Restore from time machine questions

Since update from snow leopard to time machine mac mini runs very slow.  Too much beach ball.  I want to do a clean install of lion and restore from time machine and have multiple questions.
1. I'm not sure if my time capsule password is the same as my airport, and if it is not where can I find it
2. If I install the os can I just tell the time machine that I am migrating to a new machine and that would be the most simple and painless?  And if I did would that just restore broken extensions?
3. Will my keychain be restored?
4.What do I restore?  Documents?  All my files? Macintosh HD?  Applications?  Documents?
5. I'm using parallels primarily to run the windows version of Quicken. Will time machine restore that or do need to reinstall parallels and windows etc?
6. If I restore Applications folder will programs work or do I need to reinstall the programs?
7. Do I install Ilife or Iwork?  Mobile me?  Widgets?  Printers, keyboard, etc?

Since update from snow leopard to time machine mac mini runs very slow.  Too much beach ball.  I want to do a clean install of lion and restore from time machine and have multiple questions.
1. I'm not sure if my time capsule password is the same as my airport, and if it is not where can I find it
2. If I install the os can I just tell the time machine that I am migrating to a new machine and that would be the most simple and painless?  And if I did would that just restore broken extensions?
3. Will my keychain be restored?
4.What do I restore?  Documents?  All my files? Macintosh HD?  Applications?  Documents?
5. I'm using parallels primarily to run the windows version of Quicken. Will time machine restore that or do need to reinstall parallels and windows etc?
6. If I restore Applications folder will programs work or do I need to reinstall the programs?
7. Do I install Ilife or Iwork?  Mobile me?  Widgets?  Printers, keyboard, etc?

Similar Messages

  • I'm having a problem with logging into a FileVault-protected user account after restoring from Time Machine backup.

    Hi all,
    My computer had been running really slowly for a while, so I decided to erase the whole hard drive and reinstall the operating system, and then I was going to restore the files I cared about from Time Machine. The main account, which had all my documents and photos, was FileVault-protected. The last thing I did before erasing the hard drive was to run one last Time Machine backup. As far as I remember, I always ran Time Machine backups with the FileVaulted user logged in.
    I don't remember whether I was using FileVault 1 or 2. I had been using FileVault 1, but I installed Lion as soon as it came out and I thought I had migrated to FileVault 2 at that point.
    Once I erased the hard drive and reinstalled the operating system, I browsed the Time Machine disk and, within the Users folder, there was no folder for the main user account. When I tried to reinstall everything by restoring from Time Machine backup, I'd get the option for all the user accounts, but when I tried to log in with the main one I'd get the dreaded "You are unable to log in to the FileVault user account "User" at this time. Log in failed because an error occurred." Finally, when attempting to restore from the Time Machine backup again, I noticed something strange: After the computer got to about 10% done restoring, it declared itself completed successfully and rebooted.
    I've tried a number of tips that came up from questions about similar issues on the Apple support forum, but had no luck. Is there any way to get these files back? Did they ever even get backed up?
    Thanks.

    Hroodbwai wrote:
    I can't find it! not sure what's going on but the only folder shown is the " Shared" folder.
    Did you have only the one user account? If there were others, they should also be in the "Users" folder. You probably won't have access to the files inside them, but they should be there.
    From what can make out, it looks like it's not backed up any of the files for the filevault account. Can't see user folder when looking through previous backups in Time Machine galaxy view.
    Are you doing that from a Finder window set to your internal HD, or your computer name? It should look something like this (with the Finder in List view):
    |
    |
    I'd been logging out and backing up manually on a regular basis.
    Scheduled backups should run normally; but they won't back up the File Vault sparse bundle, nor will any run manually.
    The only time it's backed-up is when you actually log out.
    You should have seen this window on logout:
    |
    |
    followed by this one:
    |
    |
    If you didn't see the second one, or cancelled it, the account wasn't backed-up.

