Home folders

Somehow i lost my pictures home folder in Finder- is there a way to replace?? or at one for websites?

Hi blueh0rse9!
Is the Pictures folder, still present in HD > Users > Your Account; HERE, but is missing from the Sidebar in Finder windows?
If so, open your Account folder referenced above, and drag the Pictures folder, back over to the Sidebar.
Position it beneath the separator bar.
ali b

Similar Messages

  • How to set up Open Directory Users with local home folders?

    Hi folks,
    i set up a Mac mini Server with the services DNS, DHCP, AFP and OpenDirectory running. Everything is working fine so far but i want my OpenDirectory Users to have their home folders locally on the clients harddisk. My Leopard clients are already bound to the directory but everytime i try to login the login window is shaking even when i use the Directory Administrator account. What am i doing wrong?
    Thanks.

    (Did you read my other reply? You need to make it a portable account for the caching of login credentials.)
    With network homes and portable account enabled on a machine you always run from the locally stored homefolder on that machine.
    This homefolder syncs with the server network home folder for that account.
    If either of these folders get corrupt or unintentionally altered files (permission problems) somehow, there is risk of losing files, syncing problems and more (can take long time to sync at login/out, during even without corruption - I prefer gigabit cable to WiFi for this for obvious reasons).
    You at least need to monitor storage space in both places. You don't want either to fill up the disk (worse on server because several users can have their folders corrupted at the same time). Working quota settings / account is probably a good thing.
    And you probably need to decide what is synced : all folders or just some (and when / how often).
    You either do this form the server (you decide) or let the user have some say or a mix of these two.
    You might want to leave out the user's personal files (music, movies and such) and also depending on emaIl client used, maybe not sync email if the client saves it like Entourage does it, in big ever changing database files. Might be better to just backup the mailserver if IMAP based.
    If a user puts other large files in their homefolder (often on the Desktop) they can fill up the server fast. DVD-projects anyone?
    Mixing different versions server/client might not work too good either.
    So having said that, when syncing works it can be really good and you can restore a machine/account fast with pretty recent data. You can if in a hurry even log in from another machine using the account network home folder, getting access to the synced folders/files.
    Using Time Machine it's a one way "sync" (more like "duplicate changed and new files" - which I like) and you have to manually set TM settings on the client for what is going to be backed up and when. I do atleast don't know how to do it from/on the server. This "less intervention by the server" can be a good thing but if your users don't "behave" you might want to be in the drivers seat "saving them from themselves".
    TM backups can grow fast and probably demands more user interaction when storage space is used up.
    As with all "backup" configurations you probably want some rotating media backup of both network homes and/or TM backups so you can do a restore. Of these two, network homes are the more important one to backup "further".

  • Active Directory Authentication, AFP Home Folders in the wrong place!

    Hi,
    I've had this problem off and on... that is, it comes and goes, so I'm not really able to effectively troubleshoot it. My setup is this:
    -Xserve G5, Mac OS X Server 10.4.7
    -OD Master bound to AD for authentication
    -Hosts AFP and SMB shares, all stored on Xserve RAID
    On the RAID, I have a folder called Users (/Volumes/XserveRAID/Users) that is shared via AFP. The system Users folder (/Users) is not shared. In fact, nothing at all on the root drive is shared. All share points are on /Volumes/XserveRAID/. All Mac users' home directory profiles are pointed to \\servername\Users\username (in Active Directory Users and Computers application on our domain controller). Their home directories mount automatically when they log into their client machines (also bound to AD).
    The problem is this; at seemingly random times, a user's home folder will all of a sudden be created in /Users on the server, and it will not use the /Volumes/XserveRAID/Users/ folder. I will clean out /Users every now and again, but the errant home folders show back up. The only folder that should be in /Users is the local admin.
    Since /Users is not even shared, how is it doing this? Why is it that sometimes the /Volumes/XserveRAID/Users share is used (I know this because there are users' files in their folders in the proper place) and sometimes it's going to /Users? Any ideas? Thanks in advance!!
    Going slightly mad,
    Jason

