Repaired permissions, now TM doing a full backup?

Hi, intelligent user who doesn't have much advanced knowledge concerning what Repairing Permissions even means here.
So I'm planning on replacing my Macbook Pro's HD, and I just finished making a full bootable backup onto a 200GB FW drive using Super Duper, and checked the "Repair Permissions first" option. I figured that having a latest Time Machine backup (1TB Time Capsule) would make sense as well, so before powering down to unscrew the case I did a Back Up Now. It scanned the entire computer and decided that it would backup all 70 GB fresh. I'm assuming this has something to do with having repaired permissions, but I don't quite know what that means. It may be something similar to what recently happened to me, when I erased my whole computer and refreshed from Time Machine, and then on the next backup it did everything over again instead of updating (for that backup I can still browse dates before that happened as long as I start at the root drive).
Anyone know what I could do to fix this?

Brian wrote:
We have to be careful here: there are three different scenarios:
New computer or logic board. Time Machine identifies your computer by it's +Media Access Control address+ (MAC address), embedded in the hardware of the logic board. There is a way that some folks have gotten around this on Leopard after a new logic board, but it's tedious and very easy to mess up (I did that, twice!) per the link in #C8 of Troubleshooting. (It's very dangerous on a different Mac).
That was automated for Snow Leopard, resulting in the Re-Use prompt mentioned in #B5 of Troubleshooting. But, as #B5 specifies, Time Machine usually still does a full backup; the advantage is, Time Machine will delete the old backups normally.
New drive on the same Mac (per the link you provided). I don't believe that works on Snow Leopard, and I've not seen a hack specifically for Snow Leopard posted here.
Full restore (from Time Machine, a "clone", or otherwise) to the same drive on the same Mac. This almost always results in a new, full backup. An Apple engineer said that would stop with Snow Leopard, but obviously didn't. Some real techie UNIX guru decided there ought to be a way to do it; he posted a two-page log here a few months ago, of altering all sorts of things via Terminal, converting UUIDs to hex, etc., and claimed to have made it work. But he did it only as an exercise, and even he wouldn't recommend it, even to expert UNIX types.
. . . I suppose the best way to save space on my Time Capsule (it now has at least 3 copies of my entire system with only very minor differences in the existence of some files) would be to make sure I have all the files I will ever want to have backed up, then delete the old records, which is something I presume wouldn't be too hard, make a fresh backup, then delete whatever I don't think I need right now, knowing it will all be found by scrolling back to July of 2010?
I'd have to agree. It just isn't worth the hassle, or the risk of damaging something that you might not notice for a long time. I have no problem hacking around with most things, but not my backups.
Depending on whether Time Machine made new sparse bundles, it may not be too tedious to delete the old backups. See #12 in Time Machine - Frequently Asked Questions (or use the link in *User Tips* at the top of this forum).

Similar Messages

  • Time Machine doing a full backup every time it runs

    My Time Machine seems to be doing a full backup every time it runs on the hour. The backup size is about 19GB. Shouldn't hourly and daily backups be much smaller after you run Time Machine for the first time?
    I remember a while back, my hourly backups were a couple of minutes.....now they are 30 minutes.
    John

    Hi Steve,
    http://pondini.org/TM/12.html
    https://discussions.apple.com/thread/3687285?start=0&tstart=0
    http://pondini.org/TM/Troubleshooting.html

  • Time Machine Does Excessive Full Backups

    Time Machine used to just backup changed material on a hourly basis. It seems that recently every time I look at the progress indicator it is trying to do a full backup of my entire hard drive. Any ideas why?

    Have you recently done a restore?
    I have the same problem. I did a full restore, and TM did a full backup afterwards. This is a "documented feature". Then it did skims every hour. However, if I reboot, it does a full backup the first time after the reboot. It's done 5 full backups (50 GB each) in the past 5 days. I can't afford to shut down my Mac until I figure this out. I only have 170GB of free space on my Time Machine drive.
    Is there any way to see how big each backup is, and delete un-needed ones?
    I'd really like to figure out what causes this problem, before Time Machine starts deleting old stuff I want backed up to make room for all these wasteful new backups.

