Guys,

Hopefully one of you all can explain this to me.

First off, I'm not saying anyone is being untruthful.  It's very very! likely 
that I may just not be understanding things entirely.  I don't clame to be 
perfect.

I have a friend who will be left unnamed who has a mac system running 
Snowleopard.  NO, it's not the guy on this list ironically.  Anyway, they had 
to recently repair disk permissions on their main internal Macintosh HD.  They 
can't upgrade to Yosemite, as their system won't support it.  Anyway, they have 
misplaced the Snowleopard DVD which came with their system.  Further, they 
don't have any other bootable partition internally nor externally.  So here 
lies my question.

How in the world were they able without the SL DVD media or another bootable 
partition to repair permissions on their main primary macintosh HD volume?

Here's the thing.  From what I remember, correct me if I'm wrong, Snowleopard 
didn't have a recovery partition, did it?  Normally, after Lion and higher, you 
could just boot, and hold down command+R to go to recovery.  From here, you 
could run Disk Utility, and repair permissions.  That's not going to work 
though in SL, as there's no recovery that I recall, hince why you got a 
physical DVD back in the days.

You can't exactly repair permissions though while booted into the OS though, as 
certain files and folders will be in use, and the volume will be locked, 
therefore not allowing a repair to be done.  So, with no media, and no external 
bootable partition, and no recovery partition, how in the world is he/she doing 
this?  Either something's not adding up here, or I'm just thoroughly confused, 
and my guess is, probably the ladder.  Just curious what on earth I'm missing 
here.  Enlighten me.

Chris.

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