    Hi there,
    Just wanted to share my make-due solution.
    I have setup the automount sharepoint at "/Data/Home".
    When I logged in or tried to use createhomedir in terminal, nothing happened but users could login (even though there was no home folder on the sharepoint for them).
    I have created the Home Folders manually "/Data/Home/username" and then logged in again. When I did this it created two folders in the home dir:
    -Desktop
    -Library
    The other icons related to the home dir on the Dock remain big "?" 's.
    So I manually added them and assigned them the propper rights.
    Now users can log in without any problems, network home folders are working.
    So essentially I got thing s to work, luckily I have only a hand full of Mac Users, Imagine having a user base in the hundreds !
    Thinking about this really makes me want to know how I can fix this problem, I have a make shift solution but this really isn't the way to go. When I use the createhomedir command, it says "creating homedir on servername.domain.net" and it seems to be busy for like 20 - 30 secs, but after that nothing has changed.
    I've checked all possible locations on the server (i thought maybe it might have made local accounts on server by accident, but it didn't.)
    If anyone has ANY idea, please share.
    Thx!!
    Have a nice day

  • Can't add users' home folders to Windows Libraries - "unindexed network location" error

    I am unable to add our users' home folders to their Windows Libraries on client PCs.  Windows is giving an unindexed network location error.
    This worked perfectly fine in WHS 2011, but is failing on WSE 2012 R2 Essentials.
    I've checked the indexing settings on the server, and the correct locations are in fact being indexed. 
    Since several of our clients have limited local storage, I can't solve this by turning on Offline Files.
    Is this behavior by design, or am I seeing a bug? 
    I'm guessing that on WHS 2011 the user folders are special-cased somehow, as normally one would need to include the share root in a library for federated indexing to work correctly.  What is it about WHS 2011 that makes this work, and is it possible
    to replicate these settings on our WSE 2012 R2 server?
    Thank you.

    No, our clients are not domain joined.
    To clarify, I'm not trying to redirect local folders, but rather to add the (automatically provisioned) user folder on the server to local libraries.  Federated search does support this scenario in WHS, so I assume it should work in WSE. 
    Trying to understand why I'm seeing the error.  Thanks.

  • How bad is it to have 4 network mounts for home folders?

    I am the tech curriculum guy at a middle school and also manage the servers. I am not an expert at all. Learn enough to make it work efficiently. We got a new server (intel). I am in the process of migrating all the users, groups, home folders and data etc. Had some problems so I called Apple, in my discussion with the tech support there (3-4 hours solving problems) one of the techs questioned my setup. Here is what I used to do:
    Server one has all the users in workgroup manager. The home folders for the 6th, 7th and 8th graders are on two separate drive bays on server one. Each grade level folder is a network mount. I then have the faculty home folders on a server two. There is also a shared folder called "Stuff" which mounts for all users and has clipart, movies etc. It is basically a read only mount. The faculty home folders are network mounts of their home folders.
    I service between 400 and 500 students a day in the lab, it is quite busy, with anywhere from 60 to 90 users logged on at one time. My thinking last year was that if I could spread out the home folders on different drives, the students wouldn't all be hitting the same drive for saves, data etc. So that one drive wouldn't be spinning its brains out to keep everyone going. That is why I have the 4 network mounts for the home folders. One for each grade level (6,7,8) and the faculty.
    My new server has three drives, two of them for home folders. The drives are 750 gb each. He (apple tech) suggested I create a folder in each drive, set it as the network mount and within that folder put two sets of home folders. So, then I would only have two network mounts, but retain my four sets of home folders that would be within the network mounts.
    I guess my question is, which is better, to have the 4 network mounts with separate home folder locations on 2 different servers, or consolidate the home folders into 2 network mounts on one server.
    He said that the more network mounts, the longer it takes to get computers started up.
    Any expert advice here would be greatly appreciated.
    Thanks, hope I explained this well enough.
    Intel Imac Mac OS X (10.4.8) Lab- Education Intel iMacs - PPC eMacs

    I don't think the logins take too long, we may wait 30 seconds or so for the students to login. We have had problems when 60 kids leave and 60 more come in, some login and after the username and password are entered, the login begins then locks. The Apple tech guy thought that could be aggravated by the 4 network mounts. I just sort of thought that with students and teachers accessing 4 different hard drives, that it wouldn't tax one drive as much. I agree that a longer login is a small price to pay for faster working speeds.

