Old Hard drive died...automated restore from Time Machine?

Is there a way to just sort of "one click" the process for restoring from an external drive I've been using? My hard drive died on my MacBook and I had it replaced under my Apple Care warranty. Without dragging and dropping things is there an easy way to just pick up where I left off? I'm trying to search around and I'm not finding any solutions for this particular situation.

you can do a full system restore from TM.
Start from the leopard install DVD, once past the language screen go to Utilities menu and select "restore from Time machine". follow the instructions.

Similar Messages

  • HT4718 Installed new hard drive, click on restore from time machine, get to 'select a destination' but just keeps searching for disks.. any help please?

    Installed new hard drive and want to restore from time machine.
    Get as far as 'select a destination'  then it goes no further - just keeps 'searching for disks'
    Help anyone please?

    1. Be sure your drive is attached and mounted.
    2. If you have already written any data to the drive, back it up before proceeding to the next step.
    3. In the Finder, choose Go > Utilities. The /Applications/Utilities folder will open.
    4. Launch Disk Utility.
    5. Click the icon for your external hard drive in the sidebar on the left.
    6. Click the Erase tab along the top of the window.
    7. From the Volume Format menu, choose Mac OS Extended (Journaled).
    8. Enter a name for the external hard drive in the Name field.
    9. Click the Erase button.
    Make Sure that you choose the correct drive

  • HT201250 My macbook pro crashed and I had to install a new hard drive. I restored from Time Machine backup all the files from my old hard drive onto my new one.

    Does it really back up the whole new drive or does it only back up what's been added? It seemed like it was doing the whole thing when I tried it. I stopped it. Don't want to use up all the space on my external. Is there something else I need to do or did I mess up by not doing the migrating thing? thanks!

    If you installed a new hard drive, it has nothing on it and yes TimeMachine is going to take forever to restore everything back.
    I guess you'll have to erase and start over again now.
    Too bad, you should have made bootable clones in addition to TimeMachine, they can restore in a hour or two depending upon content, they are also option key bootable.
    TimeMachine has to go through and calculate all the files it needs to bring forward, the files are strewn all over the drive. The read heads are moving all over the platters all the time from fast sectors to slow ones, not matching what's occuring on the internal drive.
    With a clone the files are defragmented and optimized, the drive reads one file, moves the heads a tiny bit and reads the next all the while transferring exactly to the internal drive, they are more in step with one another, thus it's much faster restoring from a clone than TM.
    Most commonly used backup methods

  • Iphoto 11 on MT Lion can not find my iphoto library after a a hard drive replacement and restore from time machine...HELP

    I have an iMac with the recalled seagate drives and I have everything backed up on Timecapsule and on Carbonite. I also copied all my photos to a file prior to having the hard drive replaced. The merge back to the mac worked well except that now iphot can't locate my library. In iphoto 11 they moved it out of the pictures file and it is hidden. Does anyone know how to find it so I don't have to reorganize 20,000 pictures?
    Thank you!

    In iphoto 11 they moved it out of the pictures file and it is hidden.
    They didn't, I'm afraid. The iPhoto Library is still stored in the Pictures Folder by default, and it's not hidden.
    Can you see it in Time Machine?

  • 2nd External Drive - how to restore from Time Machine backup?

    I have had Time Machine configured to back up my photos and videos on an external drive. My Time Machine backup is a separate drive attached to my MacBook by FireWire. I have Leopard OS. I have in the past successfully retrieved deleted photos from the Time Machine backups using iPhoto.
    Now, unfortunately, the external drive with the photos and videos has developed a problem (possibly power-related) so that my MacBook no longer recognizes that drive. Obviously, this means that iPhoto can't find/open that photo library. Which means that iPhoto can't access the backup via Time Machine. Help! The photos must surely be on the Time Machine backup but I can't figure out any way to retrieve them.

    callipygia600,
    This one's easy. Purchase a new drive to replace the one that went "belly up." Format (erase) it using Mac OS Extended, and give the volume that will be created the exact same name as the bad drive. Navigate into the new (empty) volume in the Finder, then open Time Machine from the Dock.
    You should be able to navigate "back in time" and see the backed up contents. Select everything you see, and click "Restore." It will all be restored to your new external drive. The key is to use the same name for the new drive.
    In the meantime, your backup can be accessed in the Finder if necessary. Using the Finder, navigate into the "Backups.backupdb" folder on the backup drive, then into the latest backup. You will see one folder named for your startup disk, and another named for your secondary/external volume. Within that second folder you will find the items that were stored on the bad drive. You can safely copy these to another volume using the Finder, but do not attempt to move or modify them otherwise (do what you like with the copies).
    Scott

  • Updated to 10.9.2 and now my WD hard drive fails to backup from Time Machine

    Yesterday I updated my software so now I am running 10.9.2 on a mid 2010 MacBook Pro. After the update, my WD 1tb hard drive won't backup. It says "Unable to complete backup. An error occurred while creating the backup folder" Please help! I don;t know how to fix it and the information I found online was confusingly unhelpful!
    Thank you in advance, a stressed student!

