Using existing 1Tb Home Folder from new SSD boot drive

So, I am completely stuck.
My plan;
Mac Pro (2008) with RAID card. 4x750Gb drives as RAID5, Home Folder is resident there at 1.25Tb.
Purchased 160Gb SSD. Performed clean install of 10.6.7 on it connected by e-SATA.
Migrated Applications. Booted into SSD; Used Advanced Users from System Preferences to point at original Home Folder on RAID.
My result ;-)
50% success but many of the sub folders in ~Library are locked with permissions. Preferences, Mail etc.
Everything is 100% OK when I boot from the original Raid (which is great as a fallback)
My hope;
That there is some way that the original Home Folder would be 100% fine when referenced from the new SSD boot drive.
£1,000,000 to the first MacWiz to help me solve this... (joking about the £1,000,000 but I would be very, very grateful indeed)
Cheers

Hi all,
I just went through a similar issue and solved it with a little persistance.
Follow these steps:
1) All you need to do is cmd + i or "get info" on the folders you want access to
2) in the bottom right of the window that pops up click the small padlock symbol
3) enter your password (the login password for you mac) to "authenticate"
4) Click the arrow by "sharing and permissions" to open that drop down
5) click the + button in the bottom left corner
6) in the new window that pops up click administrator or your specific user (both work fine)
7) when it adds that user click the "privilege" and choose Read & Write
Hey presto, when you refresh the finder window the folder will be accessilble!!!
Yay

Similar Messages

  • HT1338 Can't start up from new SSD hard drive

    Hello,
    I installed a new SSD hard drive in MacBook Pro, but can't select it as my start up disk. I get the message "You can’t change the startup disk to the selected disk. The bless tool was unable to set the current boot disk."
    Entire old hard drive was restored on new SSD prior to installation.
    I wlecome all suggestions.
    Thanks,
    Mark

    I swapped my HD in my MBP for a SSD (samsung 840 pro) last week. I took a different approach: a clean install.
    I backed up my old HD with time machine, for my documents, and used a USB drive with the ML installer on it that I made with Lion Diskmaker (which, despite the name, also works for ML). Then installed my apps from scratch with their installers, moved my documents. Worked like a charm. Takes a bit more thought and time but maybe the drive will work better. The new drive is sweet. Beachballs are rare now.

  • Installed new SSD boot drive, Time Machine won't backup

    I installed a new 240 GB SSD boot drive (cloned using Super Duper) in my Mac Pro and want to use it as my startup disk. When I boot up using the new 240 SSD drive and try to start Time Machine to back it up onto a 500GB external drive it tells me it failed because the estimated backup size is over 2 TB. I suspect that Time Machine still has the last backup from my old boot drive, which was a 3TB hard drive. I go to Options and tell it not to back up any of my other hard drives but that doesn't help. So now what? How can I get rid of the last backup, which was from my 3 TB hard drive, so that I can backup a 240 GB SSD on a 500 GB external drive? Or is it another problem? Help!! Thanks!!

    Problem solved, wasn't using Options/Exclude items properly.

  • Permissions problem with new SSD boot drive

    I recently installed an OWC SSD drive as a boot drive on an iMac I've had for many years. I’m having some sort of permissioning error that I can’t figure out how to resolve.
    I’ve setup the SSD as the boot drive (created user named “Boot Admin”). 10.9.3. All data and files remain on my old spinning disk
    When the computer first boots, as expected, I’m presented with 2 users at the login screen (“Boot Admin”; Original User Account). If I choose my old user account, I receive the following error:
    "You are unable to log in to the user account “<name of original user account>" at this time. Logging in to the account failed because an error occurred.”
    If I choose the Boot Admin user I’m able to login without issue as the Boot Admin user (no access to my original apps and data). At that point, I can choose Log Out from the Apple menu and then login using my old user account. When I follow that sequence, I’m able to login with no issues. Apps are there, data is accessible etc. I can enjoy the speed of the SSD.
    Although, if browse within Finder to the Boot Admin user on the hard drive, none of the folders are accessible (the little red icon is on the folders). Similarly, if I boot straight into the Boot Admin user and browse to my original User on the hard drive, none of its folders are accessible!
    I am at a loss on how to troubleshoot. Ideally, I would like to login in directly to my old user account (eliminate the 2 step — login to Boot Admin, log out, login to Original User) and have full file access to things within both the Boot Admin user and my original user account.
    Any guidance or tips on how to troubleshoot? thanks in advance

