Retail Disc Root Directory
Can somebody please put a Mac os X Snow Leopard disc into their computer. And print screen the open disc. Thanks
MacBook, Mac OS X (10.6.8)
Apple Event: May 7th at 7 am PT
Can somebody please put a Mac os X Snow Leopard disc into their computer. And print screen the open disc. Thanks
MacBook, Mac OS X (10.6.8)
Employing the term "root directory" here does not make any sense. There is no root directory until the OS is installed. This is as far as I am willing to go with this. Other than this, I really have no idea what you're asking. This is from the 10.6.3 retail disc.
Employing the term "root directory" here does not make any sense. There is no root directory until the OS is installed. This is as far as I am willing to go with this. Other than this, I really have no idea what you're asking. This is from the 10.6.3 retail disc.
Its the one of the left. Root is the highest directory of a device (/) So the root of any device is / and from that it has many other folders and files. in the picture the disc has / then an app file and 2 folders. Thank you
eljoshy0 wrote:
Its the one of the left. Root is the highest directory of a device (/) So the root of any device is / and from that it has many other folders and files. in the picture the disc has / then an app file and 2 folders. Thank you
This is not really applicable to the structure of the install DVD, at least for what you wanted to know. Instead of tripping all over the term root directory, which has a specific meaning for OSX, you could have initially stated the question directly--and gotten the answer directly--by asking what does the opening installer screen of the DVD look like? There is a file structure to the install DVD, but the first installer screen of the install DVD is not the root directoy.
And / is the mount point and parent directory of any OSX volume or disk.
How are you getting to that?
Basically Apple 'genius's' had my macbook along with the disk it came with to 'fix' my laptop. But they never gave the disc make so I refuse to buy another retail disc so I want to torrent the files and burn them to a dual layer disc. But due to how to torrent was packaged I don't know the layout of the disc or how to structure it to allow my mac to boot from it
WZZZ wrote:
How are you getting to that?
You know how. 🙂
Did Waldo find the cat yet?
eljoshy0 wrote:
Basically Apple 'genius's' had my macbook along with the disk it came with to 'fix' my laptop. But they never gave the disc...
So they stole your 10.6 install disk. File a complaint.
so I want to torrent the files and burn them to a dual layer disc. But due to how to torrent was packaged I don't know the layout of the disc or how to structure it to allow my mac to boot from it
We don't advise using torrents, illegal software or unverifiable sources for obvious reasons, people bank and enter sensitive data into their machines, thus deserve the best security only original sources of software can provide.
Call Apple and order your 10.6 disks. There is a 10.6.7 machine specific versions and the common 10.6.3 white retail, best to give them your serial number and they can look it up and send you the right disks for your machine.
They are inexpensive, like about $20 or so. So it won't break you really.
https://support.apple.com/kb/HT1159#MacBook_Pro https://support.apple.com/kb/HT1349
https://support.apple.com/kb/HT1559 http://www.everymac.com/ultimate-mac-lookup/
Oh man, the cat was hiding.
Kitty is on the left center, near the apple logo on a box thing...
http://www.findthecat.net/find_the_cat_in_the_junk.jpg
TextWrangler, same as before.
WZZZ wrote:
TW not needed.
You missed /Etc before remember?
No, not that
My way with TextWranger doesn't dim the invisible folders and you one can go poking and opening stuff to read too.
Retail Disc Root Directory