Can you stop a transfer from a Time Machine backup?

I just bought a new mbpro and am doing a transfer from a time machine backup.  Can I stop and restart it?

Yes, but the transfer is likely to be corrupted and should not be relied upon. I recommend erasing what was transferred.

Similar Messages

  • Can you extract individual files from a time machine backup if you have filevault turned on?

    Can't figure out how to do this any ideas?

    Just to add a bit more to this I'm trying use migration assistant to copy stuff off a previously backed up Mac

  • I had to reformat my OSX 10.5.8 and i can't restore my emails from my time machine backup from an external hard drive - only the latest (post backup) time machine back ups are available to restore. Please can any help

    I had to reformat my OSX 10.5.8 and I can't restore my emails from my time machine backup from an external hard drive - only the latest (post backup) time machine back ups are available to restore. Please can any help? I can find the mail folder in my libraries, but the Restore Button is grayed out

    OSX treats the reformatted drive as a different one; it's the same as replacing it, and the old one is no longer connected.
    See #E3 in  Time Machine - Troubleshooting to see and restore from the "old" drive.
    And, you may not want to restore via the Finder; see the blue box in #15 of  Time Machine - Frequently Asked Questions.

  • Can I manually recover files from a Time Machine backup?

    I'm just about to perform a fresh install of OS X Lion.  I plan to re-install the apps I need from scratch so only need my files backed up (iTunes/Aperture library, documents folder etc).  At the moment I have time machine backing up to an external USB disk. 
    Do I need to copy my Music/Pictures/Documents folders to another USB disk before doing a fresh install of Lion or can I just copy/paste them from my time machine backup disk (would save a lot of time)?  I don't want to do a time machine recovery, recover preferences or apps etc - just manually recover my data.
    Thanks.

    JBF80 wrote:
    I want to copy all of my files, but not settings or applications.  I'm happy to copy/paste the Documents, Pictures and Music directories from the TM disk.
    Well, that is what I said ("You can customize what to transfer")

  • Can I restore my mac from a Time Machine backup once I have used BootCamp to partition and set up Windows (without erasing all of the Windows content)?

    A few months ago I partitioned my mac using BootCamp and successfully installed Windows and a few Windows-only programs (games).  I never restored my mac from the Time Machine backup and now I would really like all of my files back on my mac.  I am wondering if I insert the osx install disc and restore from Time Machine backup, will that get rid of the partition I made for Windows?  Will the Windows side of my hard drive stay in tact or will everything on that side get erased when I restore the mac side from the Time Machine backup.  It was a HUUUUUUUGE pain to do the BootCamp partition and get everything Windows set up and I would really like to not have to do that all over again.  I just want to make sure that if I insert the mac osx install disc and restore from Time Machine backup it will only affect the Mac partition, NOT the Windows partition.

    Hi,
    Time Machine does not touch your BootCamp Windows.
    It simply said ignores it completely.
    Nonetheless, I am curious as to why you wanna restore a Time Machine backup.
    Usually during partitioning with the BootCamp Assistant in OSX to make the Windows partition your OSX stays intact.
    Regards
    Stefan

  • IPhoto computer transfer from a time machine backup

    I switched to another macbook and no longer have the original. I saved the time machine backup of my iphoto from the old computer onto an external harddrive. Now I want to transfer it to my new computer. When transfer the photos it gives me 3 or more multiple copies of each photo or folder. The event names are not saved and the pictures are all over the place. Is there a way that I can get it to be just like it was without having to manually organize every photo?! In retrospect, this was a bad idea.
    Any help would be terrific!

    This may be a TM question - as far as iPhoto is concerned you need to restore the iPhoto library intact as a single entity - it sounds like you are importing the ole iPhoto library into a new iPhoto library - this is not the way to do it
    LN

  • How to restore just Mavericks from a Time Machine backup

    Macbook Pro 15", (early 2011) 2.0 GHz, 8GB memory
    After having my WD 750GB HD crash, I decided that I would opt for a smaller (256GB) SSD drive and just put Mavericks and my apps on the new drive and keep my user files on an external drive. I've installed and formatted the new drive but I can't figure out how to install just OSX from Time Machine since the entire backup is too big for my new drive.  Before the drive failed, I had installed the latest update for Mavericks (10.9.3?) Thoughts?