    I appreciate the continued assistance. I'm clearly overlooking something and Google is not my friend! I've tried.
    At the expense of repeating myself, I'll share my current configuration:
    10.9.3
    2 hard drives (new SSD with name "Boot Drive" and original spinning disk "Macintosh HD")
    Startup Disk in System Preferences is "Boot Drive"
    "Macintosh HD" has 3 User Folders: bootadmin, jayelevy, shared
    jayelevy is my home folder - all my documents are in tact
    bootadmin has the normal home folder structure
    "Boot Drive" has 3 User Folders: bootadmin, jayelevy, shared
    jayelevy is empty; no folders
    bootadmin has the normal home folder structure (Desktop, Documents, Downloads, Movies, etc), but each is empty with the exception of Movies and Pictures. I've moved my Aperture databases to these 2 folders to take advantage of the speed of the SSD
    When I restart the iMac I'm presented with 2 user choices: jayelevy and bootadmin
    If I initially select jayelevy, I receive the error mentioned at the start of the thread
    If I initially select bootadmin, I can login without issue, but get the standard Mac desktop (not my home).
    If I then log out of bootadmin (not restart, but logout) and then choose jayelevy, the signin completes successfully and my desktop/home folder is restored to it's normal and expected condition.
    I am still trying to avoid this step of login/logout/login.
    I imagine I'm overlooking the obvious, but I'm in uncharted grounds for me! Here I thought the hardware swap to replace my optical drive with SSD would be the hard part. That was simple! I've stumbled on the software side!

  • New SSD boot drive. Confused about "Incompressible Data Rates"

    Hi everyone,
    My editing machine is a 2011 17" MacBook Pro with the OEM 128GB SSD. I'm getting close to filling this drive and so I was thinking of upgrading to a larger capacity and faster SSD for my boot drive. (All my media storage, caches and whatnot are stored on FW800 drives). I was looking at the OWC Mercury 6G drives. For the price, I'd love to get the 480GB Mercury Electra drive, but I see that it states that the read/write speeds are severely lessened for "Incompressible Data Rates" such as photos and video. The OWC people obviously recommend to me to buy the Extreme. Is it necessary to get the Extreme? I find that even the OEM SSD I use now allows me to run PPro CS5.5 perfectly fine. I'm not editing 4K footage or more than 2-3 camera angles (I primarly do news video production).
    Thank you,
    William

    If you don't keep footage on the drive (and you shouldn't), then you don't need to worry about it.

  • Bay 1 or bay 2 when installing a 120gig SSD Boot drive with 10.8 into a MacPro 3.2Ghz Quad core ?

    Im about to install a 120gig SSD into a MacPro 3.2Ghz Quad core. It shipped with a 1TB Hitachi Ultrastar HDD Sata III, that runs 10.7 and is the boot disk running form bay #1. I plan to run 10.8 on the new SSD and use that as the boot disk.
    Should I swap over the Hitachi HDD and SSD so that new SSD boot drive is in bay #1 ? If so am I correct that it would be okay to download and install Mountain Lion on the SSD using bay #2 first and then swap them over once installed ?