  • How do i reconnect mobile account home folders after re-install?

    we have problems with our server interfering with the college server. It kept changing our hostname so i had to enable DNS on the second ethernet port on xserve which prevented it from changing it but now is messing up the network as our server is being used for dns by the rest of the college. So i either need to restrict our dns to only answer queeries from specific addresses i.e my laptop and colleagues and forward all of the rest to another dns server. Or i have to re-install the osx server software and change the name to correspond with their servers given name for our xserve. The problem with re-installing it is that the students have a lot of work in their home folders which i can't loose. But i'm aware that the mobile accounts will be tied to the old domain name. Is their any tips you can give us so that i don't loose their home folders and it will sync back the client machines after i have put the new domain name on. I'm also aware that you can export the usernames from workgroup manager but not the passwords. Is there anything else i need to do so that i can just reconnect their accounts to the existing home folders after re-install? In other words i need to know the easiest way to do this to reduce dissruption to students files? Any ideas would be greatly appreciated! Also will i have to delete the students local folders on their imacs and sync back from the server again?

    ok reinstalled everything dns seems to be working have done sudo changeip -checkhostname and it says that both names match but then i started open directory and can't seem to get Kerberos started, i've tried changing it to stand alone then back again but it does nothing. I'm wondering why this would happen? i've tried adding a kerberos record but it doesn't do it just does nothing so i don't know what i'm doing wrong. I wondered if it might be a problem with the two network cards and dns as on ethernet one it is getting the dns name xserve.xxxx.ac.uk (which matches what the college server wants to call us) but on ethernet 2 gets xserve-2.local because it tells me that it already exists on ethernet one and renames it to this. I need to set up NAT so have ethernet coming in on port one and out again on port two. I wonder if my dns is backwards as its got the 192. address the NAT uses but its linked to the ethernet port one dns maybe this is the problem. would this cause open directory not to start kerberos?

  • Erase mobile account home folders script

    does anyone know of a script that will erase all of the mobile account home folders on local machines while keeping the admin and other local account folders in place??

    Here is a script I've used to flush all Portable Home Directories (Run as "root" user) --> http://homepage.mac.com/applesd/downloads/flush-phds-script.zip

  • Mobile Accounts not copying home folders to local machine

    Having recently upgraded my MacBook to 10.5 (and having a 10.5 server) I have noticed an error with mobile accounts. My account has not synced for a couple of weeks and I have checked all the directory settings and cannot see any errors.
    I've removed all directory services and rebooted, put them back and it will create a mobile account but nothing is being copied to the local hdd. So basically it is functioning like a network account rather than a mobile one.
    This works fine on our 10.4 clients but having tried different users on my 10.5 system it does the same....creates the account, mounts the server but does nothing else.
    This means when you sync it says its complete but does nothing...its like its lost permissions to the folder on the server but that seems very odd.
    Anyone else had issues with 10.5? We have an AD server with our users and a 10.5 server with OD replicating AD and holding the home folders.

    Are you still ahving this issue?
    Would you do like geekinit in this thread and post some partial screen grabs (although is problem included Windows server Active Directory and profile Manager which I will get up to soon.)
    Unable to deploy home folder mobility settings through an Apple MDM server
    Did you create a fileshare for Local Network accounts to put their stuff
    If so where is OS X server?
    Did you tell the user in OD to use that fileshare?
    Here's a screen grab example
    Francois.

  • Moving Home folders onto external HDD, what's the right way to do it?

    At the moment I have my network accounts on the Server's boot disk, but I want to move them onto an external disk.
    I was thinking I should rsync the Users folder with the external, but do I then have to edit each account in Workgroup Manager to point to the external Home folders?
    I don't have many accounts so I don't mind doing it that way, or maybe there is an easier way? I want to get this right before I start, hence why I'm asking for help.
    Thanks in advance.