    I think you should do the following:
    Install Mavericks, Lion/Mountain Lion Using Internet Recovery
    Be sure you backup your files to an external drive or second internal drive because the following procedure will remove everything from the hard drive.
    Boot to the Internet Recovery HD:
    Restart the computer and after the chime press and hold down the COMMAND-OPTION- R keys until a globe appears on the screen. Wait patiently - 15-20 minutes - until the Recovery main menu appears.
    Partition and Format the hard drive:
    Select Disk Utility from the main menu and click on the Continue button.
    After DU loads select your newly installed hard drive (this is the entry with the mfgr.'s ID and size) from the left side list. Click on the Partition tab in the DU main window.
    Under the Volume Scheme heading set the number of partitions from the drop down menu to one. Click on the Options button, set the partition scheme to GUID then click on the OK button. Set the format type to Mac OS Extended (Journaled.) Click on the Partition button and wait until the process has completed. Quit DU and return to the main menu.
    Reinstall Lion/Mountain Lion. Mavericks: Select Reinstall Lion/Mountain Lion, Mavericks and click on the Install button. Be sure to select the correct drive to use if you have more than one.
    Note: You will need an active Internet connection. I suggest using Ethernet if possible because it is three times faster than wireless.
    You can find more about restoring from a Time Machine backup at Pondini's Time Machine FAQ for help with all things Time Machine.
    You

  • Can i restore from a time machine backup that is not the latest one?

    I am trying to restore from a May 7th time machine backup.  At that time my username was michaelhood.  I had a system crash and when my computer was returned to me I inadvertently set it up under a different username, thinking I would do the restore later.  Between May 13 and today, Time machine did backups under the name mhoo4494.  Changing the name didn't let me access my May 7 backup, nor did creating a different user account.  I have erased the hard drive and am reinstalling from the Install CD.  I have set up a third user name.  I now want to restore my data from the Time Machine May 7 backup.  How do I do that?  Migration assistant saw two users -- mhoo and mhoo4494 (michaelhood was not an option).  I selected them both, but got no data for either  -- no docs, no music, no pictures.  This procedure should not be this hard~!!

    Hi uclamikey90,
    It is possible, using Migration Assistant, to restore the contents of your hard drive selectively. See this article -
    Mac OS X v10.6: How to use Migration Assistant to transfer files from a Time Machine backup - Apple Support
    In particular -
    To migrate data from a Time Machine backup
    In Finder, press Command-Shift-U.
    Double-click Migration Assistant.
    Click "Continue" and enter an administrator name and password when prompted.
    Select the "From a Time Machine backup or other disk" option, then click "Continue".
    Select your Time Machine backup disk or Time Capsule (enter the user name and or password if prompted), then click "Continue".  
    Select the Time Machine backup you would like to restore (such the most current one you just made), then click "Continue".
    Select Items to Migrate, then click "Continue".  Note: The "Continue" button will be dimmed until the "Calculating…" stage is complete.  
    A user account sheet may appear if you have a user name on your Mac that is the same user name in your Time Machine backup.  You will have to give the username in your Time Machine backup a new username to avoid conflicts.  Note: This will create a new user account on your Mac to hold the data from the Time Machine backup. After migration, you can use the /Users/Shared folder to transfer data files the accounts.
    Migration Assistant will begin the process of transferring the items you selected to migrate. When it is finished, click "Quit" to exit.
    When you reach step 7, deselect items that you do not wish to migrate. Videos, photos and music are likely candidates for this as they take up a lot of disk space. You can later put items on an external hard drive.
    Thanks for using Apple Support Communities.
    Best,
    Brett L 

  • In migrating to a 21.3" iMac from a Time Machine backup, can I do this more than once?

    In migrating to a 21.3" iMac from a Time Machine backup, can I do this more than once?

    David,
    My apologies....I was working on questions from a different thread and thought yours was part of that one.  Your question is fine where it is....
    Now....that being said, I'm afraid I don't know the answer to your question.  I know you can exclude certain items from being backed up in Time Machine, which would save disk space on your external drive. But, you'd first have to calculate how much disk space you're using for the different things you want to back up vs. those you want to exclude.
    I think it MIGHT be possible to do what you want, but (in my honest opinion) it's a recipe for a LOT of headaches should things not work out as you calculated. Better (again, in my opinion) to just pick up a larger external hard drive and transfer everything as Time Machine was designed.
    Just my $0.02 worth.

  • How can I restore my EQ settings from a Time Machine backup?

    I recently reinstalled Mavericks, and restored my user account from a Time Machine backup. In doing so I appeared to have 'lost' my personal EQ settings in iTunes, of which I had perfected quite a few to suit various headphones and speakers I've found myself using over the years.
    I have a pre-reinstallation copy of the com.apple.iTunes.eq.plist file (found in /Users/username/Library/Preferences) that I believe contains my EQ settings; opening it in Textedit I can see references to the EQ settings I created.
    Having tried restoring this particular file from Time Machine and restarting and finding iTunes doesn't recognise the [old] custom com.apple.iTunes.eq.plist file, does anyone know a way I can re-import my old EQ settings, or do I have to try and manually create them again? (gah)
    Thanks for any light you can shed on this!

    Enter your Time Machine backup (via the TM icon in the menu bar) and find this file
    /Users/username/Library/Preferences/com.apple.iTunes.eq.plist
    and hit Restore.
    It didn't reflect in iTunes immediately, but after a restart it appears to read the new (old) plist file. You should have your old EQ settings back.
    Let me know if it worked for you...

