- Joined
- May 7, 2014
- Messages
- 95
- Motherboard
- HP Probook 450 G1
- CPU
- i5 4200M
- Graphics
- HD 4600
- Mac
- Mobile Phone
I solved that problem manipulating with partitions. I found this, it helped me
The installation of Yosemite has created a logical volume group. You can fix it this way:
If the yosemite installer creates logical volume groups, you can run this in terminal to get your partitions back to normal. This will also make a recovery partition visible when you boot up when holding the option key down.
diskutil cs list
and then
diskutil coreStorage revert lvUUID
where lvUUID is the last lvUUID reported by the previous Terminal command.
You may have to restart for everything to get back to normal after you have run these commands in Terminal.
http://forums.macrumors.com/showthread.php?t=1769775
second post
The installation of Yosemite has created a logical volume group. You can fix it this way:
If the yosemite installer creates logical volume groups, you can run this in terminal to get your partitions back to normal. This will also make a recovery partition visible when you boot up when holding the option key down.
diskutil cs list
and then
diskutil coreStorage revert lvUUID
where lvUUID is the last lvUUID reported by the previous Terminal command.
You may have to restart for everything to get back to normal after you have run these commands in Terminal.
http://forums.macrumors.com/showthread.php?t=1769775
second post