Will Time Machine recognize a new RAID 1 boot volume?

I would like to convert the boot volume of my Mac Pro to a RAID 1 mirror (using a second internal hard disk) with Disk Utility. But will Time Machine recognize the RAID mirror as the boot volume it's been happily backing up and continue to back up incrementally? Or will Time Machine regard the RAID mirror as a new volume and therefore do a full backup, consuming quite a lot of disk space on the Time Machine disk? Does anyone here know?
In the past, I've discovered that even if I make a very high quality clone of my boot volume (using Super Duper), Time Machine will fail to recognize the clone and will insist on starting all over again with a full backup. I have not heard a reasonable explanation of why Time Machine does that, considering that the clone should be nearly identical to the original; it's not clear to me how Time Machine "recognizes" a volume. This makes me suspicious about how Time Machine will treat a new RAID 1 volume.
Thanks for any thoughts on this.

No you are right after my TM going slow someone said to download a widget which checks the log and it all ways checks UUID first thing.
P.S. Camelot can you please take a look at my http://discussions.apple.com/thread.jspa?threadID=1909838 Loop post again; you seemed to forget -thanks

Similar Messages

  • Time Machine Backup not only from boot volume

    hello
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    Who has a solution
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  • Will time machine do a full backup of external volume (extra storage) after new logic board?

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    Due to NAS issues, when I started a new time machine backup it did not have the old backups available. My question is do I need to delete them or will time machine automatically reclaim the space?  There is only one sparse bundle but when I enter time machine I don't see my historic backups.  I use a synology DS212 for my time machine.  Started a new backup which is 218gb but it says 618 gb is occupied  therefore it looks like 2 or 3 backups are still on the disk. Before my NAS issues the last backup was in 2014.  As you can see there is a second sparse bundle from 2012.  Not sure what that is.

    This is an old message now, but what happened to me similarly was:
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    At least I had good Time Machine backups on an NAS drive (Synology DS212j), or so I thought - when I started Time Machine up again, the old backup file was gone, replaced by a new one using my "new computer" name. The old file was gone both by directly mounting the NAS drive and by clicking "Enter Time Machine".
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    As usual when things get complicated with computers (not just Apple computers) there was never a warning message. Something like "YOU'RE ABOUT TO DELETE A TIME MACHINE BACK-UP FILE!!!" would have made my life a lot simpler.
    BTW, I did try a "restore from Time Machine" option the first thing I had my "new computer" (old hardware, 2009 iMac) up and running, using Migration Assistant, and it ran for many hours and then failed in the wee hours - what that has to do with anything I'm not sure.
    I'm not sure that I have a question about this other than "why do these things happen to me?", but it's a warning. Apart from that I've been very happy with the stability and reliability (but not the cost or set-up complexity) of NAS vs. directly-cabled external drives.
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  • Time machine doesn't recognize old time machine backups after new drive

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  • How do I restore from time machine on a new macbook pro ?

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    lounginBob wrote:
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  • Time machine was not working.  I bought a new time machine and migrated time machine files to new time capsule; not recognized by yosemite

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  • If my Mac explodes, will Time Machine be any use?

    Would appreciate some clarification on how Time Machine works. Currently I occasionally back up iTunes and iPhoto files manually to an external hard drive, so that if I lose my Mac completely and have to buy a new one, then I can just import the saved files from the external HD. Will Time Machine now take care of this for me? - Will files backed up using TM be recoverable onto a different Mac, or even a PC?
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    When you boot a new Mac with Leopard installed there is an option to Restore From Time Machine, so yes.

  • Restoring Time Machine backup to new drive in G5 iSight

    Hi all
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    Scott

    So, You're saying I can do this from a different computer with its own Time Machine?
    In other words, I have my Time Machinedrive  from the dead iMac and a fresh, formatted drive both hooked up to an unrelated computer with its own Time Machine.
    If I enter Time Machine on that computer won't it show me the data it backs up for that computer only?
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  • How will Time Machine react? Moving iPhoto Library from one HDD to another

    Hi,
    I had to move my iPhoto library from one external drive to another. The iPhoto library was backed up via time machine.
    Is there a way that I can "teach" Time Machine that the iPhoto-Backup from the old hard drive now belongs to the new drive???
    Greetings from Austria!
    EDIT:
    I haven't made a backup since moving the iphoto library. But now I wonder, maybe: Will time machine automatically recognize that the iphoto library just has been moved? And that it's not a "new" library?

    If you have any problems with the library in the new account you might have to download and run BatChmod on the library to reset the ownership and permissions to the new account owner for all of the files in the library.  User the settings shown in the screenshot below:
    Click to view full size
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    OT

  • How do I restore my iPhoto library from my old macbook (stored in time machine) to my new iMac?

    I have my old macbook backed up on my time machine.  The problem is, when i enter time machine on my new iMac, I can only restore files from the current iMac's backups.  I can go to finder, and find my files under the "shared>airport time capsule" menu, but I don't know how to safely and accurately restore the iPhoto library to the current iMac's iPhoto.
    Most of the searches I did on this topic kept advising to enter time machine, find your file and hit restore, but I can not select files from my macbook's backup in time machine on the current iMac.

    Linc Davis wrote:
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    This seemed to do the trick.  I found the iPhoto library file and chose restore.  The question now is where to put the iPhoto library file.

  • HT201250 When getting a replacement Seagate hard drive for my Imac through Apple, will they restore my system to it's current state? Or will I have to do it myself though Time Machine? Will Time machine restore all the programs as well?

    Apple has determined that certain Seagate 1TB hard drives used in 21.5-inch and 27-inch iMac systems may fail. These systems were sold between October 2009 and July 2011.
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    Most of them will tell you to backup your data.
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  • HT4413 When migrating from time machine to my new hard drive, only some files and applications and setting are transferred, not all of them. In my latest back up I have them all. How can I fix that?

    When migrating from time machine to a new hard drive, not all is transferd, only partial documents, applications , settings etc. How can I migrate the latest back-up with all the content.

    sohs wrote:
    When migrating from time machine to a new hard drive, not all is transferd, only partial documents, applications , settings etc. How can I migrate the latest back-up with all the content.
    If you want to use Time Machine to recover the contents of one of its a backups to a new drive, follow the instructions in Mac OS X 10.6: Recovering your entire system. Note that you must select the "Restore System From Backup" option from the Utilities menu of the Installer disc to do this.
    Also note that if you are transferring files to a hard drive to be used with a different computer, you should use Migration Assistant instead. This intentionally will not copy everything because some settings, applications, etc. are not compatible computer-to-computer. Migration Assistant will copy everything that is.

  • I need to erase my hard drive and start anew, will time Machine(external drive) and all the discs I got with my computer be enough to restart things

    I need to erase my hard drive and start anew, will time Machine(external drive) and all the discs I got with my computer be enough to restart things.  And secondly does RAM memory cards go bad.  Here's the info on my IMac:
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