  • Time machine does a full backup every time I reconnect my portable drive to my macbook pro

    How do I stop time machine from doing a full backup every time I disconnect & reconnect my backup portable drive to my macbook pro. It doesn't recognize the old backups.

    Hi Steve,
    http://pondini.org/TM/12.html
    https://discussions.apple.com/thread/3687285?start=0&tstart=0
    http://pondini.org/TM/Troubleshooting.html

  • Repair permissions now takes literally hours

    on my MBP, i can repair permissions in five minutes or so. on my wife's macbook, it takes up to four hours. does anyone know why this may be and how to fix it? both are running the latest version of 10.6.3.

    Carolyn Samit wrote:
    HI,
    on my wife's macbook, it takes up to four hours.
    That shouldn't happen.
    Boot your wife's Macbook from her install disc, run Disk Utility to Verify and if necessary Repair any errors on the startup disk.
    Insert your install disk and Restart, holding down the "C" key until grey Apple appears.
    Go to Installer menu and launch Disk Utility.
    Select your HDD (manufacturer ID) in the left panel.
    Select First Aid in the Main panel.
    *(Check S.M.A.R.T Status of HDD at the bottom of right panel. It should say: Verified)*
    Click Repair Disk on the bottom right.
    If DU reports disk does not need repairs quit DU and restart.
    If DU reports errors Repair again and again until DU reports disk is repaired.
    When you are finished with DU, from the Menu Bar, select Utilities/Startup Manager.
    Select your start up disk and click Restart
    While you have the Disk Utility window open, look at the bottom of the window. Where you see Capacity and Available. *Make sure there is always 10% to 15% free disk space*
    Carolyn
    thanks for the response. so.... i repaired the disk as you suggested. nada. "the disk appears to be fine." i thought i'd repair permissions from the boot disk. big mistake. it's said, "15 minutes remaining" for the past 30 minutes and isn't budging. plus, now it won't let me quit (or even force quit). i know my wife's HD is quite full - i think there's 12GB free of 80GB total - but that shouldn't be it, should it?

  • HT4859 Is backing up over iCloud not using iTunes the same as doing a full backup on iTunes?

    My recent laptop has broken, I had to format it and now when I try downloading iTunes again it doesnt work at all, I have tried ridiculous amounts of times. I am going to send my phone off for repair and I need to know if backing up over iCloud via the iPhone backs up the same contents as doing a full back up on iTunes.
    Thanks!

    Should i just run a full back up?
    Yes.

  • TC keeps doing a full backup

    This is the third time my 1TB Time Capsule has done a full "initial" backup. I have absolutely no idea why it's doing this. Each time it apparently overwrites the previous backup.