    What follows assumes that you have a proper OD setup and are able to copy the users' home folders with permissions intact to the new home directory path. Please note that I haven't done this in a while, so proceed with caution.
    1. Create your new home folder root on your external drive.
    2. In Server Admin:File Sharing, set the new folder a a share point.
    3. In "Share Point," check "Enable Automount" and click the "Edit" button.
    4. Set the protocol to AFP and click "Use for: User home folders and group folders," and click ok (diradmin pw will likely be needed).
    5. Optionally, click "Enable Spotlight Searching."
    6. I think AFP guest access may be required in "Protocol Options."
    7. Copy your users' folders to the new path (with your preferred mechanism. cp -p might work too).
    At this point, the new path should be visible in Workgroup Manager in the "Home" tab. You should be able to select multiple users from the list and apply the new path simultaneously. However, I suggest testing this on one account first - preferable not your CEO's.
    Regards,
    Lyle Millander

  • Network Home Folders on NAS

    hello all-
    i have recently purchased a QNAP TS809U-RP. i want to move all my network home folders to it. here are the steps i have taken thus far:
    1) created a new share on the QNAP via the QNAP web utility. the share is xServeData
    2) created a folder called "Home" in the xServeData - this is where i want all the home folders to reside
    3) went to Server Admin and created a new share for the "xServeData" share i created in the QNAP web utility
    4) went to Workgroup Manager and created a test user called, oddly enough, "Test"
    5) clicked the "Create Home Folder" for that user
    when i look on the QNAP a Home folder is created called "Test" but with only 2 folders inside of it:
    Library
    Sites
    when i go to one of the iMacs on the network i type the username and p/w for the user "Test" and the login starts but i get the error:
    "You are unable to log in to the user account "Test" at this time
    Logging in to the account failed because an error occurred."
    when i go back and check the new "xServeData" share's permissions versus the permissions where the home folders currently reside (on Drive 2 in Bay 2 on the xServe) i see that the permissions are:
    serveradmin, Allow, Read & Write, This folder
    staff, Allow, Read & Write, This folder
    others, Allow, Read Only, This Folder
    on the new "xServeData" share these permissions are:
    serveradmin, Allow, Read & Write, This folder
    staff, Allow, NO ACCESS, This folder
    others, Allow, NO ACCESS, This Folder
    when i try and change the new share to match the old share and save it just reverts back to the "NO ACCESS" for staff and others. i am sure this is probably what is causing the user "Test" from logging in but i don't know how to solve the issue. i am new to NAS's and am certainly not the most advanced OS X Server user. i have this in my home and my users are my family. this is really more of a hobby but i love to learn and play with this stuff.
    if someone has any experience setting up Network Home Folders on a NAS and hopefully on a QNAP NAS i would sure appreciate your help and knowledge to resolve this. it seems that i am very close but that i am just overlooking one or two issues......

    I am in the same boat. I would like to create mobile accounts but never sync. This is like having a local account but this way the password is in sycn with OD.  Then the Time Machine can do the backups to the home folder on the NAS instead of using home synching.
    How do we get the NAS box folders available to WGM? I need to know what to enter in the home folder section and be able to hit create home now and save.
    This will be using Snow Leopard 10.6 od master.
    Lannie

  • Network home folders owned by (unknown) user.