    Do you have any westerndigital software installed? If yes, uninstall it and restart.
    I have several WD disks and they behave perfectly.
    TM having problems with finishing backup ofcourse will not eject or free up the disk! It might corrupt your TM backup.
    Read about your problem in Pondini's website:
    http://pondini.org/OSX/Home.html

  • New hard drive, re-installed iWork from Time Machine, but none of the programs work..

    Process:         Pages [411]
    Path:            /Applications/iWork '09/Pages.app/Contents/MacOS/Pages
    Identifier:      com.apple.iWork.Pages
    Version:         4.1 (923)
    Build Info:      Pages-9230000~1
    Code Type:       X86 (Native)
    Parent Process:  launchd [132]
    Date/Time:       2012-07-24 18:35:04.338 -0500
    OS Version:      Mac OS X 10.7.4 (11E53)
    Report Version:  9
    Interval Since Last Report:          187668 sec
    Crashes Since Last Report:           7
    Per-App Crashes Since Last Report:   5
    Anonymous UUID:                      997DEA19-AC95-4293-B32E-165A04C8F745
    Crashed Thread:  0
    Exception Type:  EXC_BREAKPOINT (SIGTRAP)
    Exception Codes: 0x0000000000000002, 0x0000000000000000
    Application Specific Information:
    dyld: launch, loading dependent libraries
    Dyld Error Message:
      Library not loaded: @rpath/SFCompatibility.framework/Versions/A/SFCompatibility
      Referenced from: /Applications/iWork '09/Pages.app/Contents/MacOS/Pages
      Reason: image not found
    Binary Images:
        0x1000 -   0x345fe8  com.apple.iWork.Pages (4.1 - 923) <CA075805-8E22-2F83-8911-ED378A10FA8D> /Applications/iWork '09/Pages.app/Contents/MacOS/Pages
    0x8fe3b000 - 0x8fe6daa7  dyld (195.6 - ???) <60FD3471-A1D7-342E-99A7-3EDECDAEC6EC> /usr/lib/dyld
    0x99d7d000 - 0x99dfcff7  com.apple.iLifeMediaBrowser (2.6.3 - 502.3.12) <2A8A782C-0799-3CB9-A1AE-13743B7EFECF> /System/Library/PrivateFrameworks/iLifeMediaBrowser.framework/Versions/A/iLifeM ediaBrowser
    Model: iMac11,2, BootROM IM112.0057.B01, 2 processors, Intel Core i3, 3.06 GHz, 4 GB, SMC 1.64f5
    Graphics: ATI Radeon HD 4670, ATI Radeon HD 4670, PCIe, 256 MB
    Memory Module: BANK 0/DIMM1, 2 GB, DDR3, 1333 MHz, 0x80AD, 0x484D54313235533654465238432D48392020
    Memory Module: BANK 1/DIMM1, 2 GB, DDR3, 1333 MHz, 0x80AD, 0x484D54313235533654465238432D48392020
    AirPort: spairport_wireless_card_type_airport_extreme (0x168C, 0x8F), Atheros 9280: 4.0.64.8-P2P
    Bluetooth: Version 4.0.5f11, 2 service, 18 devices, 1 incoming serial ports
    Network Service: Wi-Fi, AirPort, en1
    Serial ATA Device: WDC WD5000AAKX-001CA0, 500.11 GB
    Serial ATA Device: HL-DT-STDVDRW  GA32N
    USB Device: hub_device, 0x0424  (SMSC), 0x2514, 0xfa100000 / 2
    USB Device: composite_device, 0x0c45  (Sonix Technology Co., Ltd.), 0x1050, 0xfa130000 / 5
    USB Device: Internal Memory Card Reader, apple_vendor_id, 0x8403, 0xfa120000 / 4
    USB Device: BRCM2046 Hub, 0x0a5c  (Broadcom Corp.), 0x4500, 0xfa110000 / 3
    USB Device: Bluetooth USB Host Controller, apple_vendor_id, 0x8215, 0xfa111000 / 6
    USB Device: hub_device, 0x0424  (SMSC), 0x2514, 0xfd100000 / 2
    USB Device: FreeAgent Pro, 0x0bc2  (Seagate LLC), 0x3110, 0xfd130000 / 5
    USB Device: IR Receiver, apple_vendor_id, 0x8242, 0xfd120000 / 4
    USB Device: Built-in iSight, apple_vendor_id, 0x8502, 0xfd110000 / 3

