Mac Os X Lion Basesystem.dmg

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Install Mac OS X Lion.app System private Library boot.efi usr. Looking inside of InstallESD.dmg, take note of two important files: Install Mac OS X Lion.app and BaseSystem.dmg. Yes, that is another Install Mac OS X Lion.app. That installer runs when booted from InstallESD.dmg. It is what actually installs Lion to the hard drive. This is the Mac OS X Base System. Notice that the Recovery HD is only 650MB, but Mac OS X Base System is 1.4GB? That's because it's a compressed disk image (and I'm pretty sure that compression is the reason they bother with all this disk image trickery). Actually, BaseSystem.dmg is compressed down to only 451MB (at least in OS X v10.7.0). Jun 11, 2015  How to Make Bootable USB drive with.DMG for Tiger, Leopard, Lion, Mountain Lion, Mavericks OS X. How to Create a Mac OS X Lion Install Disk. Leopard, Lion, Mountain Lion, Mavericks OS X.

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Mac Os X Lion Basesystem.dmg

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An interesting dilemma, indeed. The configuration of the Recovery HD seems convoluted and backward; why they'd put the entire startup system inside another disk image is beyond me--unless installing extra utilities is exactly what they're trying to prevent. I see two possible solutions:

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  1. After backing up BaseSystem.dmg, try using Disk Utility to convert the image to a read/write format. Make your mods, and convert it back. This option, of course, is highly tricky, and it’d be difficult to keep the volume bootable.

  2. Use Disk Utility to create a new (standard, visible) partition in HFS+, and Restore from BaseSystem.dmg to it. You’ll now effectively have two recovery partitions. This new one, though, not being wrapped up in an image, should be free to add files to. It seems like Mac OS X Base System has all the requisite files for starting up from, all the way down to boot.efi. You might have to also jump through a few hoops in order to get it bootable, but it should be far more straightforward than using option 1. Once you’ve done that and tested it thoroughly, you could remove the “official” Recovery HD partition.

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Might I stress: I have tried neither of these, and I’m running purely on speculation based on past experience. Proceed entirely at your own risk, and only if you know exactly what you're doing!

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