Freeze login window when connected disk for Time-Machine

MacBook, 13-inch, Early 2008, Lion 10.7.3 (same problem on 10.7, 10.7.2)
- Freeze login window when connected disk for Time-Machine.
In logs I can see they Time-Machine finished work successfully.
I have do hardware reset every time to login my laptop.

wongkh wrote:
If connecting the time machine after windows is up,both windows and the time machine works properly.
i can access the time machine hdd in windows.
Don't, Time Machine knows nothing about Windows, and vice versa.

Similar Messages

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    Hi
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    If she can't, is it then possible to connect a USB hub and have two disks hooked up to the Airport Extreme?
    Thanks for helping. I am constantly in awe of all the help people like you give people like me. Thanks!!!
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    I've gone through the manual setup and the assisted setup and can't seem to get my MacBook to use the Time Machine. Any thoughts or help would be greatly appreciated.
    Well, as the Jolly Giant points out....+this type of configuration is not supported by Apple+, so it's difficult, if not impossible, to provide a fix for something that Apple says that you cannot do. Reference these Apple Support documents regarding this topic:
    http://support.apple.com/kb/HT2038
    http://docs.info.apple.com/article.html?path=Mac/10.6/en/15139.html
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    I started getting the corruption error messages after 4-5 weeks of successful backups, so I figured that it did not make sense to continue to try to get a second computer to backup (yes, I too could not setup a second Mac to backup).
    Sorry, I could not get a second machine to backup, so can't tell you how to accomplish that goal. If you want to continue to try backing up this way, you might want to also think about a second backup strategy...just in case backups become corrupted on the WD drive.
    Maybe if Apple says you cannot do this, they just may be right?
    Message was edited by: Bob Timmons

  • I need to configure a new hard disk as backup disk for time machine. The set up program is running and it says it will take 9 days to backup about 56 GB. Is it normal ?

    I need to configure a new hard disk as backup disk for time machine.
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    Roberto 17 wrote:
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  • How large should a disk for time machine be vs the hard disk

    Can anyone tell me how large a disk for time machine be vs the size of the hard disk?

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  • HT201250 Is it possible to use Dropbox or Microsoft OneDrive as the backup disk for time machine?

    I have a MacBook Pro for which I have not set up Time Machine. I have a Dropbox account and a Microsoft OneDrive account, each with plenty of space to serve as backups. Is it possible to use either of these as THE backup disk for Time Machine? It doesn't appear intuitive from Time Machine on my MBP.
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    No. Time Machine does not work with "cloud" drives.

  • If I choose a hard drive ask my backup disk for time machine, will it clear out the data that was previously stored in my hard drive?

    If I choose a hard drive ask my backup disk for time machine, will it clear out the data that was previously stored in my hard drive?

    Hello edjhsu,
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    http://support.apple.com/kb/HT1427
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  • How to turn off the 'Use disk for Time Machine?' warning

    I have Time Machine set to OFF.
    I use cloning software instead; "SuperDuper" with a "Voyager Q" unit attached via FW 800
    I rotate my external backups HDs using 2 x 3.5" HDs.
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    I have tried the solution at;
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    Mind you, the article was written for 10.5 and I was hoping the same solution would apply to 10.6.
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    Think I just found the answer to my own question.
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  • Using 1 disk for time machine and to back up and windows machine

    ok so my parents need to back up their machines, my mother on a mac and my dad on a pc (has to use it for work). we have a single disk drive from OWC and im trying to figure out if i can partition it so my mom can use TM and my dad can still back up his machine on it?
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    -matt

    Some more info would be helpful. Depending on the Mac your mom has it should be partitioned to APM (PPC) or GUID (Intel) although this has been called into question. It should not be MBR.
    The external HDD needs to be plugged into the Mac for Time Machine to work. For Time Machine, that partition needs to be formatted HFS+ (Mac OS Extended - Journaled). The PC partition may not matter as the PC should treat that partition as a network share. However, if your intent is to occasionally plug that external directly into the PC, you need to format that partition FAT/FAT32. The Mac can read and write FAT/FAT32, but it cannot write NTFS (without a paid third party app), hence why I didn't recommend that format. Leave lots of room for the TM backup (2-3 X the Mac's content) as that will gradually grow in size.