    Zmantra,
    Welcome to the Apple discussions. Next time feel free to start a new thread as you will likely get more responses that way. But the following might give you some ideas as to what is happening.
    *_Incremental Backups Seem Too Large!_*
    Open the Time Machine Prefs on the Mac in question. How much space does it report you have "Available"? When a backup is initiated how much space does it report you need?
    Now, consider the following, it might give you some ideas:
    Time Machine performs backups at the file level. If a single bit in a large file is changed, the WHOLE file is backed up again. This is a problem for programs that save data to monolithic virtual disk files that are modified frequently. These include Parallels, VMware Fusion, Aperture vaults, or the databases that Entourage and Thunderbird create. These should be excluded from backup using the Time Machine Preference Exclusion list. You will, however, need to backup these files manually to another external disk.
    One poster observed regarding Photoshop: “If you find yourself working with large files, you may discover that TM is suddenly backing up your scratch disk's temp files. This is useless, find out how to exclude these (I'm not actually sure here). Alternatively, turn off TM whilst you work in Photoshop.” [http://discussions.apple.com/thread.jspa?threadID=1209412]
    If you do a lot of movie editing, unless these files are excluded, expect Time Machine to treat revised versions of a single movie as entirely new files.
    If you frequently download software or video files that you only expect to keep for a short time, consider excluding the folder these are stored in from Time Machine backups.
    If you have recently created a new disk image or burned a DVD, Time Machine will target these files for backup unless they are deleted or excluded from backup.
    *Events-Based Backups*
    Time Machine does not compare file for file to see if changes have been made. If it had to rescan every file on your drive before each backup, it would not be able to perform backups as often as it does. Rather, it looks for EVENTS (fseventsd) that take place involving your files and folders. Moving/copying/deleting/saving files and folders creates events that Time Machine looks for. [http://arstechnica.com/reviews/os/mac-os-x-10-5.ars/14]
    Installing new software, upgrading existing software, or updating Mac OS X system software can create major changes in the structure of your directories. Every one of these changes is recorded by the OS as an event. Time Machine will backup every file that has an event associated with it since the installation.
    Files or folders that are simply moved or renamed are counted as NEW files or folders. If you rename any file or folder, Time Machine will back up the ENTIRE file or folder again no matter how big or small it is.
    George Schreyer describes this behavior: “If you should want to do some massive rearrangement of your disk, Time Machine will interpret the rearranged files as new files and back them up again in their new locations. Just renaming a folder will cause this to happen. This is OK if you've got lots of room on your backup disk. Eventually, Time Machine will thin those backups and the space consumed will be recovered. However, if you really want recover the space in the backup volume immediately, you can. To do this, bring a Finder window to the front and then click the Time Machine icon on the dock. This will activate the Time Machine user interface. Navigate back in time to where the old stuff exists and select it. Then pull down the "action" menu (the gear thing) and select "delete all backups" and the older stuff vanishes.” (http://www.girr.org/mac_stuff/backups.html)
    *TechTool Pro Directory Protection*
    This disk utility feature creates backup copies of your system directories. Obviously these directories are changing all the time. So, depending on how it is configured, these backup files will be changing as well which is interpreted by Time Machine as new data to backup. Excluding the folder these backups are stored in will eliminate this effect.
    *Backups WAY Too Large*
    If an initial full backup or subsequent incremental backup is tens or hundreds of Gigs larger than expected, check to see that all unwanted external hard disks are still excluded from Time Machine backups.
    This includes the Time Machine backup drive ITSELF. Normally, Time Machine is set to exclude itself by default. But on rare occasions it can forget. When your backup begins, Time Machine mounts the backup on your desktop. (For Time Capsule users it appears as a white drive icon labeled something like “Backup of (your computer)”.) If, while it is mounted, it does not show up in the Time Machine Prefs “Do not back up” list, then Time Machine will attempt to back ITSELF up. If it is not listed while the drive is mounted, then you need to add it to the list.
    *Recovering Backup Space*
    If you have discovered that large unwanted files have been backed up, you can use the Time Machine “time travel” interface to recovered some of that space.
    Launch Time Machine from the Dock icon.
    Initially, you are presented with a window that represents “Today (Now)”. DO NOT make changes to file while you see “Today (Now)” at the bottom of the screen.
    Click on the window just behind “Today (Now)”. This represents the last successful backup and should display the date and time of this backup at the bottom of the screen.
    Now, navigate to where the unwanted file resides.
    Highlight the file and click the Actions menu (Gear icon) from the toolbar.
    Select “Delete all backups of <this file>”.
    *FileVault / Boot Camp / iDisk Syncing*
    Note: Leopard has changed the way it deals with FileVault disk images, so it is not necessary to exclude your Home folder if you have FileVault activated. Additionally, Time Machine ignores Boot Camp partitions as the manner in which they are formatted is incompatible. Finally, if you have your iDisk Synced to your desktop, it is not necessary to exclude the disk image file it creates as that has been changed to a sparsebundle as well in Leopard.
    Cheers!

  • Why is TM doing a full backup?!