  • How to restore from Time Machine WITHOUT install discs using a second Mac

    It's a question that is asked repeatedly all over the web by Mac users like me that bought in to Time Machine (TM) on the assumption that if their computer died one day it would be a piece of cake to restore from it, only for that day to come and then to be told "ahh, okay the first thing is to get your computers install discs..." (loud crashing sound of world falling around ears).
    I've never been able to afford a new Mac and both of my machines were bought second-hand. Neither came with Leopard (both have Tiger and have been upgraded to Leopard via the net). This was never supposed to be a problem as I've been backing up with TM. However it appears that Tiger discs are as much use as an inflatable dart board when it comes to using TM. So I've been faced with the possibility of having to spend £130 (about two hundred Pres Sheets, Yankees) on the Leopard install discs just so that I can have the option of restoring from TM. Bonkers.
    However after much nashing of teeth, a very long weekend learning all sorts of things about 'Target Mode', 'Single User Mode', 'Verbose Mode', 'Open Source 9' etc the following solution has worked without the need to go out and buy those over-priced discs...
    What you will need:
    1 broken Mac requiring restoration
    1 second donor Mac running Leopard (or Snow Leopard so long as the broken Mac can run it)
    1 firewire cable with the correct fitting at either end to attach both Macs together
    1 Time Machine backup
    Note: The following is for when you have given up trying to boot from your hard drive. In my case I couldn't boot in to Safe Mode etc. so was forced to format my drive and re-import everything. If you've read this far I'm assuming your at the same point as well and have tried everything else that's out there first.
    Also - both my Macs are Power PC's so can't run Snow Leopard, so I can't say 100% this will work with SL (Intel) machines. From what I've read Snow Leopard will work with this procedure too, but if you've found differently please feel free to add your experiences below...
    STEP ONE: Format the corrupt Hard Drive or replace with a fresh HDD
    *Link the two computers with a firewire.
    *If you're replacing your HDD, remove your corrupted hard drive from the 'broken' machine and insert a new one.
    *Power up the broken Mac whilst holding down the 'T' key. This will start it up in Target Mode and you'll get a nice firewire symbol floating around that machine's screen.
    *Power up the second 'healthy' Mac. This will be our 'donor' machine. When it starts up after a few seconds you will see the hard drive of the broken Mac appear on the donor Mac's desktop.
    *Using your donor Mac's 'Disc Utility', format the broken Mac's hard drive (now's the time to partition it etc. if you want to).
    STEP TWO: Clone your donor Mac
    Your broken Mac is no longer broken and now needs a new OS. But you don't have the discs, right? Well get this... you can clone your donor mac on to your machine, even if they are totally different i.e. a laptop on to a tower.
    *Again using Disc Utility, click on your donor Mac's hard drive. The restore tab appears as an option.
    *Click on restore and drag the donor Mac's hard drive that contains the operating system in to the Source box.
    *Drag the newly formatted hard drive on the broken Mac in to the Destination box.
    *Click restore. Your donor Mac's hard drive will now be 'cloned' on to your no-longer-broken Mac. Once this is done, eject the first Mac's hard drive from your donor Mac's desktop. You no longer need the donor Mac.
    Ta daa! Your machine now starts up happy and smily again. Time to restore all that stuff that's been sat on your Time Machine drive...
    STEP 3: Restore from Time Machine using Migration Assistant
    This is the really clever part that prompted me to write this piece in the first place. Time Machine IS accessible without those Leopard install discs you don't have. You need to use something called 'Migration Assistant'.
    *Start up your machine as normal and you'll see it is an exact clone of the donor machine. Weird huh?
    *Attach your Time Machine hard drive. It will show up as an icon on the desktop and because of it's size, you'll be asked if you want to use it as a Time Machine backup. Err, NO YOU DON'T! Click 'cancel'.
    *Open Migration Assistant (if you can't find it just type it in to Finder and click). There are three options, the middle one being to restore from TM or another disc. Yup, you want that one.
    *Migration Assistant will now ask you what you want to restore in stages, firstly User Accounts, then folders, Apps etc. It will even import internet settings
    And that's you done. Let Migration Assistant do it's thang... altogether I had about 140gb to restore, so it wasn't exactly speedy. This wasn't helped by the fact that my TM hard drive is connected via USB (yes, I know). Just leave it alone and it'll whirr happily away...
    Before I go - you don't have an option of when to restore from, and will restore from the last Time Machine save. At least then you should be able to access TM and go 'backwards' if you need to.
    Also - for a Mac expert, the above will be up there with 'Spot Goes To The Farm' in terms of complexity. However, for the rest of us the above is only available in fragments all over the net. By far the most common response to 'how do I restore from Time Machine without install discs' is 'you can't'. If I'd found the above information in one place I could have saved a lot of hair pulling and swearing over the last couple of days, so forgive me for sharing this workaround with the rest of the world. Meanwhile your expertise will come in very handy for the inevitable questions that will get posted below, so please feel free to help those people that won't be sure if this solution is the right one for them. I'm no expert, I just want to help people that were stuck in the same situation (and looking at the web, there's a LOT of them).
    Hope this is of use to someone, thanks and *good luck*!

