See if this helps;
http://www.osxfaq.com/Tutorials/fsck/index.ws
alright, so... none of the above has worked.
does anybody know how to use the mount command in OSX? I know you can do it verbosly, maybe it will give me some clue as to why it won't mount.
-Paul Wieland______________
http://www.sickdimension.com
Dual G5 2.0Ghz / 2.5GB Ram / 620 GB HD / 23" CD
See if this helps;
http://www.osxfaq.com/Tutorials/fsck/index.ws
You may want to contact Apple about this. In the first generation of G5s, people reported their hard drives getting hot -- too hot. Too hot to even touch. That's too hot, and can cause errors.
Also, what brand of drive is it? This may be biased, but if it's anything other than Western Digital, I would be suspect of it. Especially Maxtor.
Are you still under warranty? Do you have AppleCare? Even if "no" to both of those, it wouldn't hurt to call Apple and tell them what's happening. It may be a known condition.
2009 Mac mini 2.0GHz • 2010 MacBook Air 11" • 2010 MacBook Pro 13" • LED 24" Cinema Display
PowerMac G4 MDD dual 1.25GHz • PowerMac G4 Yikes! • iPad 2 32GB • 2 x iPhone 4 16GB • iPod Touch 8GB • iPod nano 1GB • iPod shuffle 1GB • AirPort Extreme dual-band • AppleTV
http://www.jeffhoppe.com
That generation G5 is a good point. See this article about first generation G5s cooling problem. Apple quietly fixed the sensor problem in V2s.
Mac Pro Dual 2.8 Quad (2nd gen), 14G Ram, Two DVD-RW Drives, OS X 10.8.3
2006 Mac Book Pro 2.16 (first Gen) OS X 10.7.4
2TB Time Capsule, 2 TB
32G iPhone 4S Black, iPad (3rd Gen) 32G Black
You might also try to hook up the harddrives the other way round and then boot from the OS X installer CD. If the installer allows you to install Mac OS X on that icky harddrive, do so choosing a minimum in custom installation. Then try to let the machine boot OS X from that drive. If all works well, you'll be able to back things up before switching the cables again.
After that you can try and reformat the drive, check it etc. or bring it back to the store for replacement (warranty?).
Mac user since 1987. Running Mac OS X 10.8 Mountain Lion on a MacBook Air 11" & an iMac 27" and whatever's newest for my iPhone 4s, iPad 3 and AppleTV 2.
Apple Certified System Administrator 10.6, Apple Sales Professional 2008-2011, Apple Certified Mac Technician.
Thanks for the feedback and links...
I've known about the G5 cooling problem since December (when my first hard drive failed). I have dual 250 GB maxtor drives - I'm not a huge fan of maxtor, but thats what came in the machine. A few months ago, Tech Tool Pro sent me an email saying that the smart checks were failing on the new drive that apple gave me after fixing the first one (some number was out of range). On top of that the machine will randomly shut itself off for no reason -even while you are using it. Its not going to sleep, its shutting off - but thats a WHOLE 'nother story..
So I brought it to my local Apple store. They had it for over a week and couldn't find anything wrong with it. The tech told me he ran hardware tests on it the whole time and nothing out of the ordinary was found. figures. I asked him about the smart checks and he said that TTP must be wrong. *sigh*
Now, none of the software checks I've run can find anything at all wrong with the drives. I've run Tech Tool Pro, Disk Warrior, Disk Utility and fsck_hfs from single user mode, all of which reported no problems. (during a surface scan, Tech Tool Pro reported that it found 2 bad blocks on the drive in question, but a subsequent run didn't find any errors).
After booting into single user mode and running fsck_hfs -yf on both of my drives, I rebooted and the machine hung on the apple startup screen with the rotating icon. It sat there for 30 minutes with the fans on full blast until I killed it. I tried it again...still wouldn't boot. Single user mode worked fine mind you.
At this point I was beyond frustrated... my secondary drive with all of my data wouldn't mount and now the machine wouldn't even boot to the primary drive. I booted to the 10.3 installation disk and it still wouldn't mount the secondary drive.
For some reason I tried the software restore dvd that came with my machine (10.2). I booted to that and low and behold, my secondary drive showed up as a valid installation directory.
I installed 10.2 to the secondary drive, upgraded it to 10.3 and now the machine is running on a fresh copy of panther.
So I have two 250 GB drives, over 400GB of data, 3 installations of OSX on 2 different drives and the eerie feeling that something catastrophic is about to happen and I'm going to lose all of my precious data.
I need to figure out a cost effective way to save all of my data... Maybe I should buy an external FW 800 raid array... and then run the two 250 GB drives in Mirror RAID for my system. Seems like a waste of space, but I'm sick of this.
-Paul Wieland______________
http://www.sickdimension.com
Dual G5 2.0Ghz / 2.5GB Ram / 620 GB HD / 23" CD
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