By Even using OS X Mavericks there may be times you need Recovery HD. If you see a prohibitory sign, spinning-disc cursor, or kernel panic alert (the text in six languages that appears below the other two images) that doesn’t go away when you start up your Mac, the first thing to do is attempt to repair hidden damage to your hard drive with the Disk Utility program’s First Aid feature. And to do that, you’ll have to boot from the Recovery HD partition. That’s because you can’t run Disk Utility’s First Aid feature on the current startup disk. To start up from this magical disk (actually, a disk partition), here’s what to do:.
To use Recovery Mode, reboot or start your Mac and hold the Command and R keys simultaneously on your keyboard as soon as you hear the familiar startup chime. Keep holding as your Mac boots, which.
Restart your Mac. Press and hold Command+R until you see the Apple logo. If your Mac doesn’t boot from the Recovery HD after Step 2, hold down the Option key while booting to display the built-in Startup Manager. If you press Option after the startup chime instead of Command+R, the built-in Startup Manager appears. From this screen, you can click the Recovery HD icon, and then click the arrow below it or press Enter or Return to boot from it. Or, if you’re going to boot from a disk other than the Recovery HD, you can select it here. Pressing Option during startup displays icons for all bootable volumes it sees and allows you to select one (including the Recovery HD partition).
Click the disk you want to start up from, and then click the arrow below it or press Return or Enter to start up your Mac from it. Step 1: Run First Aid In most cases, after you’ve booted successfully from the Recovery HD or another bootable disk, the first logical troubleshooting step is to use the First Aid option in the Disk Utility application. If you booted from a disk other than the Recovery HD partition, you’ll have to find and launch Disk Utility on that disk before you can follow these instructions.
Boot from the Recovery HD volume by restarting your Mac while pressing the Command and R keys. The OS X Utilities window appears. Select Disk Utility and click Continue. When the Disk Utility window appears, click the First Aid tab to select that function of Disk Utility.
Click the icon for your boot hard drive at the left of the Disk Utility window. Click the Repair Disk button. Your Mac whirs and hums for a few minutes, and the results window tells you what’s going on. Ultimately, First Aid tells you (you hope) that the drive has been repaired and is now okay.
If so, go back to work. Quit Disk Utility by choosing Disk Utility→Quit Disk Utility, by pressing Command+Q, or by clicking the red Close Window gumdrop. Reboot without holding any keys down. Step 2: Safe Boot into Safe Mode Booting your Mac in Safe Mode may help you resolve your startup issue by not loading nonessential (and non–OS X) software at boot time. You do it by holding down the Shift key during startup.
If your Mac is set up so you don’t have to log in, keep pressing the Shift key until the Finder loads completely. If you do log in to your Mac, type your password as usual, but before clicking the Log In button, press the Shift key again and hold it until the Finder loads completely. You know you held the Shift key long enough if your Login Items don’t load (assuming that you have Login Items; you can designate them in the Users & Groups System Preferences pane, although some programs create them for you). Booting in Safe Mode does three things to help you with troubleshooting:.
It forces a directory check of the startup (boot) volume. It loads only required kernel extensions (some of the items in /System/Library/Extensions). It runs only Apple-installed essential startup items (some of the items in /Library/StartupItems and /System/Library/StartupItems).
Note that the Startup Items in the Library folders are different from the Login Items in the Users & Groups System Preferences pane. Startup Items run at boot time before the login window even appears; Login Items don’t run until after you’ve logged into your user account. Taken together, these changes often work around issues caused by software or directory damage on the startup volume. If your Mac boots in Safe Mode, you may be able to determine what’s causing the issue by moving the contents of your Preferences folder (in Home/Library, which you can make visible by pressing the Option key when opening the Go menu) to the Desktop temporarily or by disabling Login Items (in the Users & Groups System Preference pane). Step 3: Zap the PRAM/NVRAM Sometimes your parameter RAM (PRAM) or N on- V olatile RAM (NVRAM) becomes scrambled and needs to be reset. Both of these are small pieces of memory that aren’t erased or forgotten when you shut down.