    I am seeing something strange happening and i will try and describe it as best as i can.
    This is happening in a middle school with about 750 users, 150 emacs(10.3.9) and 1 xserve(10.4.?).
    I am not sure if this is a capacity issue but it seems to happen when there are lots of users trying to log into the computers. There are several different work groups the students can choose from when they log in and at any one time there may be 60 to 100 users logged in with network home folders and 1 or 2 other auto mounting share points.
    Occasionally a few users will not be able to log in. A closer look will show that they are able to get passed the login screen and choose a workgroup and actually log into a desktop environment but they are not able to access their home folder. If you try and access anything in their home folder you will get an error msg informing you that you do not have sufficient access privilages. Of course the documents folder that normally sits on the dock is displayed as a question mark, and trying to launch any application will fail as it cant access the prefs file stored in the users library folder in their network home folder.
    There are a couple different scenarios i have observed when looking at the permission information on the home folders.
    Scenario one: when i look at the permissions on the home folder using get info tool, the owner is a completely different user. Doing an ls -sl from the command line shows the same information.
    Scenario two: when i look at the permissions on the home folder using the get info tool the owner is (unknown). Doing an ls -al from the command line will show the owner as being a number. I assume this is a uid number, and the number is usually a uid that does not show up in workgroup managers current list of users, and i assume this is why the get info tool reports the owner as being (unknown).
    I can fix the home folder by using a chown -r but dont know why this is happening to begin with.
    Does anyone have any ideas or suggestions.
    I have done some research on google but have not come up with anything concrete.
    Help
    Mark
    SD34

    This is not a definitive answer, but you are certainly pushing the capabilities of a single XServe. As best I understand it, the XServe is really meant to be part of a deployment of OS X server in an environment such as yours. You should really have at least one replica server for authentication purposes and a separate device, such as an XServe RAID, or at least another server to house network home folders. You should at least consider getting another box, even a dual G5 or Mac pro, make it a replica, and split the home dirs between the new box and the XServe. Think about it. You have a lot of users authenticating a buncg of shares and at the same time a bunch of users zipping all sorts of big and little dats files (like office or appleworks files) as well as all the web browser chache files and whatever other cache files are flying around. That's an awful lot for the XServe's network connection, nevermind the read/writes on the HD.
    So honestly, it would be really tough to tell if there;s just a bottleneck causing issues, or some other software/configuration error with that much traffic to a single server.
    And this is in no way meant to be a lecture - I learned a lot by trying a similar feat on my network

  • Network Home Folders - Sometimes

    Is there a way to have network home folders sometimes?
    Here is the situation. (all servers and clients are at 10.3.9, but could be upgraded to 10.4.x)
    In a school there is a 29 unit eMac lab and an iBook cart. The students each have a home folder on the server. When they log in to an eMac they use their OD/LDAP username and password. The OSX server authenticates them and then they use their network home folder. This works just fine.
    But when they use the iBooks, they are using Airport to connect to the network. Network home folders are too slow to work over a wireless network, so they have to log in using a local account and then mount their network home folder to save files.
    What I would like to do is have them login to the iBooks with their OD/LDAP information so that they can be authenticated using OD/LDAP but not use home folders when using the iBooks. (I could then put their home folders in the dock)
    Is this possible?
    Thanks
    too many to list   Mac OS X (10.3.9)  

