assistant now - must use USB.
    Grabbed a different USB stick and started again. This time I used the other USB port on the macbook (the one on the left). Everything worked fine this time!?
    You still have to go into "advanced options" and hit "format" when you get to the partition screen.
    Moral of the story: different stick, different port. Sounds random. If that doesn't work, try changing your socks and putting on a hat.
    Good luck!

  • Problem with the EFI system partition's file system.

    I installed latest yosemite 10.10.2 update - did a verify disk on “WDC WD1001FALS-403AA0 Media” (internal HD on my iMac 21.5-inch, Mid 2011) and got
    Problems were found with the partition map which might prevent booting
    Error: The partition map needs to be repaired because there’s a problem with the EFI system partition’s file system.
    However a verify disk on the volume partition gets a clean bill of health!
    I haven't done a 'repair disk' yet. Thought I'd check if anybody else has same message first.
    Cheers

    I had issues where my MacPro 8-core would not boot after the 10.7.4 upgrade, but my MacBook Air 13" 2011 upgrade worked just fine.
    I had to restore my MacPro HD from my TimeMachine back up. Apparently, the Softraid raid drivers that I use on my MacPro are not compatible yet with 10.7.4. See here for more info:
    http://macperformanceguide.com/blog/2012/20120511_1-MacOSX-SoftRAID.html
    I contacted Softraid and they are already aware of the issues and are working with Apple for a fix.
    Cheers.
    Bud

  • MacBookPro SSD Error- ALERT: The partition map needs to be repaired because there's a problem with the EFI system partition's file system.

    MacBook Pro OS x Mavericks. I have Sandisk 256GB SSD and I am getting a below error message.
    ALERT: The partition map needs to be repaired because there's a problem with the EFI system partition's file system.
    Does anyone know how to resolve this error and fix it ? unfortunately I don't have a Time Machine backup. Thanks!

    Have you tried to run the verify/repair permissions and verify/repair disk through the recovery disk? If that didn't work then I would reinstall the OS after backing up. If that still doesn't work I would take it in.

  • Unable to create a system partition

    I'm attempting to install Win7 via Boot Camp under OS X 10.9. 
    I've created a 40 Gb partition, and the windows install disk loads and successfully formats the partition for NTFS. 
    However, it then returns the message "Windows was unable to create or locate an existing system partition"
    Any suggestions?

    Bootcamp did it.  Problem was fixed by unplugging all external drives.
    Success!
    Thanks!

  • Cannot resize system partition due to recovery partition

    Hello.
    I have a 500GB HD (momentus XT) that replaced my default 320GB HD.
    i cannot resize the system partition due to the recovery partition. System keeps on telling me that "map is too small".
    Tried diskutil under osx, under lion bootable recovery usb stick, under diskutil through console.
    Here is what diskutil tells me.
    ~ > diskutil list
    /dev/disk0
       #:                       TYPE NAME                    SIZE       IDENTIFIER
       0:      GUID_partition_scheme                        *500.1 GB   disk0
       1:                        EFI                         209.7 MB   disk0s1
       2:                  Apple_HFS Macintosh HD            319.2 GB   disk0s2
       3:                 Apple_Boot Recovery HD             650.0 MB   disk0s3
    ~ > diskutil resizeVolume /dev/disk0s2 400G
    Started partitioning on disk0s2 Macintosh HD
    Verifying the disk
    Checking file system
    Performing live verification
    Checking Journaled HFS Plus volume
    Checking extents overflow file
    Checking catalog file
    Checking multi-linked files
    Checking extended attributes file
    Checking volume bitmap
    Checking volume information
    The volume Macintosh HD appears to be OK
    Resizing
    Error: -5341: MediaKit reports partition (map) too small
    I want to resize the partition to use the remaining new space i have, of course, and create a bootcamp part.
    I am wondering if i can kill the recovery partition without destroying my lion. As i have the recovery transfered successfully to usb stick using the apple utility, i am able to use it anytime.
    But... just wondering if that would crash my OS or not.
    Or, if anyone sees a way to move the recovery partition to end of the HD so that i can enlarge successfully...

    Thanks to you both, luckily there's only 600GB on that drive at the moment.
    I was wondering, though, why won't it let me make it bigger?
    I already had a 1TB partition in the space below it. The screenshot shows me having already deleted it - but still no option to resize the other (larger) 2TB one.
    If there is a reason why I can't resize now, then I can take that advice and try and make sure it doesn't happen when I reformat it again.
    I would understand if the partition were MBR, but it's not, it's a GUID Partition Table (bottom right), so I'm confused - what is it's problem? ;-)

  • Touchsmart 610 - installing windows 8 on a partition, error, not enough space on system partition?

