Clean installed Snow Leopard, but Lion Time Machine backup was not recognized.

I erased the Macintosh HD and clean installed the Snow Leopard. But when I try to use the Time machine backup to recovery my documents, the external hard disk can not even be recognized. It says "To use this disk, connect it to a Mac with Mac OS X v10.7 or later. The format of the disk was created using Lion which can not be read by Snow Leopard." The fact is that the format of the disk is Mac OS Extended (journaled) and was indeed created by Lion from windows format. So how can I read the disk using Snow Leopard? Thanks.

I it a general problem, affecting e.g. a Mac with multiple partitions.  I get the same with trying to mount 10.7 from 10.6.8.
Not ideal.  Hope a fix will be found. I'd suggest to report this to Apple.

Similar Messages

  • Issue installing Snow Leopard thru the Time Machine backup.

    Might be a beginners Q, but I will ask because it's not being solved somehow.
    I've tried installing the 10.6 Snow Leopard a few times but am confused. First time I installed without restoring the whole Mac HD from a backup few days ago (which I want to do because it is having trouble with my current Mac HD settings. I did this for the 2nd attempt)
    When I did this, though I probably had every file there, I had major problems with my permissions(some files don't let me access says I have no permission) Also it was like the whole setting I had in 10.5.8 was gone.... What I thought is if I did a upgrade, everything will stay the same and all that will happen is it will become 10.6 snow leopard.
    So next I restarted with inserting SL disk, and restarted the computer to install the SL and also restore my system from few days ago from time machine backup. This started and it did the restoration, and when everything is done, it is back to my 10.5.8 setting I want....but no 10.6 upgrade done(ie still 10.5.8) I am so confused. I did all this with my snow leopard disk but no upgrade happened!!
    Am I missing some step? If someone can point out something that will be great.
    Thank you,
    n

    Glenn Carter wrote:
    First, what OS version were you running before you attempted the first restore? Approximately, what was the date and time of the last Time Machine backup before you attempted the first restore? That is the backup snapshot you want to aim for if you attempt another restore. However...
    ...have you permitted Time Machine to resume backups since the first restore attempt? If "No", then good. Do the following:
    a. Wipe the drive again.
    b. Install SL from the DVD (Do Not perform a "Restore..."), just a simple install of SL.
    c. At the end, when given the opportunity to migrate your user accounts & apps from your Time Machine backup do it. If the most recent TM backups contained your most up-to-date user account, then it should migrate the most recent data & apps.
    d. Then use Software Update to bring the system up-to-date.
    If, however, you have permitted Time Machine to resume backups since your first restore attempt (described in your original post) then the user account you are after is no longer available for migration. You will need to do the following:
    a. Using the SL DVD, perform a "Restore System form Backup...". Make sure you go back and pick the correct date and time that represented your user account before you performed the first restore (described in your original post). It should bring your system back to what it was before but only if you choose the correct date and time.
    Any further questions?
    Glenn Carter wrote:
    First, what OS version were you running before you attempted the first restore? Approximately, what was the date and time of the last Time Machine backup before you attempted the first restore? That is the backup snapshot you want to aim for if you attempt another restore. However...
    ...have you permitted Time Machine to resume backups since the first restore attempt? If "No", then good. Do the following:
    a. Wipe the drive again.
    b. Install SL from the DVD (Do Not perform a "Restore..."), just a simple install of SL.
    c. At the end, when given the opportunity to migrate your user accounts & apps from your Time Machine backup do it. If the most recent TM backups contained your most up-to-date user account, then it should migrate the most recent data & apps.
    d. Then use Software Update to bring the system up-to-date.
    If, however, you have permitted Time Machine to resume backups since your first restore attempt (described in your original post) then the user account you are after is no longer available for migration. You will need to do the following:
    a. Using the SL DVD, perform a "Restore System form Backup...". Make sure you go back and pick the correct date and time that represented your user account before you performed the first restore (described in your original post). It should bring your system back to what it was before but only if you choose the correct date and time.
    Any further questions?
    <<<<First, what OS version were you running before you attempted the first restore?
    It was 10.5.8
    And the rest it was confusing and before I read your post I have gone to the apple store late afternoon today.
    I explained the above and I was suspecting the permissions deal was causing the problem. What the mac guy did was went to some option to repair my user account permissions and everything worked out!!
    When the guy did this I had the 10.6 system with lotta files having permission problems and also lotta small settings gone. But when repairing the user account permissions, all the settings came back and the os was 10.6!
    Bottom line I think I screwed up account settings bad, and that was causing the problem.
    thanks again glenn for all your help. If all goes wrong again, I will definitely follow some of the advice you mentioned here(^^)
    cheers,
    n

