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#1
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Intel Mac boots on Apple Partition but not GUID?!?!
I have Leopard on my computer. I have used SD for years and even have had it save my bacon. My original SD backup external HDD was/is a Lacie d2 (250GB, same size as iMac internal HDD). It is partitioned as an Apple Partition Map and will boot up off of it.
I recently got 2 more Lacie drives that are larger than my internal HDD and I have partitioned them using GUID Partition Map with partitions for a SD backup as well. However these SD backups will not boot up Leopard. I have Erased, Partitioned, reback-uped, everything and they will not reboot. Does anyone have any suggestions? I don't know why the Apple Partition Map will boot, but the GUID will not. I don't think an Intel Mac is even supposed to boot from an Apple Partition. I actually ran my Mac off the Lacie d2 for a week on my wife's laptop while my iMac HDD was being repaired so I know it works and works reliably. |
#2
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GUID should certainly boot if APM does. Are you sure they're not bootable? Does the drive show up in the Startup Disk Preference Pane?
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--Dave Nanian |
#3
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Yes, the disks always show up in the Startup Disk preference pane.
Last night I Erased (one pass with 0's) the Rugged Lacie and partitioned to APM then let SD run through the night and back up the computer. This morning, everything was complete so I selected it as the Startup Disk and Restarted ... nothing. It just went to the white screen with the Apple and stops, there is no revolving wheel showing that the computer is thinking, etc. I just don't know what to do with these new disks. The only difference in the new disks and the original backup is they are partitioned down to a smaller size to match the internal HDD. Is there some reason that since there is other stuff on the external HDD (albeit in other partitions) that I can't boot from those drives? |
#4
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are you doing an erase and clone, or smart updating to a new volume?
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(It doesn't matter which of those he's using, fishmonkey, since he manually erased the drive first.)
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--Dave Nanian |
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Quote:
that could possibly explain why the volumes don't boot properly... |
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So if you take this same drive and partition as APM it boots fine?
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--Dave Nanian |
#8
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he tried that and it didn't work either...
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#9
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Sorry, missed somehow that you did partition as APM. I'm happy that it didn't make a difference, at least, since it would not have made sense otherwise.
OK, so... do you have multiple drives attached to the Mac? Have you tried simplifying as much as possible, using just, say, FW400?
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--Dave Nanian |
#10
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Here is as much information I can supply that I think matters ....
MacIntosh HD (250GB) Capacity: 232.57GB LaCie Big Disk Extreme Triple (2TB) - WILL NOT BOOT Capacity: 250GB on the partition with the SD clone 4 GUID Partitions "Ignore Ownership on this Volume" = unchecked You have access = system, admin, everyone LaCie d2 (250GB) - WILL BOOT Capacity: 232.86GB on the partition with the SD clone 1 APM Partition "Ignore Ownership on this Volume" = unchecked You have access = system, admin, everyone Note: This is the original LaCie that I had that has worked and saved my bacon. I probably had a clone of my internal HDD before Leopard came out and it just continued to update itself though the weekly updates. It was probably a little over 1.5 years ago when I got the HDD and set it up, but I don't remember doing much if anything special because I was new to a Mac so probably I plugged it in via FW800 and then opened SD and said START! Lacie Rugged HDD (500GB) 2 APM Partitions - WILL NOT BOOT Capacity: 232.88GB on the partition with the SD clone 2 GUID Partitions - WILL NOT BOOT Capacity: 250GB on the partition with the SD clone You have access = Gagel (Me), (unknown), everyone - why wouldn't system and admin not be in the list for this drive ... or does it matter? Note: After the test this morning when the Rugged would not boot I decided to do another Zero out Data Erase and haven't done anything else to that drive right now. Currently "Ignore Ownership on this Volume" is checked ... can't be sure about it before but I do remember unchecking it one time before, but don't know when it was in all of my attempts. Actually, I just unchecked the "Ignore..." split the drive into 2 APMs and when I clicked on Get Info on the new partitions the "Ignore..." was checked. Then I did the same thing with 2 GUIDs and the "Ignore..." was checked. Not sure why the default is "Ignore..." being checked when I Erase or Partition. All the HDDs are connected in series through FW800 in the order I have listed on this post (not that I think it matters). The d2 used to be next to the iMac, now it is after the Extreme and will boot up in either location. As a reply to a previous post I have not tried to go down to FW400, would that matter? |
#11
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Please do try to simplify to just a single drive, connected to FW400, and see if it boots.
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--Dave Nanian |
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