They keep track of things such as. Time-zone setting. Startup volume choice. Speaker volume.
Any recent kernel-panic information. DVD region setting To reset (a process often called zapping ) your PRAM/NVRAM, restart your Mac and press Command+Option+P+R until your Mac restarts itself.
![Recovery Recovery](/uploads/1/2/5/5/125521360/428272045.png)
It’s kind of like a hiccup. You might see the spinning-disc cursor for a minute or two while your Mac thinks about it — then the icon disappears, and your Mac chimes again and restarts. Now restart your Mac without holding down any keys to see if the PRAM/NVRAM zap fixed your Mac. Remember that your chosen startup disk, time zone, and sound volume are reset to their default values when you zap your PRAM. So after zapping, open the System Preferences application to reselect your usual startup disk and time zone, and set the sound volume the way you like it. Step 4: Reinstall OS This procedure to reinstall the system software is a second-to-last resort when your Mac won’t boot correctly because it takes the longest and is the biggest hassle.
You can download instructions for reinstalling OS X Mavericks. Step 5: Things to try before taking your Mac in for repair To get your Mac up and running again, you can try any of the following:.
Call the tech-support hotline. Before you drag it down to the shop, try calling 1-800-SOS-APPL, the Apple Tech Support hotline.
The service representatives there may be able to suggest something else that you can try. If your Mac is still under warranty, it’s even free. Ask a local user group for help. Another thing you might consider is contacting your local Macintosh user group. You can find a group of Mac users near you by visiting Apple’s User Group web pages.
You can also paste this command into Terminal (it will make hidden partitions visible): defaults write com.apple.diskutility DUDebugMenuEnabled 1 Launch DU and to to Debug (menu bar) and select 'show every partition'. If you have a recovery HD, the hidden partition(s) should then show like this: If you don't have one, you can try downloading/installing the entire OS over the top of the current one; that should create a new Recovery HD. This has worked for me - however, I just tried that on a newly created clone of my MBP and it would not do it. My guess is that is has to do with the fact that this MBP came preinstalled with the OS rather than having purchased Lion or ML from MAS. You can also paste this command into Terminal (it will make hidden partitions visible): defaults write com.apple.diskutility DUDebugMenuEnabled 1 Launch DU and to to Debug (menu bar) and select 'show every partition'.
If you have a recovery HD, the hidden partition(s) should then show like this: If you don't have one, you can try downloading/installing the entire OS over the top of the current one; that should create a new Recovery HD. This has worked for me - however, I just tried that on a newly created clone of my MBP and it would not do it. My guess is that is has to do with the fact that this MBP came preinstalled with the OS rather than having purchased Lion or ML from MAS. Check these two articles: I checked the above myself after the failed attempt to create a recovery HD; from what I've gathered (and I've not had the time to test this myself), I'd need to boot into my clone, from there boot into (internet) recovery and it may create a (local) recovery partition for me: FWIW: my external clone was created using CarbonCopyCloner and it did successfully create a recovery on a Lion volume; however, it may not be completely compatible with ML yet because it messes up the system if you try having it create a recovery partition on an ML volume. So I chose not to have it do that and just cloned the OS - hence no recovery HD. As far as I know, there is no other software that can create/copy a hidden partition (except CCC) as of yet.
The perfect solution: I want install media! Apple Footer.
This site contains user submitted content, comments and opinions and is for informational purposes only. Apple may provide or recommend responses as a possible solution based on the information provided; every potential issue may involve several factors not detailed in the conversations captured in an electronic forum and Apple can therefore provide no guarantee as to the efficacy of any proposed solutions on the community forums. Apple disclaims any and all liability for the acts, omissions and conduct of any third parties in connection with or related to your use of the site. All postings and use of the content on this site are subject to the.