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Boot into recovery startrail 4
Boot into recovery startrail 4




boot into recovery startrail 4
  1. #BOOT INTO RECOVERY STARTRAIL 4 WINDOWS 10#
  2. #BOOT INTO RECOVERY STARTRAIL 4 PRO#
  3. #BOOT INTO RECOVERY STARTRAIL 4 ISO#
  4. #BOOT INTO RECOVERY STARTRAIL 4 WINDOWS#

Is there anything I could do to get back into my Windows system? I have gone through the steps of this fix and come undone at point 6: It tells me the volume cannot be found. In macOS, typing diskutil list returns this: #: TYPE NAME SIZE IDENTIFIERĢ: Apple_HFS Macintosh HD 850.0 GB disk0s2ģ: Apple_Boot Recovery HD 650.0 MB disk0s3Ĥ: Microsoft Basic Data BOOTCAMP 149.2 GB disk0s4Ģ: Apple_HFS Macintosh SSD 959.3 GB disk1s2ģ: Apple_Boot Recovery HD 650.0 MB disk1s3Ģ: Apple_HFS Floola (MacOS X) 45.4 MB disk4s2 Is it possible it is something to do with the EFI folder being recreated in recovery? It seems since recovering the Macintosh HD associated with my Bootcamp partition, it has lost its association. I can also see Bootcamp in the Startup Disk menu. I can see the Bootcamp partition and Windows files in the Finder, as well as in Disk Utility (although "First Aid" is greyed out). The issue I now have is the option for Windows doesn't show up when holding down the Alt/ Option key during startup. I have since restored it from the recovery boot menu. However, in the process of assigning more disk space to Windows, I accidentally deleted the original Macintosh HD. I continued using Windows through the old HDD via Bootcamp.

boot into recovery startrail 4

Then I installed a new SSD with no issues.

boot into recovery startrail 4

#BOOT INTO RECOVERY STARTRAIL 4 WINDOWS 10#

I had macOS and Windows 10 installed through Bootcamp on my iMac (Mid-2011) and everything worked fine. bcdboot C:\windows /s S:Įnter the command shown below, then select option to "Turn off your PC". Enter the command shown below to recreate the boot files. Here I will assume the BOOTCAMP partition is assign the drive letter C. diskpartĮnter the command below to assign drive letter S to the EFI partition. Use the diskpart command to determine the drive letter for BOOTCAMP partition. The result should be the image shown below. In the image shown below, select "Command Prompt". In the image shown below, select "Troubleshoot". In the image shown below, select "Repair your computer". Below is an image of what is initially displayed by the Windows 10 installer. Open a Windows Command Prompt window, by following the procedure outlined in this step.

boot into recovery startrail 4

From the Startup Manager, select the icon labeled "EFI Boot". If the root folder of the flash drive contains the file AutoUnattend.xml, you will need to rename the file to NoAutoUnattend.xml.īoot to the flash drive. For your model Mac, I believe the Boot Camp Assistant will aid in the creation of the Windows installer flash drive. Next you will need 16 GB or larger flash drive.

#BOOT INTO RECOVERY STARTRAIL 4 ISO#

First download the 64-bit Windows 10 iso from this Microsoft web site. If you do not have this flash drive, you will have to build one. I suppose you will need a Window 10 installer flash drive.Is there anything I could do to get back into my Windows system? Many thanks in advance. In macOS, typing diskutil list returns this: /dev/disk0 (internal, physical):Ģ: Apple_APFS Container disk1 164.0 GB disk0s2ģ: Microsoft Basic Data BOOTCAMP 86.3 GB disk0s3Ġ: APFS Container Scheme - +164.0 GB disk1ġ: APFS Volume Macintosh HD 148.7 GB disk1s1 However, selecting the latter and reboot would lead to a black screen with error message reading "No bootable device found." Also, System Preferences->Startup Disk still recognizes two System, the macOS and the "BOOTCAMP Windows". Now when I boot into macOS, I can still see the BOOTCAMP partition with my Windows files on it. If I remember correctly, I deleted the original EFI folder by doing this in Ubuntu: $ sudo mkdir -p /mnt/sda1 I wonder if there is a way to recover the EFI files/entries and fix this problem so I can boot into Windows again? I noticed the EFI folder in /dev/disk0s1/ (the EFI partition) has only an APPLE folder but is missing the Microsoft one. However, in the process I accidentally deleted the original EFI folder (not the partition, just the folder) and now the option for Windows doesn't show up when holding down ALT/Option key during startup, though I am able to boot into macOS and Ubuntu without problem. Then I tried installing Ubuntu on an external drive and setting up pure-EFI triple boot.

#BOOT INTO RECOVERY STARTRAIL 4 PRO#

I had macOS and Windows 10 installed through Bootcamp on my Macbook Pro (late 2013) and everything worked fine.






Boot into recovery startrail 4