![]() The only thing I don't see that Bigshwabel stated is that I cannot access local recovery with just holding down the option key when booting up. I did a test and internet recovery for me is indeed Command Option-R. By default, the recovery partition is OS X Lion (10.7). ![]() I hope I made that clearer, but I suppose it is a little difficult to explain without actually showing it, heh. We can create a directory called efi within /Volumes by running the following command: mkdir /Volumes/efi. On Mac OS X, mount points are typically created in /Volumes. A mount point is a directory where a non-booted volume is mounted. In the past before El Capitan, you entered Internet Recovery through Command-R, and the Recovery Mode it entered was the version of OS X that came with your computer (for example, if you bought your Mac with Mountain Lion, and you updated to Yosemite, Internet Recovery would be the Mountain Lion version of recovery). 1) Access the drive from another copy of OS X. In this case, the volume identifier of the EFI partition is disk0s1. It seems Apple disabled entering the Recovery Partition from the Startup Manager (holding down the Option key at boot). Internet Recovery changed to Command-Option-R. ![]() It seems that entering the Recovery Partition is now by just using the shortcut Command-R (which used to be Internet Recovery). What it is, and what it will need to be turned off for, we’ll. I looked into it further, and it seems Apple changed things around since El Capitan. System Integrity Protection, or SIP, is one of the new features of OS X El Capitan, aimed at protecting the integrity of the system.
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