How to verify the Time Machine restore?

Completed the TM restore, verified disk and permissions (fixed some permissions) but the machine will not boot - apple logo and spinning wheel sit there forever.
I a able to boot in Single User Mode - and boot from CD and in both cases see all the files restored
How can I see the boot log to see where Leopard 10.5.7 is getting stuck?
Is there a way to validate the files needed for booting the OS?
(the restore was a result of getting a corrupted file system that I was not able to fix)
Thanks for any advice

Answer to the boot log - is the system.log in /var/log or boot up in verbose mode with Cmd-v pressed.
having said that I am getting this error
com.apple.launchd (com.apple.ATSServer) posix_spawnp("/System/Library/Frameworks/ApplicationServices.framework/Framewor ks/ATS.framework/Support/ATSServer",...) No such file or directory
com.apple.launchd (com.apple.WindowServer) posix_spawnp("/System/Library/Frameworks/ApplicationServices.framework/Framewor ks/CoreGraphics.framework/Resources/WindowServer",...) No such file or directory
so some resource files not properly restored - will look to see why they didn't restore - any ideas in the meantie welcom

Similar Messages

  • How to use the time machine?

    how to use the time machine? because i don't know where to find the back up. can you please help me.. thankyou.

    Time machine is a backup application and service that come with Leopard. When you plug in an external drive you can use it as a backup source. All you do is select the drive in the Time Machine control panel and start the backup. It will back up your whole drive and if you lose a file, go to the location on your drive where that file should be and open the Time Machine application. From there you will be able to migrate to all the points in "time" when the file was changed, and select the version of the file that you want. Then select "restore" and the file will be restored to the location where it last was on your drive.
    For more information check out the Time Machine website:http://www.apple.com/macosx/features/timemachine.html

  • Time machine corrupted sparsebundle? how to repair? time machine restore not working

    On my macbook pro, after starting with Cmd-R, I erased the hard disk, re-installed Mavericks and I want to restore my back up with Time Machine. I select the NAS where the backup is, it sees the backup file but it says: "There is a problem with this backup and it can't be restored". I also copied the backup file (with extension sparsebundle) to another external hard disk and tried to use it from there but I have the same problem. With my iMac (as the laptop is not usable since I started it with cmd-R), when I double click on the backup file (ext sparsebundle), it mounts and I can actually see and access the files that are there. I do not understand why the restore is not working with the Time Machine. It seems the sparsebundle is corrupted. I tried these instructions: http://www.garth.org/archives/2011,08,27,169,fix-time-machine-sparsebundle-nas-b ased-backup-errors.html
    But I am stuck at this step: tail -f /var/log/fsck_hfs.log
    iMac-6:~ root# tail -f /var/log/fsck_hfs.log
    /dev/rdisk3s2: ** Checking Journaled HFS Plus volume.
    /dev/rdisk3s2: ** Detected a case-sensitive volume.
    /dev/rdisk3s2:    The volume name is Time Machine Backups
    /dev/rdisk3s2: ** Checking extents overflow file.
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    Well, if Time Machine is the only thing on that hard drive and there is only one partition, sooner or later, Time Machine will fill up the entire thing and you can't use it for anything else.
    Now, you can start over, but that will mean that your Time machine backups will be wiped out. If that is what you want, it is a rather easy process easily accomplished in Disk Utility:
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    You can then set up the one for Time Machine and the other to drag over whatever files you want.

  • How come that the time machine backup takes 5 days to sync 200 GB over the ethernet?

    I'm really not happy with the backup speed of the time machine. it has been 1 day and half that it is syncing and for now just 36GB are done of 210GB.
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    I must have being doing something very wrong, can anyone help me or give me suggestions?
    Regards
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    The latest update to Lion.. 10.7.5 added slowness of TM as a new feature.. (There are no bugs just features).
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    Welcome to the new Apple beta program.

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    Choose Go to Folder from the Finder's Go menu and provide /Volumes/ as the path.
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  • HT201250 Will the Time Machine restore lost SMTP server password?