    After two attempts, I finally thought I had TM working properly. The initial backup took HOURS to complete but, once done, every hour thereafter, it did just a small (measured in kilobytes) incremental backup. Excellent, right?
    Well, I put my machine to sleep for about three hours and, when I fired it back up, TM now has started to do another FULL backup of 70 GB's. It is, of course, taking forever to complete once again.
    What gives? After the initial full backup, every backup thereafter should be incremental, no? This is going to be completely unusable if it doe a full backup daily, or every time the machine has been off for 3+ hours.
    The only thing I did before shutting the machine off was to install two small applications that are used to update the content of my portable GPS. Does the installation of an application force a full backup? Grr...

    I'm running a Macbook Pro C2D. I had 70 GB worth of data that kept getting backed up every time I plugged in my external hard disk even if I hadn't changed any files.
    Maxthewildthing's advice in a different thread worked for me -- your mileage may vary. His advice reportedly came from Apple Support and applies to Intel machines. I've reformatted and elaborated on his steps a bit.
    1. Start Applications > Utilities > Disk Utility.
    2. Highlight the disk you intend to use for Time Machine.
    3. Click "Info" on the file bar. The Partition Map Scheme should read: "GUID Partition Table".
    4. If it does not, you need to re partition your Time Machine disk. Under "Volume Scheme" click the down arrow and select "1 partition".
    5. Name your time machine drive, making sure that the selected format is "Mac OS Extended (Journalled)".
    6. Click "Options" at the bottom and select "GUID Partition Table". Select "Apply." WARNING: This will erase all of the data on the selected disk! Performing this step triggers the repartitioning process and wipes your disk clear.
    7. When it's done, Time Machine will likely open on its own. Turn it off and then on.
    8. Set it up as you would normally, e.g. excluding directories if you wish.
    9. When you finish selecting your options, let it do the initial backup. This will be a lengthy process since it's backing up all of your files for the first time. Subsequent backups will backup only changed files.
    Good luck.
    Steven

  • Getting this error when repairing permissions. What does it mean????

    Hello,
    I just ran premissions repair with OSX's disk utility.
    What do these errors meana nd are they a serious issue?
    Repairing permissions for “Macintosh HD”
    Determining correct file permissions.
    Permissions differ on ./private/var/log/secure.log, should be -rw------- , they are -rw-r-----
    Owner and group corrected on ./private/var/log/secure.log
    Permissions corrected on ./private/var/log/secure.log
    Permissions repair complete
    The privileges have been verified or repaired on the selected volume
    MacPro 2.66   Mac OS X (10.4.8)   2G ram.. iSight camera
    MacPro 2.66   Mac OS X (10.4.8)   2G ram.. iSight camera

    Hi Rich, it sounds like your MacBook is running well after the archive & install.
    when the user login screen came up... and it trashed my Adobe CS2/CS3 installs and Parallels.It trashed them? Are you sure it didn't save them in a folder called, "Previous System" on the top level (root level) of your hard drive? Can't you just re-install them?
    Also, you should maintain some type of backup, preferably on a firewire hard drive. If you clone your entire system over to one and make it bootable, you never have to worry.
    You can also run Apple Hardware Test to set your mind at ease about hardware issues:
    Using Apple Hardware Test:
    1. Disconnect all external devices from your iMac except the keyboard and mouse.
    If you have an Ethernet cable connected, disconnect it.
    2. Insert the Mac OS X Install Disc 1 that came with your iMac.
    3. Restart your iMac and hold down the D key as your iMac starts up.
    4. When the Apple Hardware Test chooser screen appears, select the language
    appropriate for your location.
    5. Press the Return key or click the right arrow button.
    6. When the Apple Hardware Test main screen appears (after about 45 seconds), follow
    the onscreen instructions.
    7. Apple Hardware Test displays an error code if it detects a problem. Make a note of the
    error code before pursuing support options.
    I don't know about that CleanApp thingy, not sure you need it for anything,
    -mj
    [email protected]