    Most maintenance and repair, restore and install procedures require the use
    of the correct OS X install DVD; be it an original machine-specific restore/install
    disc set or a later retail non-specific general install disc set.
    By having an unsupported system, perhaps installed via an illegal download or
    other file-sharing scheme, where no retail official discs are involved and the
    initial upgrade was done by other means outside of the License Agreements,
    you are asking us to discuss a matter of illegal installation and use of a product.
    There are no legal complete OS X system download upgrades online; only bits
    that are update segments to a retail or as-shipped machine's original OS X install.
    +{Or an installation where a previous owner had correct retail upgrade discs, &+
    +chose to not include them with the re-sale of the computer it was installed in.}+
    However, to answer the initial question. To get and use an externally enclosed
    hard drive in suitable boot-capable housing, and get a free-running Clone
    Utility (download online; often a donation-ware product, runs free) you can
    make a bootable backup of everything in your computer to an external HDD.
    This is the way to make a complete backup to restore all functions to the computer.
    The Time Machine has some limits, in that it can restore only that which it saves.
    It does not make a bootable clone of your entire computer system with apps and
    your files, to an external drive device. A clone can. And some of the clone utility's
    settings can also backup changes to an external drive's system; if that other drive
    is attached to the computer correctly.
    Carbon Copy Cloner, from Bombich Software; and also SuperDuper, another of
    the most known software names you can download and use to clone boot-capable
    system backups of your computer's hard disk drive contents, are often cited.
    However you resolve the matter of the running OS X system in your computer,
    derived from what appears to be questionable means, is part of the initial issue.
    Since you do need to be able to fix an existing installation by unmounting the
    computer's hard disk drive and run the computer from the other (install disc or
    system clone) while it is Unmounted; and use the correct Disk Utility version to
    help diagnose and perhaps be able to fix it. You can't use a Tiger version Disk
    Utility to fix a Leopard installation, and so on.
    So, the situation and replies as far as they can go (since the matter does
    constitute an illegal system, if it was arrived at without correct discs) is a
    limited one. And file sharing of copied Mac OS X (and other) software is
    also considered illegal.
    And, one way to get odd malware and unusual stuff, is to get an unauthorized
    system upgrade from an illegal source online. You never know what's inside it.
    The other reply was not a personal attack; the matter is of legal status and as
    you have a product with a questionable system, the answer is to correct it.
    And if you want to save everything in your computer, make a clone to a suitable
    externally enclosed self-powered boot capable hard disk drive. With older PPC
    Macs, that would best be to one with FireWire and the Oxford-type control chips.
    However that works out...
    Good luck & happy computing!

  • Can't restore from time machine after SSD upgrade

    Macbook Pro 13" mid-2009, 10.7.5 Lion
    I just swapped out my 160GB  HDD with a 250GB SSD on my MBP. When I booted up, I pressed Command-R to try to get into recovery mode but all it does was showing a gray folder with a question mark on it.
    I had previously backed up my HDD with time machine. My original HDD is no longer available because I tried to upgrade to Mavericks (since the command-R was not working) and upon restarting my MBP was locked with system pin code (that is another nightmare all by itself)
    What are my options besides getting a 10.7 Lion CD from the apple store and try to boot it up that way? and then restore from time machine?
    Any other way I can get into receovery mode?
    Thanks (My MBP is now a brick sitting on my desk)

    It's a bare drive so it isn't formatted and it doesn't yet have a Recovery HD installed on it.
    Your computer originally came with a version of Leopard installed. You can reinstall it if you still have the original discs that came with the computer. Or, if you have a retail Snow Leopard DVD you can reinstall Snow Leopard from which you can then upgrade to Mavericks (Lion is no longer available for re-download.) It's unlikely your local Apple Store has a Lion USB flash drive or DVD although you can certainly make an appointment and ask for their help.
    You should see if you can boot from the Recovery HD invisible image in your Time Machine backup drive. Connect it to the computer and use OPTION boot to get the boot manager. If you see a Recovery HD on your backup drive displayed, then boot from it.

  • Restoring from Time Machine AFTER install

    My hard drive crashed, so i had to buy a new one (WD scorpio blue). I replaced it, then reinstalled from the install disk (10.4.10, Tiger). That was mistake one. What I meant to do was to restore from my time machine backups on an external HD. I also have the leapord disk that came with, which i forgot to install from, my second mistake. so my question is -- do i have to erase the hard drive and start back over to install from my TM back up, or can i do it either during the upgrade to Leopard or from Tiger?
    Thanks.

    Matt Clifton wrote:
    Boot from your Leopard disk (with your TM drive connected), and go to Utilities - Restore from Time Machine Backup.
    So, using this procedure will restore my MB onto a totally new hard drive with all my programs back intact along with any files?
    If so, this looks like a great way to replace/upgrade a hard drive. Re "go to Utilities", is this folder or option from the Leopard disk?