    Thanks. FYI the planned build is this...
    Bay 2 - BOOT DRIVE. 120gig SSD running OS 10.8 plus all apps (although not sure whether to wait a while regarding upgrade to 10.8 ? )
    So far Im quite happy with 10.7.3 and the machine seems very stable
    Bay 1 - 1TB HDD running OS 10.7.3 (so can boot from this HDD disk if required to should the SSD fail (if or when ). This is disk already running 10.7.3 as boot disk now.
    Bay 3 & 4 - On horizon...    x2 1TB Western Digital Black Caviar HDD set up with RAID '0' stripe. Not sure on whether to use a RAID 0 or not yet....    Might just go with one 2TB drive... TBC.
    BACKUP:  3tb external HDD or Synology DS411j NAS drive
    So from what I understand once I've installed the OS on to the new SSD along with any apps, use Carbon Copy Cloner to make an fresh image before I use the system...    is that correct ???

  • Can I switch out a hard drive for an SSD without having to clone the existing hard drive, and then install Yosemite from an USB Boot Drive onto the new SSD?

    Can I simply replace a hard drive with a new SSD and just install Yosemite from a USB boot drive onto the SSD? I recently bought a used MBP and it has absolutely no files on it except for the OS, and so I'm assuming I don't need to clone the current hard drive as I can just reinstall the OS onto the new SSD.

    Honey_Revenge wrote:
    Thanks.
    Just a quick follow up question, is formatting the SSD with HFS+ done in Disk Utility?...
    It's possible that the SSD will be set up for use on a PC, which means it will have a Master Boot Record partition table rather than a GUID Partition Table, which is what Yosemite needs. In Disk Utility, select the SSD and click the Partition button. Create a new Partition Layout and click the Options... button at the bottom. You'll likely see MBR is selected. Choose GUID instead and Mac OS Extended (Journaled) for the Format.

  • Transferring home folder from Tiger 4.11 into a MacBook Pro  w/ Leopard

    I just got word that my PB Aluminum 1.67 that was to be repaired via Apple is now
    going to be upgraded to a Apple MacBook Pro
    First of I'm (happily) shocked by this offer, and now I begin a new realm into intel technology
    MacBook Pro, and now... Leopard! Which I didn't want to install on my Aluminum PB I went only
    as far as Tiger 4.11.
    My inquiry is on transferring my back up home folder from the Aluminum Tiger 4.11 to the MacBook
    Pro using Leopard.
    Is that at all possible so I can restore my passwords, etc..into Leopard.
    I also have PhotoShop 6 and Microsoft X software, would this be a problem installing or using
    in the MacBook Pro?
    Just concern about software compatibility with this upgrade.
    appreciate feedback.. Aimee