  • I HAVE EARLIER PREPARED WINDOWS REPAIR DISC, NOW IT DOES NOT WORK

    140525
    I HAVE WINDOWS 7  ULTIMATE VERSION- 32 BIT
    I HAVE EARLIER PREPARED MANY  " WINDOWS REPAIR DISC" FROM TIME TO TIME AS A PROTECTION ON THIS VERY LAPTOP AND OS.
    NOW IT DOES NOT WORK AND GIVE ERROR CODE -- 0XC00AA0301.
    I TRIED SEVERAL TIMES AND WASTED QUITE A FEW DVD'S.
    CAN YOU GUIDE?
    REPLY ON [email protected]
    HOPE TO RECEIVE HELP.
    GJDMBH

    Once downloaded the Window7 setup you then want to download the windows free burning app from the same thread.
    Also visit the Microsoft website link below as has basic guidance that may help you.
    http://www.microsoftstore.com/store/msusa/html/pbP​age.Help_Win7_usbdvd_dwnTool
    Basically with the Windows free burning app you can make either a USB boot stick media of windows 7 or a good older fashioned DVD boot media. Just follow instructions & see how you go, if get stuck come back to this thread & post details on your issue - hopefully myself or other members will be able assist you further if needed.
    Like my post? Click Kudos (thumb+) to show appreciation.

  • Repair permissions now takes 15-30 minutes

    In leopard, permissions repair was slooooow. but upon moving to SL, it got a lot faster - that is, until just recently, probably coinciding with the 10.6.2 update, where it now gets stuck at the "2 minutes remaining" mark for approximately 15-30 minutes. it is at this point, we get the message:
    Warning: SUID file "System/Library/CoreServices/RemoteManagement/ARDAgent.app/Contents/MacOS/ARDAg ent" has been modified and will not be repaired.
    anyone else experience this?
    btw - this is on my wife's white macbook, not my MBP.

    K T wrote:
    Normal - pretty much everyone gets those. OK to ignore.
    http://support.apple.com/kb/TA21041?viewlocale=en_US
    -=-=-=-
    i've seen this issue before - but my problem is that repairing permissions takes up to half an hour now. on my MBP, which runs the same version of OSX and has a much bigger drive, repairing permissions takes under 5 minutes.
    i'm wondering if it's an unrelated issue. is it possible to see what's hanging up the permissions repair?
    Message was edited by: bscepter

  • Repaired permissions, now my iMac wants a password to delete anything.

    I just repaired permissions on my computer (general maintenance), and now when I try to delete something from my desktop it asks for a password. I never set one on my account in the first place. I also need one to delete off the server in Adobe Bridge. How do I fix this?

    See if Linc's suggestion in the following topic will work for you:
    Permissions nightmare: Apple Support Communities
    OT

  • Repaired permissions, now no applications run

    After I repaired permissions, in my user account (not admin), no applications run?
    Anyone know what I did wrong, and how I can fix it?
    Thanks
    it just stalls for ages and doesnt run. Only firefox and adium X is running. ...

    Yes, you can boot up from an external drive. When you get it your will first need to prep the drive before installing OS X on it:
    Extended Hard Drive Preparation
    1. Boot from your OS X Installer Disk. After the installer loads select your language and click on the Continue button. Then select Disk Utility from the Installer menu (Utilities menu for Tiger.)
    2. After DU loads select your hard drive (this is the entry with the mfgr.'s ID and size) from the left side list. Note the SMART status of the drive in DU's status area. If it does not say "Verified" then the drive is failing or has failed and will need replacing. Otherwise, click on the Partition tab in the DU main window.
    3. Set the number of partitions from the dropdown menu (use 1 partition unless you wish to make more.) Set the format type to Mac OS Extended (Journaled, if supported.) Click on the Partition button and wait until the volume(s) mount on the Desktop.
    4. Select the volume you just created (this is the sub-entry under the drive entry) from the left side list. Click on the Erase tab in the DU main window.
    5. Set the format type to Mac OS Extended (Journaled, if supported.) Click on the Options button, check the button for Zero Data and click on OK to return to the Erase window.
    6. Click on the Erase button. The format process will take 30 minutes to an hour or more depending upon the drive size.
    After the formatting has completed quit DU and return to the installer. Proceed with the OS X installation. When it has finished and rebooted you will be running from the external drive. You should then be able to fix things on the internal drive.
    Why reward points?(Quoted from Discussions Terms of Use.)
    The reward system helps to increase community participation. When a community member gives you (or another member) a reward for providing helpful advice or a solution to their question, your accumulated points will increase your status level within the community.
    Members may reward you with 5 points if they deem that your reply is helpful and 10 points if you post a solution to their issue. Likewise, when you mark a reply as Helpful or Solved in your own created topic, you will be awarding the respondent with the same point values.

