
- #Bootcamp no permissions for mac drives for mac
- #Bootcamp no permissions for mac drives driver
- #Bootcamp no permissions for mac drives software
- #Bootcamp no permissions for mac drives windows
I had it primarily so I could transfer files back and forth without worrying something downloaded on OSX that didn't affect OSX could be carried over to Windows.
#Bootcamp no permissions for mac drives for mac
I have also been told that since I had Sophos for Mac that could be the problem, so I have not installed it since I got my Mac back.

#Bootcamp no permissions for mac drives windows
Could that be why my OSX partition keeps self-destructing? I think it's also worth mentioning that my Seagate external has only messed up once, but it too is an HFS+ formatted drive, and the error was exactly the same: "Keys out of order", but not before Windows recognized it as a RAW disk and had issues reading it. I have a Seagate Backup+ for Mac, but since I wanted to also use it as an external hard drive, I have been installing Seagate's workaround that makes it possible for Windows to mount HFS+ drives every time I set up Bootcamp.
#Bootcamp no permissions for mac drives driver
More specifically, I wonder if it has to do with a certain Seagate HFS+ driver I use with Windows. I've read a few articles such as this one and while I am typically wary of believing them, I'm wondering if it has anything to do with my problem. Typically, the Macintosh HD is supposed to be read-only, so when Windows runs updates, it can't attempt to use the OSX drive as a "swap drive". I'm looking to add a Bootcamp partition again, but recently, I discovered some people have had similar issues, and now I have suspicions as to why this happened, and I have a question. The Genius Bar reformatted the disk, added a recovery disk partition, and manually recovered my files to my account. The untitled one contained my files and we were able to recover them to an external hard drive, but after that, I had to take the MacBook back to the Genius Bar. I guess I should mention my Windows partition and my Mac partition were the same size, but the Windows partition was just fine.The two partitions occupying the same space were an untitled disk and the Macintosh HD.

What's worse, two partitions were exactly the same size, occupying the same space on the disk. To my surprise, the hard drive had a whopping 8 partitions and at least 13 GB of unallocated space (which I assume was RAW). My Mac was clearly crippled, so they booted it up in Target Disk mode and ran some scans.

This time, it did load (twice): once where I could get to the login screen but could not login (it looped back to the login screen) and once where I could login but it was with a default profile and all files seemed corrupt to the point OSX couldn't even move them across the desktop. So, I took it back to the tech support desk. Since I could load Windows, I tried to open up the Macintosh HD on the Windows side and copy my important files over (which I had done in the past), but the disk was so corrupt that even Windows couldn't read it. I could still bring up the, uh, "Boot Manager" (I don't know what else to call it-I'm not well-versed in Mac!) and load Windows, but strangely, my new hard drive did not come with a recovery drive partition. That didn't work.instead of fixing the problem, it resulted in what I've come to call the "WSOD", or "White Screen of Death", meaning OSX refused to load at all. I opened up the Disk Utility and had verify, then attempt to repair permissions on OSX. Then, about a month ago, when I logged into the OSX side of my computer, it loaded a default profile (without my settings, and with the typical galaxy background) so I knew something was up. The actual time since the hard drive replacement was closer to 9 months, but I didn't re-install Windows until this past summer. Since I manually backed up my Windows files, there was no need to use Window's built-in restorer.
#Bootcamp no permissions for mac drives software
I then re-setup Bootcamp and re-downloaded and installed fresh copies of all Windows software I use. Once I had a new hard drive, I reloaded my files and profile using Time Machine, but none of my programs.

After the 7th time, I took it to the Genius Bar and they replaced the hard drive and a cable (I can't remember what cable exactly, but it was related to the hard drive). For the first 6, I followed the directions I got from a local tech support desk: use the built-in recovery drive to reformat the Mac partition and re-install OSX. Hello there! I have a problem with the OSX partition of my laptop, and it absolutely refuses to go away
