Cant Restore From Time Machine!

Due to problems I was having with my Mac running slow after upgrading to Snow Leopard when it was first released, the other day I completely wiped my Mac and did a complete re-install of Snow Leopard.
The good news is that my Mac is now back to being very fast and working perfectly. The bad news is that I am unable to restore certain files from my Time Machine drive!
When I re-installed SL I completely blitzed the drive and didn't migrate my old user account from my Time Machine backup because I didn't realise I could. So my old user account was say peakoverload and when I re-installed SL I again called my account peakoverload with the same password as I used before, effectively recreating the same old user account.
I then installed the applications I wanted and set about restoring my files from Time Machine.
I entered Time Machine, went back to the day before I re-installed SL, selected the Documents folder and hit restore. All single files in the root of the documents folder were restored but any files within sub folders were not? To restore these I then had to go into the relevant sub folder in Time Machine, select the files and hit restore. I found that if files were in sub folders I got an error message saying:
"The operation can’t be completed because you don’t have permission to access some items"
I worked around this and simply restored each file(s)/folder individually.
However I then noticed that my Aperture Library file had not been fully restored showing up as 0KB whereas in Time Machine it's over 7GB.
No matter what I try I cannot restore this file getting this error message:
"The operation can’t be completed because you don’t have permission to access Aperture Library"
Looking at the permissions of this file in Time Machine it says that: peakoverload (Me) has Read & Write privilege (but is that the new me or the old me and does that matter?)
_unknown has read privilege
everyone has read privilege
If I try to add user privileges peakoverload is grayed out, presumably because it's already added but I can add administrators. However my peakoverload account is an administrator one yet even adding this permission doesnt allow me to restore the file!
Any ideas what I can do to restore this file?

Hiya peakoverload,
peakoverload wrote:
Looking at the permissions of this file in Time Machine it says that:
peakoverload (Me) has Read & Write privilege ( *but is that the new me or the*
*old me and does that matter?* )
_unknown has read privilege
everyone has read privilege
Yes, it does matter. Your "old" account, albeit named identically, was pertaining to another build/system. You could do a "get info" on the folders
affected, then change the "everyone" to read & write, apply this to all enclosed items and you should be fine. Prior to that, you may have enter your current password if the padlock on the +get info+ window is locked. But the old time machine backup would have made the backup specifically for the old user account.
NOTE "tinkering" with disk permissions can result in unwanted problems in the new system, so you need to ensure that the old aperture library file was not corrupt.
After you copied your files across, I recommend using disk utility to conduct a "repair disk permissions". That way, you know that your new (old) files will have the correct permissions for current usage.
Let me know how you get on.
NB: Apple's article about time machine backups HERE (and note that your new account would be classified as a "different" Mac.
Message was edited by: Alexandre

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    Most maintenance and repair, restore and install procedures require the use
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    I recently had to replace my 2009 Macbook Pro's hard drive.  I had the apple store upgrade the OS to Mountain Lion while it was in being repaired.  I want to restore all of my old data and files.  If I perform a restore from Time Machine, with a date prior to having the hard drive replaced, will it revert back to the old OS?

    No, it won't revert to the prior OS X but you you may have third party apps installed that were compatible with Lion that may not be compatible with Mountain Lion.
    App Compatibility Table - RoaringApps - App compatibility and feature support for OS X & iOS
    After you restore from TM, check HD > Incompatible Software

  • Will a system restore from Time Machine erase any of the data that is currently on the Mac and not in the Time Machine?

    We had a lot of data on our Mac (i.e. photos, iTunes libraries etc) which we backed up via Time Machine. The hard disk corrupted so we had to get it wiped. When we got it back, my parents started using the mac as per usual but they didn't do a full System Restore from Time Machine. So, if I do a full restore now, will it erase any of the new photos, musc etc that is currently on the mac?