  • Restore data (iTunes Library, Photo's, files etc.) to Snow Leopard from a Time Machine backup made on OSX Lion?

    Hi,
    I have OSX Lion and have been backing up to Time Machine, I now want to do a clean install of Snow Leopard (not from backup), but can I restore my data (iTunes Library, Photo's, files etc.) to Snow Leopard from a Time Machine backup made on OSX Lion?
    Thanks.

    You should be able to restore iTunes and iPhoto files if the Lion system was running the same version of those applications that you'll have on the Snow Leopard system.  However, you won't be able to restore files for applications like Mail, Address Book, or Safari, as the versions of those won't match.

  • I just hate Lion OS. Can I go back to snow leopard using my time machine backups?

    I just hate Lion OS. Can I go back to snow leopard using my time machine backups? it's a big mess... no more rosetta or Isync ot network usefulness for me... how do I go back to snow leopard using my time machine backups without losing the files i created after the "Lion upgrade"? I want to restore my whole Macbook, but fear to lose these recently created files, some help?

    mauijiminar
    Don't patronise him. This is Apples fault. Next time dont comment if you have nothing good to say!

  • Restore to Snow Leopard from Lion Time Machine

    Hello,
    I want to downgrade from OS X Lion to Snow Leopard (due to numerou reasons being discussed all around). Problem is, after upgrading to Lion, I erased my Snow Leopard Time Machine backup, and created a new one while running Lion (I edited a lot of files and stuff). My question is once I downgrade to SL, using the method of erasing the HDD completely and doing a fresh install, can I restore my backup from the Time Machine created in Lion? If no, then how can I access my files and folders in Snow Leopard then.
    Sorry if this has ben posted in the wrong section, but I would appreciate some help on this.
    Cheers
    ~n~

    Downgrade Lion to Snow Leopard
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    3. Under the Volume Scheme heading set the number of partitions from the drop down menu to one. Set the format type to Mac OS Extended (Journaled.) Click on the Options button, set the partition scheme to GUID then click on the OK button. Click on the Partition button and wait until the process has completed.
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  • Is it possible to reinstall Snow Leopard without a Time Machine backup?

    I have Lion but I absolutely loathe everything about it and want Snow Leopard back; I have my SL install disk but everything I've read says I'll need a Time Machine backup which I don't have. If I try to downgrade, will I lose all my programs and things? Is there a way around that at all?

    Unfortunately, Time Machine will not backup a NAS (e.g. AirDisk). AirDisk can be used as a TM backup drive as you have already discovered. The only way to backup the iTunes library on your HDD is to connected directly to your Mac. TM will be able to back up to your 1TB HDD connected to your Extreme. If you are dead set with keeping your iTunes connected to your Extreme, I believe CarbonCopyCloner (donateware) or SuperDuper! (purchase) may support backup of a NAS to a NAS.
    P.S. I've notified the moderator to remove your second post.

  • Snow Leopard forgets my Time Machine backups

    I have just installed Snow Leopard on 4 machines and on each of them unless I keep selecting the time capsule backup folder from the preferences page it is only showing time machine backups from when Snow Leopard was installed. e.g. today.
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    This has been reported by a few people.
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  • Does OS X Server 10.6 Snow Leopard support client Time-Machine backups

    Hello,
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    Thanks,
    -Mike

    mausimo wrote:
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  • I accidentally downloaded lion. I did a timemachine back-up and tried to reload snow leopard. It will not accept. How do I re-install snow leopard over lion?

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    Accidentally, eh? How, might I ask?
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