    Considered, but won't work for this application.
    The students use different computers at different
    times. For instance the question is about users on
    eMacs some of the time and iBooks some of the time.
    So they would have at least 2 different computers and
    many people might use either of them at a different
    time. So a single computer could have many, many home
    folders.
    Just to press the issue: is there a reason this is a problem (disk space, for example, or security)? Because the whole point of PHDs is that you'll be getting synchronization even when multiple machines are involved. If you're worried about home directories piling up, you could implement a cron job to clean them. I'm not trying to suggest that PHDs really will work in your instance--just trying to suggest possibilities.
    In any event, it IS possible to modify your users' home directory settings on a client-by-client basis. You could, for example, have your users' accounts set to use network home folders for your wired machines, but override that setting on your iBooks to point to homes on the client. To do that:
    1. Open Directory Access on your iBook, select your LDAPv3 configuration, and edit it (Services pane > LDAPv3 > Configure, select it in the next window and click Edit. If you've checked "Use DHCP-supplied LDAP Server" you'll need to uncheck that and create a configuration for your server; consult the server documentation for more information.
    2. When you click the Edit button, you'll get a window for the selected configuration, with tabs for "Connection" and "Search & Mappings." Click the Search & Mappings tab.
    3. In the Record Types and Attributes pane on the left, click the disclosure triangle next to Users, and do two things:
    - Select "HomeDirectory" and delete it.
    - Select "NFSHomeDirectory" in the left pane, and replace the corresponding "homeDirectory" entry in the right pane with the following: #/Users/$uid$. Then, click OK to save your changes.
    4. Reboot the client, and log in as one of your network users. Here's what should happen: on this particular client, Directory Access will still log your users in with the account settings on the server, except the HomeDirectory attribute will be reset with the value /Users/<short user name>. That's what the NFSHomeDirectory line does: the sharp sign tells Directory Access to ignore the attribute in the user's server account, and overwrite it with the string that follows. The $uid$ tells Directory Access to substitute the field with that value (the LDAP uid field). So, for user John Smith, whose short name is smithj, the client will create a folder called smithj in the folder /Users, which is on the local client.
    You could in theory use this technique to place the home folders anywhere on your client (like in /tmp), but it's best to use the default /Users folder unless you have strong reasons not to.
    The advantage of this scheme is that you only set up the Directory Access preferences this way on the clients where you want to have local homes--e.g., your iBooks. Once you've correctly configured the Directory Access preferences and have verified that everything works, you can copy the folder /Library/Preferences/DirectoryService to your other iBook clients, so you don't have to go through this process on every machine.
    There is one caveat, however. Configuring Directory Access this way will effect ANY user who logs in to your iBook--that is, any network user on your server. You can't set this up differently for different sets of users on your server--for any client workstation, all users on the server get treated the same. This is presumably what you want, given that you don't want to server network homes over wireless, but it's important to understand the implications of what you're doing.
    The instructions above assume that you're familiar with setting up configurations in Directory Access. If not, you might want to read up on it.
    Power Macintosh G5 1.8/PowerBook G4 15 1.42   Mac OS X (10.3.9)  

  • Network home folders, collaboration sharepoint and Microsoft Word 2008

    I'm hoping someone who knows how Microsoft Word 2008 works on network volumes can shed some light on our situation.
    We run a small managed network with about 15 leopard clients and a leopard server. We've got two sharepoints, a "homes" share for network home folders, and an "Office" share with our shared office document folders.
    Several times a week, users will encounter a situation where Microsoft Word 2008 will claim that a file is open by another user, or that the file can be opened in "read only" mode, even though the file is not in use. Naturally, the problem cannot be replicated when I am present.
    ### My Hypothesis ###
    My users are in the habit of quickly borrowing machines from other users to pull up documents in the "office" share by using the "connect as" button. So, for example, userA is logged in to her machine (and is thus connected to the network home folder on the server). userB comes along and borrows her machine -- without logging out, will connect to the shared office folder, pull up and edit/print a document, etc. We're not currently auto mounting the office share.
    I know that Microsoft Word creates lock folders located in the .TemporaryItems folder at the root level of the "office" share. The folders are named "folder.xxxx", where xxxx is the userid of the account that created the lock folder. Everyone uses a network account, so everyone has a unique userID. If I list the .TemporaryItems folder using the CLI, i can see lock folders that are several days or a week old. So Word doesn't seem to be cleaning up after itself immediately, at least not always.
    So my question: when userB connects to the office share on a borrowed machine (logged in to the client machine using the network home folder of userA), is it possible that word will now create lock folders for userB, and will be unable to clean up lock folders created by userA?
    Anyone have other ideas for investigating the "file in use" problem?

    Switched user back to the network home folder and adjusted the MS Word preferences so that the autorecovery files would be stored on the local client machine. There doesn't seem to be a comparable setting in the Excel preferences.
    My initial testing suggests that this has reduced how often this problem occurs, but has not eliminated it. I tested by repeatedly opening and closing a couple of different word files in rapid succession -- i was able to replicate the "file opens as read only" problem occasionally.
    I've talked to Apple server support about this issue. While they were helpful, they didn't have an explanation or solution for this problem. There are a number of postings in the microsoft mactopia discussion boards site where people report similar problems.