  • Time Machine does a full backup after a full restore

    Hi,
    To test Time Machine (as you should always do with any backup system) I decided to do a full restore of one of my Macs. This went fine (after figuring out how to mount my remote backup disk).
    However I noticed that when the restored machine did its first scheduled Time Machine backup after being restored it did what pretty much amounted to a full backup (taking ages).
    I believe Time Machine should be clever enough to know that the restored files are the same as the backed up ones, and there is no need to copy new versions.
    Cheers, Ed.

    Indeed not unexpected, however it would be easy to fix this in the future by linking the restore into the existing baseline (given that it is a direct copy of it) as it writes the files.
    It is worth mentioning because if you have a smallish backup disk (I don't) then writing the second baseline may flush out a number of your older weekly backups that you would rather have retained. It will also eventually mean that you will always have those two baselines and therefore restrict the number of valid backups that you can keep.
    Cheers, Ed.

  • After "Reconnecting" to my backups, TM still does a full backup

    I upgraded from 10.6.8 to 10.8 (yes I skiped 10.7) last week, and would very much like to keep my Time Machine backup history.  I followed the instructions on Pondini's website http://pondini.org/TM/B6.html, but TM still performed a full backup of all my data.  I then followed http://pondini.org/TM/A4.html to reset Time Machine, still TM performed full backup.  After TM performed the full backup, I ran BackupLoupe and saw that TM did recorgnize the histroy.  I tested it by deleting a small unimportant file via TM's interface, and TM did delete it from all backups.
    What happened with TM?  How do I avoid this unnecessary full backup?  The following are the messages from the Console while TM performed the backup.  Thanks in advance.
    12-9-5 12:29:49.758 AM com.apple.backupd[11586]: Starting manual backup
    12-9-5 12:29:49.773 AM com.apple.backupd[11586]: Backing up to: /Volumes/TM4T ST2T-Hi2T/Backups.backupdb
    12-9-5 12:29:51.250 AM com.apple.backupd[11586]: Inheritance scan required for /Volumes/Multimedia, associated with previous UUID: 09077F6F-5D2D-30E5-AE7B-2DF8F26907FD
    12-9-5 12:29:51.259 AM com.apple.backupd[11586]: Inheritance scan required for /, associated with previous UUID: 1DB217CD-86B7-3A22-918B-B1804C505BC4
    12-9-5 12:29:51.283 AM com.apple.backupd[11586]: Inherited root volume Main, UUID: CBFD27EC-0674-36E0-B775-1D0126D15780
    12-9-5 12:29:51.318 AM com.apple.backupd[11586]: Event store UUIDs don't match for volume: Multimedia
    12-9-5 12:29:51.337 AM com.apple.backupd[11586]: Event store UUIDs don't match for volume: Main
    12-9-5 12:29:51.351 AM com.apple.backupd[11586]: Deep event scan at path:/Volumes/Multimedia reason:must scan subdirs|new event db|
    12-9-5 12:29:51.351 AM com.apple.backupd[11586]: First backup after disk inheritance for /Volumes/Multimedia - complete scan required
    12-9-5 12:31:43.994 AM com.apple.backupd[11586]: Finished scan
    12-9-5 12:33:55.752 AM com.apple.backupd[11586]: Deep event scan at path:/ reason:must scan subdirs|new event db|
