Jump to content
9 posts in this topic

Recommended Posts

I'm having a hard time with this install, and need help!

 

I partitioned the disk using Ubuntu. I have several partitions--disk0s1 is XP, disk0s2 I left for OS X (with Linux/Unix format), disk0s3 is Ubuntu, disk0s4 is NTFS format (extended for XP), disk0s5 is Linux swap.

 

I boot to the OS X installer and launch Disk Utility. I see the main disk drive in the left window, with all the partitions listed below it. The Mac OS X empty partition and the NT partition are greyed out. If I click on the main disk icon I can see a tab for partitioning but am not allowed to partition disk0s2. I can format it as a Mac format disk, though.

 

If I delete the disk0s2 partition through Ubuntu and leave it as free space, I'm told when I select the free space in Disk Utility 'this will remain as free space.'

 

So, how the h*ll am I supposed to format the space as GUID...?

Link to comment
https://www.insanelymac.com/forum/topic/160525-disk-partitioning-help-needed/
Share on other sites

I'm having a hard time with this install, and need help!

 

I partitioned the disk using Ubuntu. I have several partitions--disk0s1 is XP, disk0s2 I left for OS X (with Linux/Unix format), disk0s3 is Ubuntu, disk0s4 is NTFS format (extended for XP), disk0s5 is Linux swap.

 

I boot to the OS X installer and launch Disk Utility. I see the main disk drive in the left window, with all the partitions listed below it. The Mac OS X empty partition and the NT partition are greyed out. If I click on the main disk icon I can see a tab for partitioning but am not allowed to partition disk0s2. I can format it as a Mac format disk, though.

 

If I delete the disk0s2 partition through Ubuntu and leave it as free space, I'm told when I select the free space in Disk Utility 'this will remain as free space.'

 

So, how the h*ll am I supposed to format the space as GUID...?

 

Use NTFS or FAT32 for OS X.........then use Disk Utility on the OS X Install DVD to format the OS X volume as required.....

Use NTFS or FAT32 for OS X.........then use Disk Utility on the OS X Install DVD to format the OS X volume as required.....

 

Same problem with me

I use Acronis Disk Suite to creat new Partition ( exp: F) ( NTFS , set Primary ) to install Mac. Pass welcome window, cho Disk Utilities. Click on partition F, chose Eraser : set name partition (MacOSX) and chose Mac OSX Extended ( Jour) . Then click Eraser. All done . But when finishes , partition F cant fomat to Mac partiton, it automatic change name to Disk0s4 (NTFS ) not name MacOSX

Plz help me to fix this problem, i cant install Mac

Same problem with me

I use Acronis Disk Suite to creat new Partition ( exp: F) ( NTFS , set Primary ) to install Mac. Pass welcome window, cho Disk Utilities. Click on partition F, chose Eraser : set name partition (MacOSX) and chose Mac OSX Extended ( Jour) . Then click Eraser. All done . But when finishes , partition F cant fomat to Mac partiton, it automatic change name to Disk0s4 (NTFS ) not name MacOSX

Plz help me to fix this problem, i cant install Mac

 

Try formatting as MS-DOS (FAT) using Disk Utility and then formatting as Mac OS Extended (Journaled).....

Use NTFS or FAT32 for OS X.........then use Disk Utility on the OS X Install DVD to format the OS X volume as required.....

That doesn't work. I can format it as NTFS or FAT32 in XP, and then as a Mac volume through the installer but its not GUID and the installer won't install to it. If I delete the partition through XP (leaving free space) then try partitioning through DU I'm told the partition (which is free space) won't be erased.

 

See the problem...

That doesn't work. I can format it as NTFS or FAT32 in XP, and then as a Mac volume through the installer but its not GUID and the installer won't install to it. If I delete the partition through XP (leaving free space) then try partitioning through DU I'm told the partition (which is free space) won't be erased.

 

See the problem...

 

OS X does not recognise unallocated space AFIK.......also the partition for OS X does not have to be GUID.......for most PC users MBR is a more friendly choice especially for multi-booting.......GUID is a better choice for servers.....its only advantage is being able to resize partitions.....

OS X does not recognise unallocated space AFIK.......

 

Not true. I just put a new hard disk into an Intel Mac and had to set it up. THe disk was unformatted and unpartitioned and I used DU to set it up.

 

 

also the partition for OS X does not have to be GUID.......for most PC users MBR is a more friendly choice especially for multi-booting.......GUID is a better choice for servers.....its only advantage is being able to resize partitions.....

 

The only choice I was given that would work when partitioning that new disk was GUID, so I don't think that's correct (at least, not in all cases). After reading your comment I did more investigation and it seem that most tutorials say that GUID must be used. I found a couple of posts where people used MBR, but they were using a patched DU. When my OS X partition is formatted MBR, the vanilla installer tells me that it can't install to it.

Answering myself here...

 

I was finally able to format a partition last evening. I blew away the disk with all existing partitions, then booted OSX and used DU. The really odd thing was that, on a 500GB disk, DU would not allow me to set an install partition size of less than 49.5 GB. Try as I might I couldn't set a smaller value.

 

This might be why DU was telling me it couldn't install or format the partition I had previously allocated for it. I may well have been able to choose an MBR partition. I formatted as GUID, though, since I knew from past experience that the installer was happier with that. I didn't want to spend time experimenting on this machine (as it's my main PC), but I am curious now. How many people on this board have experienced the same thing on a multiboot system?

 

BTW, I wanted a triple-boot system with XP and Linux as well. I had chosen to format in two partitions, with the plan of using gparted outside of OSX to further subdivide the disk. I discovered that OSX actually created three partitions--one was an EFI partition (set as primary, boot), the second was a GUID partition (set as primary, type af), and the third was set up by default as an HFS+ partition. When I went into gparted I was able to blow away the third, HFS+ partition and subdivide it for Linux and XP. However, I ran into another problem--I'm only allowed four primary partitions and the rest must be extended. WIth EFI, OSX, XP, and Linux, all my primaries were used up. I could create an extended partition for XP's use, but could not create a 5GB partition at the end of the disk for Linux swap. Gparted wanted to set it up as primary but couldn't. Another problem for another forum... :)

×
×
  • Create New...