  • I have accidentally deleted off my Mac a preferences file for Adobe photoshop and now the program cannot initialize. I have talked to Apple and then say that if Adobe can isolate the file they can help me restore it from my time machine. How do I isolate

    I have accidentally deleted off my Mac a preferences file for Adobe photoshop and now the program cannot initialize. I have talked to Apple and then say that if Adobe can isolate the file they can help me restore it from my time machine. How do I isolate the file ?

    Do you have the path to this file and name of this file?

  • I restored a Macbook Pro from a Time Machine backup and now none of my passwords are working (and I know they are the correct passwords).  What can I do?

    I restored a Macbook Pro from a Time Machine backup and now none of my passwords are working (and I know they are the correct passwords).  What can I do?

    First, make sure caps lock is not on.
    Another reason why the password might not be recognized is that the keyboard layout (input source) has been switched without your realizing it. You can select one of the available layouts by choosing from the flag menu in the upper right corner, if it's showing, or cycle through them by pressing the key combination command-space or command-option-space. See also this support article.
    If the user account is associated with an Apple ID, and you know the Apple ID password, then maybe the Apple ID can be used to reset your user account password. In OS X 10.10 and later, this option also works with FileVault, but only if you enabled it when you activated FileVault. It's not retroactive. Otherwise, see below.
    Note: If you've activated FileVault, this procedure doesn't apply. Follow instead these instructions.
    Start up in Recovery mode. When the OS X Utilities window appears, select
              Utilities ▹ Terminal
    from the menu bar at the top of the screen—not from any of the items in the OS X Utilities window.
    In the window that opens, type this:
    resetp
    Press the tab key. The partial command you typed will automatically be completed to this:
    resetpassword
    Press return. A Reset Password window opens. Close the Terminal window to get it out of the way.
    Select the startup volume ("Macintosh HD," unless you gave it a different name) if not already selected. You won't be able to do this if FileVault is active.
    Select your username from the menu labeled Select the user account if not already selected.
    Follow the prompts to reset the password. It's safest to choose a password that includes only the characters a-z, A-Z, and 0-9.
    Select
               ▹ Restart
    from the menu bar.
    You should now be able to log in with the new password, but the Keychain will be reset (empty.) If you've forgotten the Keychain password (which is ordinarily the same as the login password), there's no way to recover it.

  • Can i reinstall OS X Mountain Lion from scratch from a Time Machine Backup

    Can i reinstall OS X Mountain Lion from scratch from a Time Machine Backup
    Asking because i'm a new mac user having used windows since 3.11, wanting to know if the Time Machine bacup was enough or will i need to make a seperate OS install disk or usb drive ???
    thanx in advance guys

    Lizardcarter's instructions are correct, you can (and possibly should) consider a second external HD to create a bootable clone. Redundancy in backups is a very good thing because backup can fail too. A bootable clone is an external HD that has a mirror of your internal HD so if the internal HD does crash you can boot from the clone, something that cannot be done from TM. This means you will be down for minutes and can resume work until you have had the internal HD replaced. Never use an external HD for both TM and a bootable clone, each should have it's own EHD. The reason being is if the EHD crashes you have lost ALL of your backup and are dead, don't laugh it happens! To create a bootable clone get either SuperDuper or Carbon Copy Cloner (both about $30) and you're pretty set. Many people on these forums (including myself) use that strategy and yes I have had a backup fail.

  • Do I need startup discs to upgrade hardware on MacBook Pro or can I restore the hard drive from from a Time Machine backup?

    do I need startup discs to upgrade hardware on MacBook Pro or can I restore the hard drive from from a Time Machine backup?

    Ok, well go and grab a small 2.5" hard drive enclosure so you can put the new drive in & temporarily use it like an external hard drive.
    Download Carbon Copy Cloner or Super Duper and make a bootable clone of your current HDD on the new HDD.
    Once that's done you can test the clone by booting from it. To do this hold Optioni while booting to select the external (new) drive. If everything looks ok, you can go ahead and swap over the HDD's.
    So much easier.

  • HT201250 After restoring from a time machine backup using migration assistant I can't log in

    Hi, I recently bought a Mac Pro and using a Mountain Lion boot disk I made installed a fresh ML install which went fine. During the final part of install it gives you the option of restoring user data etc etc from a time machine backup which I have from my MacBook Pro which again in principal went fine until I went to log in when I got the message 'An error has occurred unable to log into this account a this time'.
    Looking on the web I thought at first it was a password issue so restarted with command-r and reset the password, however the same error still occurs. I don't think it is password issue as if you deliberately enter the wrong password it rejects it immediately where as with the correct password it hangs for about 15secs before throwing up the above error.
    Can anyone offer any advice?
    The only thing I can possibly think of is that on my MBP where the time machine backup is from my home folder is on a 2nd HDD that is not the boot disk and I only have a single HDD on my MacPro.......

    You might try to access the desired Time Machine backup from "Browse Other Time Machine Disks" (click Time Machine icon in the Dock).
    Also, you might find some help here.

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