    Check with the third-party software vendor to find out if there are any compatibility issues or if you will need to upgrade. Older software may be PPC-only. They will run on an Intel Mac through the Rosetta emulator, but upgrading to a Universal Binary version would be the better course of action.
    See:
    A Basic Guide for Migrating to Intel-Macs
    If you are migrating a PowerPC system (G3, G4, or G5) to an Intel-Mac be careful what you migrate. Keep in mind that some items that may get transferred will not work on Intel machines and may end up causing your computer's operating system to malfunction.
    Rosetta supports "software that runs on the PowerPC G3, G4, or G5 processor that are built for Mac OS X". This excludes the items that are not universal binaries or simply will not work in Rosetta:
    Classic Environment, and subsequently any Mac OS 9 or earlier applications
    Screensavers written for the PowerPC
    System Preference add-ons
    All Unsanity Haxies
    Browser and other plug-ins
    Contextual Menu Items
    Applications which specifically require the PowerPC G5
    Kernel extensions
    Java applications with JNI (PowerPC) libraries
    See also What Can Be Translated by Rosetta.
    In addition to the above you could also have problems with migrated cache files and/or cache files containing code that is incompatible.
    If you migrate a user folder that contains any of these items, you may find that your Intel-Mac is malfunctioning. It would be wise to take care when migrating your systems from a PowerPC platform to an Intel-Mac platform to assure that you do not migrate these incompatible items.
    If you have problems with applications not working, then completely uninstall said application and reinstall it from scratch. Take great care with Java applications and Java-based Peer-to-Peer applications. Many Java apps will not work on Intel-Macs as they are currently compiled. As of this time Limewire, Cabos, and Acquisition are available as universal binaries. Do not install browser plug-ins such as Flash or Shockwave from downloaded installers unless they are universal binaries. The version of OS X installed on your Intel-Mac comes with special compatible versions of Flash and Shockwave plug-ins for use with your browser.
    The same problem will exist for any hardware drivers such as mouse software unless the drivers have been compiled as universal binaries. For third-party mice the current choices are USB Overdrive or SteerMouse. Contact the developer or manufacturer of your third-party mouse software to find out when a universal binary version will be available.
    Also be careful with some backup utilities and third-party disk repair utilities. Disk Warrior 4.1, TechTool Pro 4.6.1, SuperDuper 2.5, and Drive Genius 2.0.2 work properly on Intel-Macs with Leopard. The same caution may apply to the many "maintenance" utilities that have not yet been converted to universal binaries. Leopard Cache Cleaner, Onyx, TinkerTool System, and Cocktail are now compatible with Leopard.
    Before migrating or installing software on your Intel-Mac check MacFixit's Rosetta Compatibility Index.
    Additional links that will be helpful to new Intel-Mac users:
    Intel In Macs
    Apple Guide to Universal Applications
    MacInTouch List of Compatible Universal Binaries
    MacInTouch List of Rosetta Compatible Applications
    MacUpdate List of Intel-Compatible Software
    Transferring data with Setup Assistant - Migration Assistant FAQ
    Because Migration Assistant isn't the ideal way to migrate from PowerPC to Intel Macs, using Target Disk Mode or copying the critical contents to CD and DVD or an external hard drive will work better when moving from PowerPC to Intel Macs.
    Basically the instructions you should follow are:
    1. Backup your data first. This is vitally important in case you make a mistake or there's some other problem.
    2. Connect a Firewire cable between your old Mac and your new Intel Mac.
    3. Startup your old Mac in Target Disk Mode.
    4. Startup your new Mac for the first time, go through the setup and registration screens, but do NOT migrate data over. Get to your desktop on the new Mac without migrating any new data over.
    4. Copy the following items from your old Mac to the new Mac:
    In your /Home/ folder: Documents, Movies, Music, Pictures, and Sites folders.
    In your /Home/Library/ folder:
    /Home/Library/Application Support/AddressBook (copy the whole folder)
    /Home/Library/Application Support/iCal (copy the whole folder)
    Also in /Home/Library/Application Support (copy whatever else you need including folders for any third-party applications)
    /Home/Library/Keychains (copy the whole folder)
    /Home/Library/Mail (copy the whole folder)
    /Home/Library/Preferences/ (copy the whole folder)
    /Home /Library/Calendars (copy the whole folder)
    /Home /Library/iTunes (copy the whole folder)
    /Home /Library/Safari (copy the whole folder)
    If you want cookies:
    /Home/Library/Cookies/Cookies.plist
    /Home/Library/Application Support/WebFoundation/HTTPCookies.plist
    For Entourage users:
    Entourage is in /Home/Documents/Microsoft User Data
    Also in /Home/Library/Preferences/Microsoft
    Credit goes to Macjack for this information.
    If you need to transfer data for other applications please ask the vendor or ask in the Discussions where specific applications store their data.
    5. Once you have transferred what you need restart the new Mac and test to make sure the contents are there for each of the applications.
    Written by Kappy with additional contributions from a brody.
    Revised 3/12/2008
    Generally, there should not be any migrating problems between the Intel versions of Tiger and Leopard other than third-party software may require upgrading for compatibility.

