<blockquote><font class="small">Posté à l'origine par melaure:</font><hr />
Haha !!! ah ?
[/QUOTE]
Trouvé par Nonoche dans le
forum de XLR8yourMac. Pour l'instant, ça a marché sur sa seule machine, un new bi 1.25 GHz - et je dois avouer que je n'ai pas de new PM pour faire le test :
"The process:
1. Restart with the Jaguar install CD in the drive and hold down the C key to boot off of it.
2. When the installer comes up, select Disk Utility from the menu and repartition your hard drive the way you want it. I named my partitions "Mac OS 9" and "Mac OS X" to avoid confusion, but do what you want. Make sure you check the box to install OS 9 drivers or you won't be able to boot it natively on the partition you've selected.
3. Once the partition is done, quit Disk Utility and continue with the installation. I highly recommend doing a custom installation and deselecting the multilanguage and localization support.
4. Reboot to your newly installed Jaguar and insert the first Software Restore CD (it may be named differently depending on what machine you got).
5. Open up Terminal (in /Applications/Utilities) and on the command line type:
% cd "/Volumes/Software Restore/.images"
Replace "Software Restore" with the name of your CD as it appears on the desktop (mine had "iBook" at the beginning).
6. Type ls at the command line and you should see some disk image (.dmg) files, including OS9General.dmg (again yours may be named differently than mine - I don't know).
7. Mount the disk image from the command line with open ./OS9General.dmg.
8. Open up the mounted disk image in the Finder. Also open up your empty OS 9 partition. Select all folders in the disk image and copy them to the OS 9 partition.
Once this was done, I could go into the Classic preference pane and it would recognize the system on the OS 9 partition. The Startup Disk pane also recognized the OS 9 system, and I could successfully boot OS 9 this way. But holding down the Option key at bootup only recognized OS X in the firmware, so there was more work to be done: I needed to re-bless the OS 9 System Folder from OS X. According to an article in Apple's knowledge base, here's how to do that:
1. Open System Preferences and click on Startup Disk.
2. Choose the OS 9 System Folder.
3. Click on Show All in the upper left corner of the window. When it asks if you want to change, select Change.
4. Click on Startup Disk and repeat the procedure a second time."