rob7997

Q: Will not boot into Safe Mode

MacBook will not boot into Safe Mode, only fills bar to about one third and hangs up.

MacBook Pro, Mac OS X (10.7.3)

Posted on Feb 19, 2012 10:36 PM

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Q: Will not boot into Safe Mode

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  • by sig,

    sig sig Feb 20, 2012 12:50 AM in response to rob7997
    Level 8 (35,798 points)
    Mac OS X
    Feb 20, 2012 12:50 AM in response to rob7997

    Explain your procedure to boot into Safe mode.

  • by rob7997,

    rob7997 rob7997 Feb 21, 2012 5:35 AM in response to rob7997
    Level 1 (0 points)
    Feb 21, 2012 5:35 AM in response to rob7997

    I shut down my MacBook. Power it back up being sure to press and hold shift key until gear and progress bar appears, and then release shift key.

  • by sig,

    sig sig Feb 21, 2012 10:54 AM in response to rob7997
    Level 8 (35,798 points)
    Mac OS X
    Feb 21, 2012 10:54 AM in response to rob7997

    Boot to the Lion Recovery Disk (command-r) and run Repair Disk from Disk Utility.

  • by rob7997,

    rob7997 rob7997 Feb 21, 2012 11:08 AM in response to sig
    Level 1 (0 points)
    Feb 21, 2012 11:08 AM in response to sig

    I did that, and the issue did not resolve itself.

  • by korm,

    korm korm Mar 17, 2012 7:03 AM in response to rob7997
    Level 1 (4 points)
    iCloud
    Mar 17, 2012 7:03 AM in response to rob7997

    I am also unable to successfully complete a safe boot:

     

    Boot while holding shift key.  Boot progress bar reaches about 25% and then hangs.

     

    To see what was going on, I set nvram boot-args to safe boot + verbose mode:

     

    in Terminal:

     

    sudo nvram boot-args="-x -v"

     

    Rebooted and I see from the verbose display that the hang is when the boot process gets to

     

    ** Checking extended attributes file

     

    However, booting from the EFI disk and running Disk Utility, and repairing the disk, it the disk repair does not hang at that step.  The disk repair finished correctly.

     

    Nevertheless, safe boot still hangs at that step.

     

    For future readers: To reverse the nvram setting and bypass the hanging safe boot, I boot into single user mode and undo the nvram boot-args setting:

     

    [in single user mode] sudo nvram boot-args=""

     

    Then reboot from single user mode.

  • by rob7997,

    rob7997 rob7997 Mar 17, 2012 8:48 AM in response to korm
    Level 1 (0 points)
    Mar 17, 2012 8:48 AM in response to korm

    This is a bit technical for me, could you simplify your explanation on what you did. Thanks.

  • by fane_j,

    fane_j fane_j Mar 17, 2012 11:06 PM in response to korm
    Level 4 (3,667 points)
    Mar 17, 2012 11:06 PM in response to korm

    korm wrote:

     

    booting from the EFI disk and running Disk Utility

    Would you care to elaborate on that?

  • by X423424X,

    X423424X X423424X Mar 18, 2012 12:08 AM in response to rob7997
    Level 6 (14,237 points)
    Mar 18, 2012 12:08 AM in response to rob7997

    rob7997 wrote:

     

    I shut down my MacBook. Power it back up being sure to press and hold shift key until gear and progress bar appears, and then release shift key.

     

    For safe boot press the shift key immediately after you hear the boot chime.

     

    fane_j:  I have to assume he is referring to the installer dvd but I am not sure why he refers to it as "EFI disk" though.

  • by fane_j,

    fane_j fane_j Mar 18, 2012 1:16 AM in response to X423424X
    Level 4 (3,667 points)
    Mar 18, 2012 1:16 AM in response to X423424X

    X423424X wrote:

     

    fane_j:  I have to assume he is referring to the installer dvd but I am not sure why he refers to it as "EFI disk" though.

    I have no idea what korm means by "EFI disk". However, according to TN2166, the first partition on a Mac-formatted GPT disk > 2GB is the EFI System Partition (aka EFI partition). I do not see how it could be possible to install a bootable copy of Mac OS X on the EFI partition, let alone boot from it and run Disk Utility from it. But there are many things I do not see, hence my asking for an elaboration. I could speculate that he meant the Lion Recovery HD -- but let's wait for his explanation.

  • by X423424X,

    X423424X X423424X Mar 18, 2012 1:34 AM in response to fane_j
    Level 6 (14,237 points)
    Mar 18, 2012 1:34 AM in response to fane_j

    I agree.

  • by Graham Perrin,

    Graham Perrin Graham Perrin Jul 7, 2012 4:26 AM in response to rob7997
    Level 2 (259 points)
    Mac OS X
    Jul 7, 2012 4:26 AM in response to rob7997

    Reference: 152162960

  • by Graham Perrin,

    Graham Perrin Graham Perrin Jul 7, 2012 9:02 AM in response to korm
    Level 2 (259 points)
    Mac OS X
    Jul 7, 2012 9:02 AM in response to korm

    If you combine verbose safe mode with single user mode, then manually run fsck_hfs before exit, you may more accurately identify the point at which things cease to progress.

     

    Whilst fsck_hfs runs, occasionally key:

     

    Control-T

     

    Note that Control-T does not have the same effect during fsck_hfs when safe mode is without single user mode.

  • by briancochran,

    briancochran briancochran Jul 17, 2012 1:21 PM in response to sig
    Level 1 (0 points)
    Jul 17, 2012 1:21 PM in response to sig

    You seem to know more about safe booting than anyone else. Let me tell you my problem and see if you can help at all. Since running parallels for windows was not working well, a techie told me to use boot camp. When I tried to install that, it refused and would not boot up, saying there was no boot drive. I finally had to take my desk top in and they were able to reboot it easily and prepared a short cut for installing boot camp. I did all that and it says it cannot install windows to that partition because its not NTFS or whatever. When I try to restart compputer I am back to black screen that says no bootable drive. I have tried all the short cut keys like shift and C, to no avail. Then it occured to me that since I use a wireless keyboard, the computer might not get far enough to even see the key board. I then tried plugging in a Dell keyboard I had here and still nothing. Can you think of anything I can do short of another trip with a heavy cpu? This is my office computer and I need it badly. Brian

  • by Graham Perrin,

    Graham Perrin Graham Perrin Jul 18, 2012 7:49 AM in response to briancochran
    Level 2 (259 points)
    Mac OS X
    Jul 18, 2012 7:49 AM in response to briancochran

    For the Boot Camp question: Boot Camp.

     

    This topic is very specific – OS X that does start and work, but not in safe mode.

     

    If you can not start OS X: Mac OS & System Software.

     

    Good luck!

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