    The Time Machine restore will only restore what is on Time Machine.  Making a clone is probably a better means of ensuring whatever data you want recovered gets recovered together with Time Machine.
    Generally speaking, applications that are newer than the operating system from Apple that are included with the operating system are not supported.  So in your data recovery process from your clone, you'll have to be careful what data you choose to copy back.

  • Can't restore from time machine after SSD upgrade

    Macbook Pro 13" mid-2009, 10.7.5 Lion
    I just swapped out my 160GB  HDD with a 250GB SSD on my MBP. When I booted up, I pressed Command-R to try to get into recovery mode but all it does was showing a gray folder with a question mark on it.
    I had previously backed up my HDD with time machine. My original HDD is no longer available because I tried to upgrade to Mavericks (since the command-R was not working) and upon restarting my MBP was locked with system pin code (that is another nightmare all by itself)
    What are my options besides getting a 10.7 Lion CD from the apple store and try to boot it up that way? and then restore from time machine?
    Any other way I can get into receovery mode?
    Thanks (My MBP is now a brick sitting on my desk)

    It's a bare drive so it isn't formatted and it doesn't yet have a Recovery HD installed on it.
    Your computer originally came with a version of Leopard installed. You can reinstall it if you still have the original discs that came with the computer. Or, if you have a retail Snow Leopard DVD you can reinstall Snow Leopard from which you can then upgrade to Mavericks (Lion is no longer available for re-download.) It's unlikely your local Apple Store has a Lion USB flash drive or DVD although you can certainly make an appointment and ask for their help.
    You should see if you can boot from the Recovery HD invisible image in your Time Machine backup drive. Connect it to the computer and use OPTION boot to get the boot manager. If you see a Recovery HD on your backup drive displayed, then boot from it.

  • Restoring from Time Machine AFTER install

    My hard drive crashed, so i had to buy a new one (WD scorpio blue). I replaced it, then reinstalled from the install disk (10.4.10, Tiger). That was mistake one. What I meant to do was to restore from my time machine backups on an external HD. I also have the leapord disk that came with, which i forgot to install from, my second mistake. so my question is -- do i have to erase the hard drive and start back over to install from my TM back up, or can i do it either during the upgrade to Leopard or from Tiger?
    Thanks.

    Matt Clifton wrote:
    Boot from your Leopard disk (with your TM drive connected), and go to Utilities - Restore from Time Machine Backup.
    So, using this procedure will restore my MB onto a totally new hard drive with all my programs back intact along with any files?
    If so, this looks like a great way to replace/upgrade a hard drive. Re "go to Utilities", is this folder or option from the Leopard disk?

  • How do I Restore from Time Machine after I have reinstalled my system software (Snow Leopard and then Lion) ?, How do I Restore from Time Machine after I have reinstalled my system software (Snow Leopard and then Lion) ?

    I have never done this before, so can someone explain in detail how I reintall my system software and then restore from Time Machine please ?

    Your profile indicates that you currently have an older version of Snow Leopard (10.6.2).  In order to install Lion, a prerequisite is the latest version of Snow Leopard (10.6.8).  Perhaps a few more details would be helpfull in solving your problem. ex. If all you want to do is to upgrade to Lion, a restoration of data is unneccessary.  Download the latest version of Snow Leopard and then download (purchase) and install Lion.  User data will remain intact.
    If I am missing something, please elaborate.
    Ciao.

  • Downloads folder missing after system restore from Time Machine

    I installed a new HDD, installed Leopard, and the did a system restore from Time Machine. Everything seems to work fine except from a big question mark in the dock, where downloads folder should be. Any suggestions pls?

    Thank you very much for your quick answers.
    Probably the problem originated from excluding the Downloads folder from my backup, although it should have been there in my new installation. The interesting thing was that this folder were nowhere to be found in the Finder, and by trying to download something from Safari, it just wouldn’t.
    I did a Repair Permissions from the HDD, not the Leopard DVD, and all came back to normal.
    I have to admit, that coming from The Win world, this HDD replacement was the easiest and fastest ever, by far!

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