  • External hard disk for Time Machine

    I'm considering baking up my iMac. I have a Lacie external hard disk with a Master Boot Record partition type. On it, there are already some data files from both Windows and Mac machines.
    I understand that, for Time Machine to work, the partition type needs to be changed to GUID (for Intel based Mac). Obviously, I will need to copy these data files to somewhere, then use Disk Utility to change the partition type, partition the hard disk (one partition to be used for Time Machine back-up).
    My question is, will it be safe to copy the data files (previously from Windows and Mac machines) back to another partition of the hard disk which will then has a GUID partition type? Will the files (including those from Windows machines) be usable?

    KenWong wrote:
    I'm considering baking up my iMac. I have a Lacie external hard disk with a Master Boot Record partition type. On it, there are already some data files from both Windows and Mac machines.
    I understand that, for Time Machine to work, the partition type needs to be changed to GUID (for Intel based Mac). Obviously, I will need to copy these data files to somewhere, then use Disk Utility to change the partition type, partition the hard disk (one partition to be used for Time Machine back-up).
    My question is, will it be safe to copy the data files (previously from Windows and Mac machines) back to another partition of the hard disk which will then has a GUID partition type? Will the files (including those from Windows machines) be usable?
    You're slightly mixing terminology.
    The *+Partition Map Scheme+* applies to the whole disk, whether it has one or multiple partitions. That's what needs to be GUID or +Apple Partition Map+.
    The Format applies to each partition, and may be different for each one. Your TM partition needs to be +Mac OS Extended (Journaled),+ the other one can be +MS-DOS (FAT)+ for use with Windoze.
    You can copy those files anywhere temporarily, while re-formattng the disk. It doesn't have to be a separate partition. It could even be CDs/DVDs. As long as you can copy and read back, it doesn't matter. If you put them on your boot drive, Windoze won't be able to read them while they're there, but once you get them back on a +MS-DOS (FAT)+ partition, it will.
    See the instructions in item #5 of the Frequently Asked Questions *User Tip* at the top of this forum.
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  • Anyone find a way to use an airport disk for Time Machine?

    Apple says it is not possible ( http://docs.info.apple.com/article.html?artnum=306833 ). Yet I have seen some posts of people who claim they are doing it. How?

    Here's the workaround that has been posted ...
    (NOTE: Caution!!! There is a reason Apple did not include Air Disk support for Time Machine in the current release of Leopard. I would strongly discourage implementing any workarounds, especially if the data you are backing up is critical to you. However, if you're just curious to see if it is possible, then proceed with caution.)
    Here's a workaround for the Airport disk problem that may or may not work for you:
    1) disconnect airport disk and plug into computer as a USB drive directly.
    2) Set up time machine to use this volume.
    3) In terminal cd to volume "cd /Volume/HDD"
    4) In terminal "touch .com.apple.timemachine.supported" this will create an invisible file.
    5) In terminal "sudo chown root:admin .com.apple.timemachine.supported"
    6) In terminal "sudo chmod 1775 .com.apple.timemachine.supported"
    7) In terminal "ls -l -a" the .com.apple.timemachine.supported file should be -rwxrwxr-t
    8) eject disk, unplug from mac, plug into Airport.
    9) mount at mac using connect to server in finder (command k) and afp://airportname.local./HDname
    10) see if time machine now sees the drive and tries to use it.
    As reported at Macrumors (http://forums.macrumors.com/showpost.php?p=4387985&postcount=50)

  • Proven external disk for Time Machine backups?

    I'm looking for a good, reasonably priced, external disk to temporarily use for Time Machine backups.  My 10.9.4 install is messed up and Time Machine no longer works with my ReadyNAS NV+ system.  I want to use the disk to backup my MBP and reinstall the OS.  Can someone please suggest a proven external disk (2TB+) with a USB 2.0 (or Ethernet) interface?
    Thanks,
    Ira

    Hello all,
    I decided to give my 2007 MBP one last upgrade with a new 1TB internal disk that I will install with 10.9.4 from scratch and will (slowly) migrate all my digital hoarding over to it.  I've been using the same OWC FW800/USB enclosure since upgrading the original 160GB disk way back when.  If TM still doesn't work with the new install (which will narrow down the TM issue to the ReadyNAS NV+), then I will put the current 750GB disk into the enclosure, flash it, and retry TM.
    For the record, I chose the HGST Travelstar 2.5-Inch 1TB 7200RPM SATA 6GB/s 32MB Cache internal disk. It was just $75 from Amazon and I used Amazon Points to pay for half of it.
    Regards,
    Ira

  • I'm suddenly getting the kernel panic message and constant restarts when connected to the time machine wireless network. if is switch to the BT network, all fine. no help found so far as to what's wrong or how to correct, anyone have any thoughts...