    I created a 150 gb partition to install Windows 8 so I could dual boot Win 7 and Win 8.  When I try to install I get a message that there is not enough free space on my 'system' partition.  The only thing I can think of is that it is referring to the system (reserved) 100mb  partition.  It only has 10 mb of free space.  Obviously the partition I want to install on has plenty of space.  Has anyone had this problem and gotten around it? 
    UPDATE:  Found the problem with my 100mb reserved partition.  I assigned a drive letter to it through disk management and saw a file 'test.vhd' of 55 mb.  I recognized this as a virtual drive I had created and deleted a few months ago!  Deleted this file and then removed the drive letter assignment, and Windows 8 installed on my partition in about 15 minutes.
    This question was solved.
    View Solution.

    Hello meezer,
    Glad you was able to get it installed. It always seems to be the little things that cause us the greatest problems.
    If I have helped you in any way click the Kudos button to say Thanks.
    The community works together, click Accept as Solution on the post that solves your issue for other members of the community to benefit from the solution.
    - Friendship is magical.

  • MBAM 2.5 - Does it create system partition 'automatically' ?

    Hi All, 
    Installed MBAM 2.5 today and deployed and is working fine from what i can see. Deployed the client to a couple machines and it started encrypting. 
    One machine took a bit of time to get going and it think maybe it was because it never had a system partition available, i created one and logged back in with a domain account and it all started to work. 
    Now this got me thinking afterwards - I think the other machines i was testing on never had a system partition either before i put the agent on. 
    So my questions is does MBAM 2.5 automatically create the system partition if the hard disk consists of only a single partition. 
    Many thanks everyone... 

    Hello,
    It's on the process of installation of Windows 7 and upper.
    Regards,
    Follow me on Twitter http://www.twitter.com/liontux | My Blog (French/English) :
    http://security.sakuranohana.fr/

  • Windows 7 Setup was unable to create a new system partition

    I had windows 7 ultimate installed on a raid striping configuration and one of the hard drives crashed.  I bought a new hard drive (WD Caviar Black 1TB) and when I went to reinstall windows 7, I got an error message saying Setup was unable to create
    a new system partition blah blah blah.  I did a lot of searching around for an answer, wondering if 1TB was too big of a hard drive to do a fresh install on, whether it was formated correctly, etc...
    What I eventually found to be the solution was to go into the BIOS and change a setting.  Somehow when my old hard drive crashed, the boot priority for hard drives automatically changed so that the first boot priority was one of my external hard drives.
     After I changed the boot priority so that the first priority was the hard drive I wanted to install windows 7 on, the installation went smoothly.  I think that's why other people had success after removing all external hard drives.  After a
    couple of reboots the boot priority most likely automatically updated to reflect which hard drives were actually connected.
    Anyway, I had a hard time finding this answer, it was frustrating beyond all belief, and I wanted to make it easily available in case it helps anybody else out in the future.
    Andy Mykrantz

    Hi.
    Thanks for sharing the information here.
    Please remember to click “Mark as Answer” on the post that helps you, and to click “Unmark as Answer” if a marked post does not actually answer your question. This can be beneficial to other community members reading the thread. ”

  • Acer aspire 5733 windows 7 intel core 13 inside, setupwas unable to create a new system partition orlocate an .......

    i woke up today to see my laptop asking for  a current password i entered 
    then it was asking
    please input password for st9500325as
    and nothing seems to be working
    i tried to reboot the system and then the error message displayed in the title comes when i click next screen asking fro where do you want to install windows, i havent connected anything on the laptop and just
    1 disc0 unallocated space  465.8gb 
    and i cant partition it also
    i clicked on drive option and clicked on new( thets the only one i can click from the options) and it waited for some time as it is trying to do something and telling me failed to create new partition, what can i do. [laese explain in  astep bt step
    procedure,
    i am not a genius on laptops or computer

    Hi,
    Quote: setup was unable to create a new system partition or locate an existing system partition.
    It can be caused by corrupt partition table.
    Boot from Windows installation media, press Shift + F10 at setup screen, and run chkdsk command to fix drive error.
    http://technet.microsoft.com/en-us/magazine/dd637756.aspx
    Also, please remmember to mark your system partition as active using diskpart command, if you do not have a system reserved partition.
    http://www.sevenforums.com/tutorials/71432-partition-mark-active.html
    NOTE This response contains a reference to a third
    party World Wide Web site. Microsoft is providing this information as a convenience to you. Microsoft does not control these sites and has not tested any software or information found on these sites.
    Andy Altmann
    TechNet Community Support

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