  • Two user accounts using the same home folder

    This may sound like a silly or goofy question, but I was wondering if anyone knows how to use two different user accounts, but with each using the same home folder?
    I was wondering because there are many different settings I would like to use for different settings. Kind of like a "Spaces on Steroids." When I'm at school, I'd like to use one Network Settings, one desktop and icons, one Dock, etc. And when at home, a different set of each, but still using the same home folder.
    Any help or suggestions would be most appreciated.

    ZooCrewMan wrote:
    So, I figured the easiest was would be seperate user accounts, "Home" "School" "Work" etc., and all have different settings, but still point to the same Home Folder.
    The problem is, most of those settings are kept in the home folder.
    You could probably do what Softwater suggests, with an AppleScript, or perhaps an Automator workflow, but it's not without some serious downsides.  You'd need one for each setup.
    At least one complication would be, any change you wanted to make to each setup would have to be done to that script; you couldn't just drag something into (or out of) the Dock.
    Another theoretical possiblility would be to have separate user accounts, but use the special Shared user folder for your data.  You'd have to select it as a souce or destination for each app you use, but many will remember that from use to use. 
    The complication would be permissions.  When you save a document there, the user that saved it is the owner, with read & write rights.  All other users have read-only rights, so could view and open them, but not update them.  You'd probably want to create one or more sub-folders in the Shared account (for various types of files), and you could probably set a Folder Action on each to grant read & write permissions to anything created in them.
    Then you could set up the desired network location, Dock, and Desktop for each user account.

  • Can I copy music iTunes Music Folder from my external Hard drive to new PC?

    not sure if this is possible but I copied my folders (documents/music/itunes/itunes music folder) from my local hard drive from laptop to my external (for backing up purposes) and now i have a new computer. can i just simply copy/paste this folder to my new computer and open itunes and it will be there. i know it's probably too easy but was hoping someone could help me out???? thanks.

    You can by dragging them from itunes to your external drive this will copy them to it. Then do the opposite for from you drive to the new computer. Just make sure if you don't intend to keep the drive connected to your new computer. That you put copies of the songs in a folder on it before putting them on itunes or you have problems playing your songs.

  • HT5824 Can I use only one (selected) folder from my documents in iCloud?

    Can I use only one (selected) folder from my documents in iCloud for MAC and PC?

    If the folders were created in the Photos app on the iPad, they don't really contain copies of the photos. They contain pointers to those photos that allow them to appear in the albums that you create. Consequently, they cannot be imported to the computer. Those albums are for local organization on the iPad only And cannot be imported.
    You should be able to select the indicidual phots that you want to import, as far as I know. I can do it on a Mac using iPhoto or Image Capture, so I assume that Windows will allow you to pick and choose which photos you want to import.
    Import photos and videos from your iPhone, iPad, or iPod touch to your Mac or Windows PC - Apple Support

  • Living with a small SSD Boot Drive on New Pro??? Migration?

    Hi Folks,  I am seriously considering moving to a new mac pro from my 2008 tower.  Aside from peripheral issues,  my main concern is how to use the smaller SSD boot drive vs.  my now current 2T drive?     I've been a mac user since 1985 and my user folder with gigs of mail, documents,  pictures (iPhoto and Aperture) and videos, etc., plus my application folder, is much larger than a 512 SSD.     I now use a 3T drive as a separate movie/video FinalCut drive, so I've stored that separately.  It just seems that if I try to do a migration of my current mac to a new one, I'm going to be creating major headaches and problems.
    Before I buy something like that, I need to have a good strategy for a move.