  • Network home folders: iCloud password question re-appears at every logon

    Hello,
    Is there any way to enable iMessage and Facetime together with Network home folders. Im using Mavericks server (Directory services enabled) and two Mavericks clients. Every time a user that was using machine A logs on to machine B the iClouds password prompt re-appears and subsequently security questions are sent to iOS devices that a new device was added.
    Is there a way to circumvent this? I think I tried once in combination with mobile home folders. However, even if I excluded iMessage/Facetime system files from syncing, questions still re-appeared.
    The more iCloud services are tied into the system, the more you would like to use them; even if you are using network home folders.
    Regards,
    Thomas

    I also have this question.

  • 10.5.6 Update Breaks Time Machine backup of FileVault home folders?

    Time machine used to backup FileVault home folders when I logged out. After 10.5.6, it just logs out and does not do the backup.
    Anyone else?
    s

    This is a copy of a post that I have here somewhere...
    "Personally I think apple is up to something...."
    My set up was almost since Leopard was out.. Airport Extreme, USB drive connected to it.. 3 profiles on a macbook mid 07, 4 g's ram.. TM would back up will I was logged in every hour or so.. and whenever I logged out it would back up my home folder since I had file vault enabled.. never had a mayor problem.. updated to 10.5.6 about a day after it was out.. TM still backed up while I was logged in but it stopped backing up my home folder that had file vault enabled.. I decided to try a clean back up with another USB drive that I had used for the same purpose and it would not even recognize the format of the drive.. Any ways.. today I got a brand new 500 g's time capsule.. guess what... same thing.. it wont back up my home folder.. I've been with support on the phone since the beginning of the problem spoke to 4 different people 2 different levels, finally one level higher (3rd) the guy told me he couldn't help me because the set up i had was not supported by apple.. today I got to that 3rd level and the guy had no idea.. he even or actually most of them sounded surprise when i told them that i was expecting TM to back up when i was logged off.. .. well he is supposedly going to fwd my issue to their engineers and he or some one else would call me back in around a week becuase of the holly days..
    SSooooo , I would say, lets not hold our breath..
    "They would have to be r*e*t*a*r*d*e*d to forget something like this"

  • Steps to upgrade and move server and home folders to new box

    Hi All,
    Can anyone outline the steps I should take to move my 1200 users from a G4 PowerMac Server 10.4.11 to an Intel Mac 10.5.6 and move home folders to a new drive on the new box? Can it be as simple as using the migration tool and connecting up the firewire cable? And what about the fact that the IP will need to be the same?
    Many thanks for any hints,
    ...Tom

    Unfortunately, it is not as simple as using the Migration Assistant.
    Please refer to the following guide from Apple:
    http://images.apple.com/server/macosx/docs/Upgradingand_Migrating_v10.5_2ndEd.pdf
    You are migrating from 10.4 to 10.5, so read that section carefully. There are still quirks in the 2nd edition of this guide, where it tells you to do extra stuff, but it won't hurt.
    If you have another IP address available, use that in combination with a temporary hostname until everything is setup. Afterwards, turn down the old server and use the changeip command on the new server.
    Schedule your migration to a long window of opportunity when the least amount of people are going to need it - like Friday evening (then take Monday off).

Maybe you are looking for

  • Creation of infotype having Subtype

    Hi ,       Please tell me link or document regarding  creation of  infotype having subtype .       i know how  to create simpe infotype . But not created any infotype having subtype.

  • Computer froze and fan started going faster by the second. What could've happened?

    I was using my computer (MacBook Pro Retina 13") and suddenly it froze and the fan speed was going higher by the second. I had to switch off the compute before something serious happens. I did the EtreCheck after reading some of the responses. Hope t

  • White Dots On Screen

    I have a Macbook Pro 2.33 that i recently purchased used and i notice theres 2 white dots in the very upper part of the screen where it shows wifi, time and and speaker, battery information this one is centered and the other is over to the left in th

  • HT4623 Updating iPad iOS system

    My iPad does not list the new iOS system as an available update.  I get a meswsage that my system is up to date?

  • What is the best way to transfer only Photos and Music from imac to imac?

    hello i have an old 24" imac that is loaded down with iphoto pictures and itunes music. i recently got the new 27" imac and wish to only transfer the photos and music files to the new computer. i have a cloned hard drive of my old imac as well as a t