    Rebel,
    The versions may be out of sync. Run Software Update to see if there are any updates that weren't captured in the backup.
    If that doesn't do it, you may have to reinstall. Use whatever method you used when you first purchased the app. Disk or registration code.
    Jerry

  • IPhoto: Photos appear as "exclamation" after restore from Time Machine

    My hard drive was recently having issues so Apple replaced it for free. I have a 2TB Time Capsule and restored the new hard drive using Time Machine. It seemed to go without issue. However, when going into iPhoto, with some of the Events (seems to be the more recent ones), I get a big exclamation icon instead of the image. The thumbnails seem fine for I can browse the Events just fine. It is when I click a thumbnail that I get the big exclamation. Does this mean that my master image is somehow gone. Mind you, I could see the images just fine before getting the new hard drive. I was have some sort of seek issues on the old one so Apple decided to replace it however the seek issues didn't affect iPhoto as I could use it and see all the images just fine. But now on the new hard drive with the restore from Time Machine, I can't see the images.
    Any ideas?

    Ah, yes, that is a PITA. Unfortunately, you're not the first.
    All I can think is, iPhoto may have been open at the wrong time during a backup.
    The iPhoto library is a rather unusual critter. It's actually a "package" (a special folder that's treated like a single file for most purposes), with all sorts of cross-linking and indexing and there's no telling what all (at least by us mere mortals). When iPhoto is open, apparently there can be some things updated on disk, but others still in memory, so a backup of what's on disk would be out of sync and not usable if you restored it. Time Machine usually seems to handle this ok, but I'm not convinced it always does.
    Time Machine really ought to send a message if it can't back it up. I don't have a problem with it continuing, and backing-up everything else, since you might not be around, but it sure ought to tell you so you can be sure to close iPhoto and run another backup to be sure. But it doesn't.
    Please feel free to provide your opinion here: http://www.apple.com/feedback/timemachine.html

  • User account to available after restore from time machine

    After havi g to erase my hard drive and reinstall Mountain Lion I could not aces my time machine backup during the installation process. Have been able to access The drive and perform restores from Time Machine however I cannot access my User account. If I try and add the account inSystem Preferences it states that the account with that name already exists but it is not available to log in to.

    Hi, and welcome to the forums.
    There are a few possibilities. You've posted in the Leopard Time Machine forum, but your signature says you're running Snow Leopard. If you used a Leopard Install disc to restore a +*Snow Leopard+* backup, that's the problem. Try again with a Snow Leopard Install disc (you can use either disc to restore a Leopard backup).
    If not, why did you restore? If you were having, say, internal HD troubles, it's possible that they corrupted your installation of OSX, those changes were backed-up by Time Machine, and restored. If that's a possibility, try the restore from an earlier backup.
    If nothing seems to work, do an +*Erase and Install+* of Leopard, if that's what you're running; or start up from your SL Install disc, select +Disk Utility+ from the +Utilities Menu,+ erase your internal HD, quit Disk Utility and install OSX.
    When your Mac restarts with only a fresh copy of OSX, +Setup Assistant+ will ask if you want to transfer your data from another Mac or Time Machine backups. Do so -- see #19 in Time Machine - Frequently Asked Questions (or use the link in *User Tips* at the top of this forum), for details.

  • HT201250 I recently replaced my 2009 Macbook Pro's hard drive.  I had the Apple store upgrade the OS to Mountain Lion while it was being repaired.  I want to restore all of my old files and data, if I restore from Time Machine, will it revert to the old O

    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

  • After restoring from Time Machine to new Hard drive, system will not boot

    I replaced my hard drive on my Macbook (2008 model) with a larger drive. I then put in my Snow Leopard disk, and followed the steps to restore from Time Machine backup. a few hours later it said it was restored, but when trying to boot up, I just get a blue screen with an occasional flicker to the Leopard screen. I tried an earlier back up as well but with the same results. Any suggestions??

