![Os x yosemite 10.10 bootable usb](https://kumkoniak.com/113.png)
If you don't still have the installer, you can get it again by redownloading from your purchases tab in your mac app store.Ģ. Copy the InstallESD.dmg file into your Downloads folder. If you still happen to have the yosemite installer app somewhere, right click on it and click Show Package Contents. Make sure it is in your downloads folder. Next, you create the recovery partition by following these steps:ġ. Then restart for everything to get back to normal after you have run these commands in Terminal. Where lvUUID is the last lvUUID reported by the previous Terminal command. If it doesn't, you can make one by doing the following.įirstly, if the yosemite dvd makes a core storage logical volume, revert it to get partitions back to normal by running these 2 commands in terminal. I don't know yet if the yosemite dvd will create a recovery partition. Hence the terminal method instead.Īlso, the mavericks dvd did not make a recovery partition. It did actually make a bootable dvd, but when one attempted to use it to actually do an installation, it did not work. However I will say that when mavericks was publicly released experiments were made with that and attempts to make a bootable dvd with createinstallmedia did not work properly. I'm still going to wait for public release of yosemite. I'm not curious enough to waste a DL DVD to test it yet. Not sure if that will work with yosemite. Mount the InstallESD image to 'install_app' without verifying or opening Finder I've included comments detailing what each command does. I had issues burning on the MacBook Pro 13, so I copied it to my Windows PC and used imgburn which works just fine. Then burn the *.iso file created on the desktop. Simply open up terminal (Hard Drive - Applications - Utilities - Terminal) and copy and paste each command. Will edit as I confirm with other previews/betas. So far this is confirmed with Developer Preview 1. So if you want to make issue over why I created a DVD guide vs USB, just don't waste your time. PLUS it's more economical to have a small CD booklet with each OS X version readily available for quick use. This guide however is for those computer/network technicians who still need AND use optical media for our own systems or customer systems. I wanted to share a method I've borrowed (and tweaked) from other sites in regards to making a bootable Yosemite installation DVD that works.īefore going any further, I fully know and agree that DVD installation media is old and being phased out and replaced by bootable USB installer media.
![Os x yosemite 10.10 bootable usb](https://kumkoniak.com/113.png)