A limitation of using a hard drive as the installation source is that the binary DVD ISO image on the hard drive must be on a partition with a file system which Anaconda can mount. This can be done using a boot option, an entry in a Kickstart file, or manually in the Installation Source screen during a graphical installation. The binary ISO image can be in any directory of the hard drive, and it can have any name however, if the ISO image is not in the top-level directory of the drive, or if there is more than one image in the top-level directory of the drive, you will be required to specify the image to be used. You can use any type of hard drive accessible to the installation program, including USB flash drives. In the following example, it is disk2: $ diskutil list /dev/disk0 #: TYPE NAME SIZE IDENTIFIER 0: GUIDpartitionscheme.500.3 GB disk0 1: EFI EFI 209.7 MB disk0s1 2: AppleCoreStorage 400.0 GB disk0s2 3: AppleBoot Recovery HD 650.0 MB disk0s3 4: AppleCoreStorage 98.8 GB disk0s4 5: AppleBoot Recovery HD 650.0 MB disk0s5 /dev/disk1 #: TYPE NAME SIZE IDENTIFIER 0: AppleHFS YosemiteHD.399.6 GB disk1 Logical Volume on disk0s1 8A1-48DF-9FC5-84506DFBB7B2 Unlocked Encrypted /dev/disk2 #: TYPE NAME SIZE IDENTIFIER 0: FDiskpartitionscheme.8.0 GB disk2 1: WindowsNTFS SanDisk USB 8.0 GB disk2s1. Disk 0 is likely to be the OS X recovery disk, and Disk 1 is likely to be your main OS X installation.
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