    Same exact problem here just yesterday, folks.
    Got a bigger hard drive on my MacBook Pro (15-inch Core 2 Duo) and installed it. Followed the restore procedures from Gizmodo (http://gizmodo.com/333319/the-secret-of-the-time-machine+assisted-hard-drive-swa p). Then got the blue screen immediately after the chimes.
    I only managed to transfer my old disk content by using CarbonCopyCloner.
    Having said that, your solution looks uselful, Portland Mac! :
    Portland Mac wrote:
    ... But when I decided to try and just do a fresh install and work my way back through all my software, I started by installing Snow Leopard and suddenly it boots and everything from my Time Machine backup is there...
    But I would not say the following:
    Portland Mac wrote:
    ... On a new drive apparently you have to install Snow Leopard before you do a time machine restore.
    Am I mistaken, or did you do a fresh install after restoring your TimeMachine backup?
    In any case, I found an interesting Apple article that might confirm that there is a problem: [Mac OS X v10.6: Issues after restoring a Mac from a Time Machine backup made with a different Mac ("Restore System From Backup…")|http://support.apple.com/kb/TS3243]. Or is it a completely different thing?
    And another discussion that might give some good advice: [http://discussions.apple.com/message.jspa?messageID=12578529#12578529]. Personally, I will now do as the man says: two backups, on two different external hard drives, using different apps, the other one being CarbonCopyCloner...
    For info, and I don't know whether that matters, my backup disk had been full and some past content had been erased automatically by Time Machine. But I don't think this should have mattered...

  • Install new hard drive, restore from Time Machine, File Vault Problems

    Hello all,
    I spent way too much time on this seemingly simple task, so I thought I would share my experience with others so they can avoid some pitfalls when upgrading a hard drive in a system that uses File Vault 2 encryption. The basic goal here is to replace a drive in a system that has only one drive, and the OS is Mavericks, and then have the new drive encrypted as before.
    The problem is that a Time Machine restore onto a new drive will leave that without a Recovery Partition, which is required for File Vault 2 and some other important things. So we need to build a recovery partition. There are possibly several ways to do this.
    Here's what worked for me (this is compiled from many sources that I found and already closed the tabs in my browser so I can't list all my sources):
    1) Make a full backup to an external hard drive using Time Machine.
    2) Go into the App Store and download OS X Mavericks but dont install it (close the window when it pops up asking to continue the install). Do this even if you already have Mavericks. At this point, there will be a folder in your Applications folder called Install OS X Mavericks (or similar).
    3) Insert a USB drive that is at least 8 GB and format it using Disk Utility, naming it the default "Untitled".
    4) Open a terminal and type
    sudo /Applications/Install\ OS\ X\ Mavericks.app/Contents/Resources/createinstallmedia --volume /Volumes/Untitled --applicationpath /Applications/Install\ OS\ X\ Mavericks.app --nointeraction
    5) Wait for this to finish (took me about 30 min). Eject the USB drive and power down.
    6) Remove the old hard drive and set it aside. Keep it for a few weeks until you know the new drive is working as expected.
    7) Install the new hard drive and insert the USB drive. Hold the option key and press the power button. Choose to boot from the USB installer.
    8) Use the disk utility to erase whatever partition shipped with the new drive, replacing it with a Mac OS Extended (Journaled) system. Verify that GUID is the partition type (in Advanced options).
    9) Close the disk utility and install Mavericks. This can take a long time. My new drive is an SSD, and it sat at the "1 second remaining" part for about 20 min. Let it reboot (maybe it was 2 times?) and go through the setup until it finishes the install.
    10) Boot into the freshly installed OS and open a terminal and type:
    diskutil list
    11) If there is a partition listed as Apple_Boot Recovery HD (mine was 650 MB), then you now have a recovery partition. If not, then go into the App store and download Mavericks, but don't use the USB this time, choose to do a regular install (or reinstall to be more correct).
    12) Now there will be a recovery partition on the new drive and Time Machine will not overwrite it when restoring. Power down the system.
    13) Plug in the Time Machine backup drive used in step 1. Press the option key and power on. Choose to boot from the recovery partiton (Mavericks).
    14) Choose to restore from Time Machine backup. Wait until it finishes and log into the old familiar account.
    15) Start a terminal and verify the recovery partition is still there (type diskutil list and see that the Apple_Boot Recovery HD is there). If it's missing, choose to download Mavericks from the App Store again and run the installation from this one.
    16) Once there is a Mavericks recovery partition on the restored data you can simply turn on File Vault from the System Preferences Security section. It will require a reboot and then you login and wait for it to finish.
    What a major pain to go through all of this for the sake of upgrading a hard drive. This should not be anywhere near as complicated. I hope this helps others avoid the very time consuming trial and error I went through in developing this procedure.