    Recently upgraded to mountain lion in order to buy the new tall tower for time machine backups. had to get technical support to help with set up as it wouldn't play ball with two computers. all working fine up until last week when the iMac started getting backup error messages. then system restarts independently when using time machine on the time machine wireless network. only stops restarting when I switch the wireless network back to he bt one, which is a pain obviously as can't back up to time machine then.  it has to be a problem with airport utility or something wireless but all says all up to date with software etc. all still works fine backing up from laptop on the wireless network, just the iMac is not happy. any help or thoughts very much appreciated.

    Hi, many thanks Bob, what you say is not unthinkable at all, although it does answer the question
    "what could I do *instead* of ..." rather than the one I actually asked, but seriously ...
    Shutting down might be an answer, although it would clear out my tmp directory - which I might not want to have to sort through looking for things I want to save every time I go to work, and also, now that nvram doesn't seem to work for disabling the boot chime, it can get a bit embarassing booting up in a busy meeting if I have forgotten to mute before I shut down. There are all sorts of other issues, such as editing documents, loading web pages and so on that I would have to set up again.
    Your suggestion of letting Apple know is a good one - thank you for the link.
    Take care,
    Mark

  • How do i make a make a backup disk for Time Machine?

    I need a backup disk for Time Machine

    You need an external hard drive. Here's a cheap SATA external hard drive case on Amazon http://www.amazon.com/Vantec-NexStar-2-5-Inch-External-Enclosure/dp/B002JQNXZC/r ef=pd_cp_pc_0
    For a hard drive try Newegg.com http://www.newegg.com/Store/SubCategory.aspx?SubCategory=380&name=Laptop-Hard-Dr ives&Order=PRICE
    Or OWC  http://eshop.macsales.com/shop/hard-drives/2.5-Notebook/

  • Changed Hard Disk for Time Machine

    I have a question, I've searched and can't find the answer (maybe I'm just not good at searching).
    I ran out of room on my external HD for time machine backups, so I added another external HD and changed the time machine location to the new HD. I did not copy any backup files to the new HD, I figured that I'd just keep the old ones on the old HD and start from scratch.
    I am using an old iMac G5 that has one (yes, one) USB2.0 port, the other USB ports are the old, slow ones. I have the new HD plugged into the USB2.0 port and the old HD plugged into one of the other ones.
    Then I selected "back up now," and it's been backing up for more than 12 hours and it's only about 1/3 of the way done according to the progress report (37.4 GB of 96.9 GB).
    Question -- does time machine automatically copy my old back up from the old HD to the new HD? That's the only thing that I can think of that would make this back up so slow. It shouldn't take 12 hours to back up 37 GB, right?

    Thanks. I think I need to just wait until it's done and then check things out. I let it run all day while I was at work, and it's another 1/3 of the way to the end. I don't want to stop it and then find out that I just need to let it run its course.
    Here is the backup log from the time machine widget:
    Backing up to: /Volumes/Backup/Backups.backupdb
    2010-06-22 18:33:57.446 FindSystemFiles[1245:713] Querying receipt database for system packages
    2010-06-22 18:34:02.962 FindSystemFiles[1245:713] Using system path cache.
    2010-06-22 18:34:03.335 FindSystemFiles[1250:713] Querying receipt database for system packages
    2010-06-22 18:34:04.293 FindSystemFiles[1250:713] Using system path cache.
    Event store UUIDs don't match for volume: Storage Central
    Event store UUIDs don't match for volume: Alternate Storage
    No pre-backup thinning needed: 116.45 GB requested (including padding), 376.49 GB available
    Copied 11 files (0 bytes) from volume Storage Central.
    Event store UUIDs don't match for volume: Storage Central

  • Changing disk for Time Machine.

    Can I just move the existing Time Machine files from the old to the new drive and then assign the new drive as the one I want to use for Time Machine?
    I just want to make sure I have the old History also on the new drive.
    Thanks

    What's the best process to create a bootable backup?
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