Restore from time machine on clean hard drive

I want to change my current hard drive to a SSD hard drive. Unfortunately i lost the DVD that came with the Mac, so my question is whether i can do a complete restore from the time machine backup? Does it include all the iOs file and everything?

You will need the Install DVD that shipped with your Mac...
Contact AppleCare and for a small Handling fee they will send you the Appropriate disc.
Contacting Apple World Wide for Support and Service
http://support.apple.com/kb/HE57
Apple Contact USA
http://www.apple.com/contact/

Similar Messages

  • 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...

  • Toasted my installation. Restoring from Time machine to 2 hard drives?

    I just installed a second hard drive into my macbook pro. SSD is the system drive and HDD is the data drive.
    When it was still working, I had my home folder on the SSD and my iTunes and Photo libraries on the HDD. Things were good.
    Then I decided to move the entire home folder to the HDD.
    Sys Prefs -> Users -> right-click the user -> advanced -> "move the home folder"
    and again, everything was good.
    Then I read something about having the user Library folder on the SSD is a good thing.
    So I moved the home folder back to the SSD. Rebooted and all my prefs were now gone. Figured I messed up something and didn't want to troubleshoot.
    So time for a restore.
    Attempt 1
    - Open Time Machine, select both hard drives, selected a past date and hit restore.
    - Got a message that I didn't have enough space.
    * I figure this is because time machine restores the entire contents of each drive as entire new volumes as a first step.
    Attempt 2
    - Go into recovery mode COMMAND+R
    - Discovered I don't have a recovery partition
    * I guess this is because I cloned my original system drive to the SSD using CCC and it didn't move this part.
    Attempt 3
    - I created a LION USB Install Key
    - Booted from it, and selected 'Reinstall Lion' (because I read an article that I could recover my files after Lion had finished installing)
    * Discovered that it reinstalled 10.7.0 and I would have to apply all patches on top. It didn't restore my HDD either.
    * Later found out this method only restores the main system drive.
    Attempt 4
    - Now that I have a recovery partition, I booted from it.
    - I selected "Restore from Time Machine Backup"
    - Was able to select my Time Capsule, and it gave me choices on which date I would like to restore to.
    - I selected and hit restore.
    * It's about 25% done now. And I realize that i should've done this in the first place.
    Question: Will this method restore both of my hard drives?

    hsmp wrote:
    Question: Will this method restore both of my hard drives?
    No, only a single OSX drive.  If both were backed-up, and both contained OSX, there was a (not very obvious) option to select which one you wanted.
    See Time Machine - Frequently Asked Question #14.  Section (g) shows this.
    If you want to restore the "other" drive, and it contains OSX, run the restore again and select it.
    If the other drive doesn't contain OSX, use the "Star Wars" display to restore it, per FAQ #15.

  • After full restore from Time machine, my TM hard drive won;t mount

    I got my macbook pro back from a logic board repair and restored it fully from Time Machine using my leopard install disc.
    Took a while, but it has installed OK. But some applications weren't restored and now the Time Machine drive won't mount on the Macbook at all. When I open up time machine - and try to choose a backup disc nothing comes up.
    The drive shows up on a PC when i connect it (but won;t read it as its mac formatted) so I'm pretty sure there;s nothing wrong with the drive.

    Also, be aware that TM thinks you got a new Mac, not a new logic board. Thus you won't see your TM backups in the normal way. You'll need the (badly named) +*Browse Other Time Machine Disks+* option (see #E2 in the Time Machine - Troubleshooting *User Tip* at the top of this forum).
    In addition, when you start doing new backups, TM will start a whole new "sequence," as if it were a different Mac. See #C8 in the Troubleshooting Tip for options.

  • Restoring from Time Machine after 1T hard drive replacement

    I am a super computer novice. I picked up my computer yesterday after having the recalled Seagate hard drive replaced. I backed up my computer using Time Machine before I took it in on a Seagate "Backup Plus" portable hard drive.
    Now, when I have tried to use the restore start up, the computer recognizes that my drive is connected, but says there are no files on that drive it can use to restore the system.
    I can see that there are 50GB on the disk, and when I look in it, there are files called "Macintosh HD" so that makes me think that my stuff is in fact on my external drive. why can't my computer see it?
    Do I need to get a FireWire cord to connect to my computer?  I'm using the USB 3.0 that came with the hard drive.
    My computer had Mountain Lion when I backed it up. I think it is back to whatever OS it came with originally. Do I need to update to Mountain Lion?  If I do, how do I do so without having to pay for it again?  My app store is empty since my computer was wiped.
    Thanks for the help, I really need it!