    12-9-5 12:33:55.768 AM com.apple.backupd[11586]: First backup after disk inheritance for / - complete scan required
    12-9-5 12:34:52.132 AM com.apple.backupd[11586]: Error (256): fetching properties: Error Domain=NSCocoaErrorDomain Code=256 "The file “keyedobjects.nib” couldn’t be opened." UserInfo=0x7ff18cdc8a50 {NSURL=file://localhost/Volumes/TM4T%20ST2T-Hi2T/Backups.backupdb/Mac%20Pro/201 2-08-08-194751/Main/Applications/iPhoto.app/Contents/Resources/TemplateDataInspe ctor.nib/keyedobjects.nib, NSFilePath=/Volumes/TM4T ST2T-Hi2T/Backups.backupdb/Mac Pro/2012-08-08-194751/Main/Applications/iPhoto.app/Contents/Resources/TemplateD ataInspector.nib/keyedobjects.nib, NSUnderlyingError=0x7ff18cdbe9a0 "The operation couldn’t be completed. Not a directory"}
    12-9-5 12:37:43.351 AM com.apple.backupd[11586]: Finished scan
    12-9-5 12:38:46.188 AM com.apple.backupd[11586]: Error (256): fetching properties: Error Domain=NSCocoaErrorDomain Code=256 "The file “keyedobjects.nib” couldn’t be opened." UserInfo=0x7ff1911f2c20 {NSURL=file://localhost/Volumes/TM4T%20ST2T-Hi2T/Backups.backupdb/Mac%20Pro/201 2-08-08-194751/Main/Applications/iPhoto.app/Contents/Resources/TemplateDataInspe ctor.nib/keyedobjects.nib, NSFilePath=/Volumes/TM4T ST2T-Hi2T/Backups.backupdb/Mac Pro/2012-08-08-194751/Main/Applications/iPhoto.app/Contents/Resources/TemplateD ataInspector.nib/keyedobjects.nib, NSUnderlyingError=0x7ff1911e8ed0 "The operation couldn’t be completed. Not a directory"}
    12-9-5 12:42:08.466 AM com.apple.backupd[11586]: Found 1087307 files (1.08 TB) needing backup
    12-9-5 12:42:08.923 AM com.apple.backupd[11586]: 1.29 TB required (including padding), 2.36 TB available
    12-9-5 12:42:46.691 AM com.apple.backupd[11586]: Copied 9650 files (624.7 MB) from volume Multimedia.
    12-9-5 12:42:48.093 AM com.apple.backupd[11586]: Backup canceled.

    Hi Steve,
    http://pondini.org/TM/12.html
    https://discussions.apple.com/thread/3687285?start=0&tstart=0
    http://pondini.org/TM/Troubleshooting.html

Maybe you are looking for

  • Creating a job that runs a Tcl script

    Hi, We currently have a scheduled job running a Tcl script on a 8.1.7 DB. My question is, can I still use the same setup in 10g DB (i.e. creating a job that runs Tcl script)? If I can, how am I gonna do it? Thanks, howie

  • Commit causing other form to fail

    I have an app that runs on forms 6i. The app is made up of multiple forms, all of which can be opened using open form (or go form if the form is already open). The forms are not table based. i.e. they are coded so that triggers fire to ensure users h

  • What fact tables get affect in open hub services whether E or F

    hi, what fact tables get affect in open hub services whether E or F when an info provider is accessed. regards, -a

  • Business Objects Universes generation

    Hi everyone, We wish to install and use Web Intelligence (Business Objects Enterprise Premium). I understand that Web Intelligence requires universes and that they can be generated via Universe Designer or Universe Builder. With these tools, we can g

  • Animation in Forms 6i (like Flash)

    Please anybody can help me. How to embed animation in forms 6i. like (forms 6i). pls give me complete coding or detail bcaz i am new guy in Oracle. If answer is ActiveX or OLE . please explain how to use them. Muhammad Faisal