Linux mac os mavricks
If you have any further suggestions please feel free to share. vi createiso.sh Mount the installer image hdiutil attach /Applications/Install OS X Mavericks.app/Contents/SharedSupport/InstallESD.dmg -noverify -nobrowse -mountpoint /Volumes/installapp Convert the boot image to a sparse bundle hdiutil convert /Volumes/installapp/BaseSystem. Considering I was using almost 500 GB just for Windows and the files I was working on with a Hybrid SSD seagate momentus XT, which I had in raid 1. Considering what your saying I will install the OS's to a single boot drive without a RAID set, array, or partition and eventually make it an SSD, but for now I want to make it an SSHD or standard HD because I need space to work with files temporarily before transporting them to my external hard drive.
#Linux mac os mavricks mac os#
I'm not entirely sure were this leaves Linux though, but I"m guessing you install it last from my experience of installing Windows after Mac OS X.
#Linux mac os mavricks mac os x#
I knew Mac OS X couldn't install Windows in bootcamp with a RAID partition and obviously the same would be true for Windows because on a Mac system OS X has to be installed first if I'm not mistaken and then Windows. Thank you for answering my question though and now I know I should install the boot OS's to a single drive instead of a RAID set or array. I know these Operating System don't want to play nice with each other and read each others filesystems, which is the reasons I posted this thread. I do not claim to be an expert on RAID, but I know enough from studying Computer Network Administration, which I have at least an Associates in. I would not bother RAIDing the platter drives. If you want really fast, get an OCZ Revo 350 for each OS - Īnd put the platter drives on the SATA ports for storage. Put the Linux SSD and storage HDD on the Marvell SATA ports. Use 3rd party software like Paragon for Windows to allow Win to read/write to the RAID array.Ī PCIe RAID card has the added advantage of speed acces through the PCIe bus. Get a PCIe RAID card and RAID your platter drives RAID 10 and format them HFS+ for storage. Recommend you use a SATA III 6G/s SSD for each OS, which is just as fast as, or faster than, a platter RAID. It still can't saturate SATA II with platter drives. Granted, RAID0 is fast, but it is too unstable and too unforgiving of read/record errors and if you lose a single drive you lose the whole thing. Both OSs will complain about the drives on boot and want to initialize and format the other OSs drives. Without that, all they see is a series of unwritable/unreadable/uninitialized hard drives. The only way OS X and Windows can both read and write to a RAID is a hardware card with both windows and OS X drivers/support. How much research time have you spent in learning how RAID works and where to use what type of RAID, be it RAID 0, 1, 5, 10 or other?
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Just why do you want to RAID your system drives? I do not understand this fascination with RAID. Building a CustoMac Hackintosh: Buyer's Guide