    Talked with Apple last night. Everything we did to restore lost images failed to fix the issue. I did have the images still on my camera's SD card so I was not breaking out in a cold sweat.
    All Time Machine backups showed the same issue. HOWEVER, I suddenly remembered I also had a SuperDuper backup and voila. The images were there.
    Moral of the story: you can't ever be too rich or have too many backups (I also have an offsite backup).

  • Had to install a new hard drive early 2008 iMac, now can't restore from Time Machine.

    Had to install a new hard drive in a early 2008 iMac, now can't restore from Time Machine. Backups show in Time Machine but  I can't select them.
    Serial Number  QP*****1LW
    <Edited by Host>

    Here are some notes on Time Machine problems.  
    http://pondini.org/TM/  
    Troubleshooting.html
    I have asked the hosts that your serial number be removed.  Best not to publish it,

  • Should I restore from Time Machine, replace hard drive, or neither?

    I appeared to have a full functioning Macbook Pro, until I ran Onyx, and after scanning my hard drive, it said that there were issues and restarting in recovery mode and repairing the disc should be done. Both Disk Utility and DiskWarrior were unable to repair the damaged hard drive.
    Obviously replacing the hard drive would sort out the problem, and I realise that it might be a sign of the start of a failing hard drive... OS X said to backup, erase my drive and restore, so should I do a restore from Time Machine?
    Or should I just leave things now until there are more signs of failure?

    Alilynx wrote:
    I appeared to have a full functioning Macbook Pro, until I ran Onyx, and after scanning my hard drive, it said that there were issues....
    OnyX runs the same Disk Utility program that's in your Applications/Utilties folder,  it uses the Terminal/command line verision. The Disk Utility program is a GUI front end to the Terminal version.
    OnyX  launched the Terminal version of Disk Utility in other words, and so it's Disk Utility that is telling you that there is a problem with the drive it's unable to repair.
    it said that there were issues and restarting in recovery mode and repairing the disc should be done.
    Disk Utility on the Macintosh HD partition (in OS X) is telling you to boot into Recovery HD partition and use that version of Disk Utiltiy to repair the Macintosh HD partition. To do this you hold the command and r keys down and boot the computer.
    Both Disk Utility and DiskWarrior were unable to repair the damaged hard drive.
    Yes because to be able to repair the Macintosh HD partition it can't be booted from, why you instead boot from the Recovery HD partition instead.
    Obviously replacing the hard drive would sort out the problem
    You don't need to go that far at this point, unless the drive is having mechanical issues.
    OS X said to backup, erase my drive and restore, so should I do a restore from Time Machine?
    You  have software issues, when booted from the Recovery HD partition that version of Disk Utiltity says it can't repair the Macintosh HD partition then it's time to erase the Macintosh HD partition and restore from TimeMachine.
    However there could be a problem if the data on your TimeMachine drive is not current or is also corrupted which it copied from the failing internal drive.
    You might want to perform data recovery steps first to grab your data off the Macintosh HD partition so you have a clean copy.
    Create a data recovery/undelete external boot drive
    If this is all above your head, your local PC/Mac repair shop will image your current boot drive to a new extenral drive, then erase the Macintosh HD partition and reinstall OS X for you or restore from TimeMachine etc.
    They will hand you the external drive with your files and everything which you can pick through to restore back to your machine.
    It all depends how important your data is, because if you go and erase the Macintosh HD partition, your destroying one of your copies leaving only one on the TimeMachine drive, which might be in worst shape or outdated without your knowledge.

  • Hard drive not appearing during restore from Time Machine?

    While attempting to restore Time Machine from an external drive to my new MacBook Pro, the hard drive doesn't appear in the graphic.  A second external drive I have does appear, but not the Macintosh HD.  Suggestions?

    Howdy dlayne40,
    If your hard drive is not showing in Time Machine, check it with Disk Utility.
    OS X: If you can't back up or restore with Time Machine - Apple Support
    Check your Drives
    Use Disk Utility to check your startup disk and any external drives you are using for backup.
    Repair any issues and try again.
    Best,
    Nubz

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