    The first thing to do is upgrade back to ML, which you can easily do.  Just redownload ML from the app store with the same AppleID you used the previous time you purchased the ML upgrade.  Your purchase is tied to the AppleID you used when buying, so you can download it again (as many times as you wish) without payment as long as you use the same AppleID.
    Once you have upgrade it to ML, then try the restore from the backup (which I gather was made when while running ML before).

  • Restore using Time Machine to new hard drive, but last "full" backup was 2012.  how do I restore the rest of the Time Machine backups, particularily IPHOTO libraries for each user?

    Restore using Time Machine to new hard drive, but last "full" backup was in 2012.  How do I restore the rest of the Time Machine backups, particularily IPHOTO libraries for each user? 
    I entered Iphoto for my user and only photo up until 2012 were in the library.  I thought the restore would do the incremental Time Machine backups too.....
    Running 10.8.2

    It usually means you are running Mavericks but have an earlier version of iPhoto. Open the App Store and upgrade your version of iPhoto to the Mavericks version.
    The iWork apps are free with a new iOS device since 1 SEP 2013. They are free with a new Mac since 1 OCT 2013. They are also free with the upgrade to OS X Mavericks 10.9 if you had the previous version installed when you upgraded.The iWork apps are free with a new iOS device since 1 SEP 2013. They are free with a new Mac since 1 OCT 2013. They are also free with the upgrade to OS X Mavericks 10.9 if you had the previous version installed when you upgraded.
    iWork and iLife for Mac come free with every new Mac purchase. Existing users running Mavericks can update their apps for free from the Mac App Store℠. iWork and iLife for iOS are available for free from the App Store℠ for any new device running iOS 7, and are also available as free updates for existing users. GarageBand for Mac and iOS are free for all OS X Mavericks and iOS 7 users. Additional GarageBand instruments and sounds are available for a one-time in-app purchase of $4.99 for each platform.

  • Trying to restore from time capsule to nes hard drive, keeps looking for disks ! Can you help

    ccan't restore from time capsule to new hard drive, after changing to new HD, after calculating required space to restore it keeps looking for disks! Have have put original OS X  install disk 1 in it won't Eject , any help

    The very best way to do this is with ethernet to the existing router. Put the TC in bridge mode manually.
    Then plug it in to existing router.. we recommend LAN router to WAN on the TC but even that is not 100% necessary.
    If you want to link by wireless, to a non-apple router that is bad.. recommend strongly against it. Join a wireless network is super slow.
    If you have a desktop Mac you can plug it directly into the Mac by ethernet.
    But we need to know how the Mac is connected to internet.
    I have given some info on one layout here.
    https://discussions.apple.com/thread/4817218?tstart=30
    If you end up relying on an old TC. And any of the models from Gen1-3.. and increasingly Gen4 have all reached EOL.. they can die suddenly and either take your files with them or be hard to recover. Also a TC is slow cf a USB external drive even, which is more reliable. Considering a 2TB is <$100 I would be careful using an old TC simply because you got it free.

  • How to restore from Time Machine onto an external drive

    Hi all,
    I am a backup freak, and I don't feel entirely safe with Time Machine taking care of backing up my system unless I can test every now and then that I would be able to do a full restore. I've had problems in the past with .Mac/MobileMe's Backup.app, which would not be able to restore from an otherwise apparently successful backup, for one reason or another.
    So, is there a way to test a full restore from Time Machine onto an external hard drive?
    Thanks for your advice

    Allamistakeo wrote:
    Hi all,
    I am a backup freak, and I don't feel entirely safe with Time Machine taking care of backing up my system unless I can test every now and then that I would be able to do a full restore. I've had problems in the past with .Mac/MobileMe's Backup.app, which would not be able to restore from an otherwise apparently successful backup, for one reason or another.
    So, is there a way to test a full restore from Time Machine onto an external hard drive?
    of course. connect an external, boot from the snow leopard DVD and choose "restore system from backup" from the utilities menu. follow the instructions and choose the external drive as the restore destination. make sure it's properly formatted. it should be formatted mac os extended with GUID partition scheme.
    also, you might want to consider doing secondary backups in addition to TM by making a bootable clone on another external drive. use CCCloner or Superduper for such backups.
    Thanks for your advice