    You should try your cyrrent system and clone the OS to a 250GB SSD and 2-3TB data drive
    The difference is nothing but remarjabke znd easy to do.
    The 2600xt really should have been retured already and confivurd your system with 16GB RAM or more
    Might be able to get more out if your Mac and get another year or more
    Using one drive only is never a good idea.
    System - data - projects - media - scratch - time machine
    And putting scratch and system on multiple SSDs and on PCIE controller card
    And then a GTX 680 or AMD Mac 7950 graphic card
    The nMP is faster but it still needs work and yiurs isn't dead

  • NEW - 2.4 Westmere 8 Core, 240 SSD boot drive won't start

    Brand new, out of the box 2.4 Westmere 8 Core with a 240 SSD boot drive and 12GB RAM will not boot up.
    Safe mode won't work.
    Boot from disk won't work.
    I can't even get the DVD tray to open. I hear no chime on startup then, it goes as far as the gray apple screen then....nothing.
    CrN.

    Who sold you this?
    You dont' get 3rd party from Apple. And who installed the OS?
    Pulling the SSD would still let you boot from a DVD as long as it is your Mac's OEM.
    Then you can install OS to a drive of your choice that you have on hand.
    Yes, take it back.
    For $2100 Mac Pro 2.8 4-core, upgrade to 3.3GHz $590, add OWC SSD $240 (120GB, usually more than enough for OS and apps, all the data goes to WD Black 1.5TB $109) and 3 x 8GB RAM (high capacity ram shows 15% boost in memory bandwidth and performance).
    I strongly recommend against 2.4GHz - unless you plan a DIY to dual 3.3's - then yes. 2.4's on a PC are good for OC'ing to near 4GHz speeds so they are easy to sell.

  • Moving inetpub folder from C: to D: drive in IIS8

    Its bit confusing in first place whether you should move the inetpub folder from C: to D: drive as there are conflicting posts on it.
    https://support.microsoft.com/en-us/kb/2752331?wa=wsignin1.0
    Secondly,how to move it also seems to be confusing.
    http://blogs.iis.net/thomad/archive/2008/02/10/moving-the-iis7-inetpub-directory-to-a-different-drive.aspx
    Do i need to perform the steps in the table or the script will take care of it. Has anyone used this script before. Also the table does not seem to appear properly.
    Please suggest.

    Hello,
    IIS related questions please ask in http://forums.iis.net/
    Best regards
    Meinolf Weber
    MVP, MCP, MCTS
    Microsoft MVP - Directory Services
    My Blog: http://blogs.msmvps.com/MWeber
    Disclaimer: This posting is provided AS IS with no warranties or guarantees and confers no rights.
    Twitter:  

  • Procedure for SSD boot drive in Mac Pro?

    I just purchased a 115GB SSD that I want to use as the boot drive in my Mac Pro running OS 10.6.8. I've read several articles about how to set this up but none seem to be working for me. On the SSD boot drive I want only the essentials: OS, Home Folder, Apps. Everything else (docs, downloads, music, photos, movies, etc.) needs to go on my 1TB storage HD. The problem I'm having using Carbon Cloner and Super Duper to copy the OS, HF and apps to the SSD is they're copying too much data, filling up the SSD with non-essentials (there should only be about 90GB of data being copied but much more seems to be transferred). I can't seem to lean-down what's being moved. Would doing a new install with the Snow Leopard DVD and then copying over only the essential files/folders with Migration Assistant be better, more specific?
    Has anyone perfected this procedure, and can give me step-by-step instructions? All help is greatly appreciated!

    There are dozens and dozens of threads, MPG, MacRumors and elsewhere.
    don't move anything from  "home" except the bare essential ~/Library (1GB at most) with CCC and deelect everything else. That should get you down to size.
    Before you bought I hope you asdded up the /applications and good estimate. most users can get an OS/apps into 60GB or less (the max I would want to see on SSD you have) FCP and some others or if you hae a lot of large apps - some allow for installing in alternate locations as well as into system/library.
    Some - there are always some - have had trouble cloning. Some had trouble with installing, too. Can't win for losing at every turn sometimes.
    Been there, but look again at MPG series.
    How To Clone a Volume
    How to upgrade your system/boot drive
    Using Cloning as a Backup Strategy

Maybe you are looking for