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    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.
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  • Time machine restore help

    I've recently been having issues with my early 2008 black Macbook. I ran the apple HW diagnostics and determined it is a bad hard drive. I went out and bought a new 500GB SATA HD, and attempted to restore my system using a Time Machine backup. I booted into the Leopard Disc that came with my computer, formatted the drive, and ran the Time machine restore. Everything appeared to go fine (took about 2 hours, no error messages). However, after the machine rebooted and attempted to boot into OSX an error similar to this popped up. http://img149.imageshack.us/img149/7792/pict0017lo8.jpg
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    Other information:
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    Any number of possibilities. First, did you prep the drive properly:
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    1. Boot from your OS X Installer Disc. After the installer loads select your language and click on the Continue button. When the menu bar appears select Disk Utility from the Installer menu (Utilities menu for Tiger, Leopard or Snow Leopard.)
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  • Time Machine restore fails from Snow Leo disc. iMac 24" 2007

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    maurocam wrote:
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    How to back up and restore your files
    Time Machine Features
    Apple - Support - Mac OSX v10.5 Leopard Time Machine
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  • Older MB (Core Duo [not '2']) Time Machine restore issues

    The hard drive in a family-member's MacBook died and I'm trying to find the path to restoration. Regular Time Machine backups were made right up to the point of failure. I've installed a "new" drive in the MacBook (an Apple-sourced drive which formerly lived in a Mac Mini) and attempted to use the utility functions on the Snow Leopard install disk but have had no luck.
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    The MacBook had been updated to the latest versions of software on a regular basis. I think that the O/S version may have reached the point where the TIme Machine backups are in the "new" format where the Snow Leopard disk utilities cannot be used to restore the backup and only the Lion utilities work. (I just went through this with my MB Air.)
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    It sounds like it's working perfectly. With Fusion I don't believe it is backed up, I know for sure Windows isn't. You may want to contact Pondini to ask about Fusion. As for your Adobe apps you can thank Adobe for that, you will need to re-install the apps, I believe this is one way Adobe ensures users aren't violating their licensing. I believe you will need to manually install the Adobe apps which shouldn't be a big deal as long as you have licensed software. Your data should have come over smoothly and frankly that's the most critical part. Reinstalling some apps should not be a problem.  
    I'd recommend looking over Pondini Time Machine Tips and if need be contacting Pondini directly (he has a contact section on the page) he has a lot of experience with TM and as you have already seen migrating Macs. He can provide much more information than me.

  • Time Machine restore to new computer

    My iMac G5 has completely failed, and I am getting a new iMac Core2Duo. As the old computer is dead, I won't be able to use migration assistant to copy my stuff from the old computer. So I will need to restore my files from the Time Machine back-up.
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    I was just going to make a post myself but thought perhaps I could do it as a reply to this post.
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    I'll probably make a separate post on this so sorry in advance on that but if anyone has any ideas on how I can solve this and help the original poster Mr. Tanner avoid this, it would be great. Maybe a Time Machine system engineer is reading and can offer some help. I live in San Jose and I'm happy to bring my Mac and Time Machine disk over to Cupertino....

  • What happens when you interrupt a Time Machine restore.

    I recently bought a new MacBook Pro.  After I started the Time Machine restore, I realized it was going to take around 12 hours to complete.  After about 45 min, I hit Command + W which shut down the computer.  I have now decided I do not want to use the Time Machine backup at all and would like to start from scratch.
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    2. Are there 45 minutes worth of transfered restore files hidden somewhere on this machine?
    Since it's a new machine I would like to start with a totally clean install and I fear that the interupted restore may have done something.
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    Boot into Recovery by holding down the key combination command-R at the startup chime. Release the keys when you see a gray screen with a spinning dial.
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    When the Mac OS X Utilities screen appears, launch Disk Utility and erase the startup volume. Then quit Disk Utility and install the Mac OS. When you reboot, you'll be prompted to go through the initial setup process. That’s when you import the data from one of your backups. For details of how this works, see here:
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