  • How to restore from Time Capsule to bare hard drive

    This is more for information, than a question, but I really hope that it helps someone else out facing the same challenge.
    Scenario:
    1 complete recent backup on Time Capsule
    2 failed hard drive on Mac
    3 no startup or OS disk
    [My teenage daughter was distraught, as her much loved and much abused MacBook Pro died completely on a college tour; quick diagnosis confirmed that the hard drive was completely toast. And with it, she believed, all of her work this summer on her college applications.
    That was the bad news. Now for the good news. Unbeknownst to her, I had configured her machine to automatically backup to the Time Capsule on the home network.
    Now the problem. We just moved home. No OS disks. No install disks. And I discovered that she hadn't told me that the optical disk drive was also toast. So no way to get a disk in, in any case.
    So I have a backup, and a new hard drive to go into the dead Mac, and (fortunately) a good Mac (actually several). But all of the guides assume that you have some way to get the zombie Mac to boot.]
    Solution:
    1 figure out spec for new hard drive, find one, buy it and install new hard drive in dead Mac (making it a zombie Mac - it moves but it has no real brains) http://manuals.info.apple.com/MANUALS/0/MA161/en_US/MacBook_13inch_HardDrive_DIY .pdf and http://www.ifixit.com/Guide/MacBook+Pro+13-Inch+Unibody+Mid+2010+Hard+Drive+Repl acement/4305/1
    2 mount hard drive as FireWire disk in Target mode by using ⌘T to any good Mac
    3 download Carbon Copy Cloner http://www.bombich.com/
    4 start the process of cloning, which involves creating a (hidden) Recovery HD partition http://help.bombich.com/kb/advanced-strategies/the-disk-center#recovery_hd
    5 do NOT proceed to clone the 'good Mac', ejecting the formerly dead Mac, which was a zombie Mac, and now has a brain again, and shut it down
    6 connect the now undead Mac to the Time Capsule
    7 boot the now undead Mac, and restore as usual from the Time Capsule http://pondini.org/TM/14.html
    [... and thereby obtain many many good father points]

    Read Q14-18 in Pondini.. the grand poohbah of Time Machine.
    http://pondini.org/TM/FAQ.html

  • If you delete a large file from the mac hard drive does it also remove it from time machine on external hard drive

    if you delete a large file from the mac hard drive does it also delete it from time machine on the external hard drive ?

    As the others say, no, the backup copy won't be deleted immediately, but it will eventually.
    If you want to delete all backups of a selected item, such as for space or security reasons, see #12 in Time Machine - Frequently Asked Questions.

  • Restore iTunes library from Time Machine, after full hard drive wipe

    I had to do a full hard drive wipe on my MBP running 10.6.6, so I made a full Time Machine backup before hand. I reinstalled os x (10.6.3) and used migration assistant to restore my files from the Time Machine backup.
    Most of this process has been painless, however, when I open iTunes it's empty. I have all the music files, iTunes Library.itdb, iTunes Library Extras.itdb and iTunes Library Genius.itdb. Is there a way to restore my previous iTunes library with these files? I feel like this should be a pretty basic thing to do but I haven't found much/any documentation of it online. Any help would be much appreciated.

    Take the files that you list and the iTunes music folder from the TM b/u and drag them to the iTunes folder. To put it in simpler terms - drag the iTunes folder from the TM to the same location on the internal HD.
    By default the path should be HD>User>Your Account>Music>iTunes(your iTunes files are here)>iTunes Music (your music files are here)
    MJ

  • Restore from time machine after clean install of Mavericks

    I decided to do a clean install of Mavericks to get rid of all the very old files hiding in my system folders.  I made a startup disk following online instructions, rebooted from the USB drive and wiped the drive and reinstalled Mavericks.  Then I plugged in my Time machine backup drive and tried to recover particular folders from the latest backup.  However, I am getting a permission error that prevents me from going into the old user folder from that backup.  It has a red circle/line icon on the folder.  How do I get around this so I can select what to restore?

    You might be able to view in System Preferences > Users & Groups.
    Time  Machine  -  Troubleshooting by James Pond is the best source around for Time Machine  help.
    I'm not seeing your issue listed. It's possible you will need to do a full Time Machine restore to another drive so you can actually boot from the drive then log into the user. If you have enough space on internal you could partition to restore there without polluting your current new install.
    Time Machine - Frequently Asked Questions 18. How can I copy my TM backups to a different location?
    I backup to Time Machine but I also use a clone and use it over Time Machine when I'm trying to restore a User like youare trying to do. Hopefully someone else will have a better suggestion other than doing a full restore.

  • Problems "transferring" files from time machine to new hard drive

    I was experieincing the spinning beach ball of death so I replaced my hard drive with a new one.  I am running mountain lion (10.8.2) and the new Hard drive has two partions - one for "start up" which I was able to use migration assisant to move over my applications from my time machine.  The problem I am having is that I can't figure out how to get my user account data transferred to my the data partition (journal extended) on my new hard drive.
    When I enter time machine I can't "see" my last back updates before I changed hard drives. 
    I put my old hard drive in a case and it "isn't working" so I can't just copy data from my old hard drive.  It did work initially but now it doesn't mount and I can't see it in disk utility.
    Any Ideas on how I can get my user data off my time machine back up?
    I forgot to mention that when I go into my external hard drive containing my time machine via finder and click on the folder with my user data I'm not able to open the various files - they have a red "-" and it says, The folder “Desktop” can’t be opened because you don’t have permission to see its contents.  In disk utility I can't run repair disk permision on my time machine drive because it is grayed out.
    Thanks - Dave

    I see. Don't do that. I do not believe using Migration Assistant is a valid method of accomplishing what you intend.
    Furthermore, unless you are using the "Enter Time Machine" feature, you really shouldn't pick and choose what you want to copy from a Time Machine backup... "no user serviceable parts inside". You can certainly find and individual files and folders in the Finder, but you will run into the permissions problems you describle. I would not attempt to circumvent those protections.
    As I understand Time Machine, you must either restore a volume from a Time Machine backup, thereby erasing the volume first, or restore individual files and folders by using "Enter Time Machine" when the backup has already been properly designated for the source.
    Since your replacement hard disk - the source, now - is technically new, the latter is not an option. It's as if you were trying to restore to a different computer. This can't be done.

  • Import apps from time machine backup ext. hard drive

    I just reinstalled by Mac OS X 10.5.8 using my original installation discs. I'd like to selectively import a stand-alone application (vitual piano) from my external hard drive time machine which I had used to back up my Mac. Can I do this after I upgrade to Snow Leopard?

    I solved this myself. I found that, after upgrading to Mac OS Lion from Snow Leopard, some of the aliased folders in my Time Machine backup hard drive are not locked, but the regular folders are locked. Apparently this is new in Lion. (As I mentioned above, my MacBook is too old to upgrade to Mountain Lion.) I had based my query above on my ability to delete things from some aliased folders on my backup hard drive. Fortunately, they are locked in the equivalent non-aliased folders.

  • Restore from Time Machine not recognizing External Drive

    Hi all,
    I woke up the other day to a black screen and a frozen macbook pro (4 months old). It wouldn't boot up past the gray screen, so I tried to repair the drive with the install disc. It said that there are no errors (liar!), so I wiped it and tried to restore from my latest Time Machine backup (should be the day prior).
    However, when trying to restore through the install disks, I only see a backup from April (5 months ago). Even if I try to restore from that one, it says that I don't have enough disk space and won't do anything for me.
    Migration assistant in OSX doesn't see my external drive, even though I can access it through finder.
    I just want my system back to what it looked like prior to my crash. Shouldnt Time Machine have this capability?
    Thank you for any help.

    Robin Ryan wrote:
    Hi all,
    I woke up the other day to a black screen and a frozen macbook pro (4 months old). It wouldn't boot up past the gray screen, so I tried to repair the drive with the install disc. It said that there are no errors (liar!), so I wiped it and tried to restore from my latest Time Machine backup (should be the day prior).
    However, when trying to restore through the install disks, I only see a backup from April (5 months ago). Even if I try to restore from that one, it says that I don't have enough disk space and won't do anything for me.
    Migration assistant in OSX doesn't see my external drive, even though I can access it through finder.
    I just want my system back to what it looked like prior to my crash. Shouldnt Time Machine have this capability?
    Thank you for any help.
    You should take your question to the Time Machine forum. More experts there on TM than you can ever imagine.
    http://discussions.apple.com/forum.jspa?forumID=1342

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