  • Downloads folder missing after system restore from Time Machine

    I installed a new HDD, installed Leopard, and the did a system restore from Time Machine. Everything seems to work fine except from a big question mark in the dock, where downloads folder should be. Any suggestions pls?

    Thank you very much for your quick answers.
    Probably the problem originated from excluding the Downloads folder from my backup, although it should have been there in my new installation. The interesting thing was that this folder were nowhere to be found in the Finder, and by trying to download something from Safari, it just wouldn’t.
    I did a Repair Permissions from the HDD, not the Leopard DVD, and all came back to normal.
    I have to admit, that coming from The Win world, this HDD replacement was the easiest and fastest ever, by far!

  • System Restore from Time Machine Back up and Mail

    Hi
    I have around 16,000 Messages in my Mail 3.2 Inbox. I use Gmail IMAP service. One thing I like about Mail is that next to all my messages there are these arrows that indicate whether I have replied to or forwarded a particular message and clicking on them takes me to my response to a particular email.
    I need to reformat my MBP HD and want to do a system restore through Time Machine.
    My question is, will Mail return to my current state (with all the arrows and tags) after I do the complete restore from Time Machine.
    Any help on this is highly appreciated.
    Cheers!

    Mheck21 wrote:
    I replaced the internal because I need more space, I'm not an expert, but I've done it before. I wasn't having trouble I was just running out of room and decided to upgrade?
    Ah, ok, that rules that out.
    I think it wasn't backing up because it was showing I had files on the external but I couldn't locate them. It's my understanding that the external must be blank to back your computer up with time machine.
    No, it doesn't have to be empty (although Time Machine works best if it has its own, exclusive space).  Without the error message(s), we don't know what is/was wrong.
    I have run the Verify Disk on the internal and it says its all good.
    Ah, good.  That means you don't have directory problems.
    I have not run a Repair Disk Permissions. I am not sure how to do that? Is that also located in the Disk Utility.
    Yup, same window, different button.
    I tried to just run the update from the update software option in the apple on the top left. I also then ran the combo that I downloaded from the apple site.
    With what results?  Did they compete?  If not, what message did you get?

  • Restoring From Time Machine Migration Assistant (and other ??)

    Hello
    Please bear with me on this long question....
    For several reasons I reinstalled ML which involves erasing the HDD first.  I do have everything bakced-up to Carbonite and TM.  Carbonite is slow as molassess so I opted to try Migration Assistant/TM to restore my files.  MA does not allow you to choose an older (good) backup and the backup that was used was an incomplete one as evidenced by the photo library being incomplete.  Another poster had a similar question and the solution involved using the install disk.  There is no install disc since it was a download from the Apps store. 
    Carbonite has a tendency to freeze-up during a long download.  Restarting it brings your download back to the very beginning.  I'm not happy about Carbonite.  I've heard of SuperDuper and seems to have gotten good reviews.
    Questions:
    1.  Is there a method to access an older TM backup from MA?
    2.  Is there a better option that Carbonite?
    3. Is SuperDuper a good option for backups?
    thank you, Bruce.

    If your Mac shipped with a System Install DVD then boot from it and choose "Restore from Time Machine backup".
    If your Mac shipped with Lion already installed you should be able to use OS X Recovery. Boot while holding ⌘ R and choose "Restore from Time Machine backup".
    Either one should present a dated list of complete system backups from which to choose. Ideally it should be the most recent one, but if you have reason to believe it is incomplete (it should not be) then try an earlier one.
    You can also boot from a locally connected Time Machine backup volume. Make sure it is connected with USB or FireWire and boot while holding an Option key. This will invoke Startup Manager, from which you can select your Time Machine backup volume. It will present the same restore options as OS X Recovery.
    These options will be faster and should be less prone to difficulty than using Migration Assistant.
    Time Machine and "clone" software use very different philosophies. SuperDuper! is good, so is Carbon Copy Cloner. They are more customizable than Time Machine, whose customizable features essentially consist of an "on / off" switch
    Of course that is also its sole advantage over the others - it's boneheadedly simple to use.
    Forget Carbonite, as you learned it does not work well on Macs. I know of no similar offsite backup services to recommend.

  • IPhoto 09 - some recent events lost after restoring from Time Machine

    recently my early-2009 iMac hanged during boot up on the white screen. so i a restore from Time Machine and it works. this freezing occurred twice of the last one week, which i did 2 restore to last backup. then i notice there's an issue with iPhoto 09. i notice some latest events which supposedly been backup during the restore point, appears 'blank'. when i enter Time Machine, i see all previous events but the recent day or two, it just turn out to be black squares, and when i enter the events there weren't any photos but just files with names.
    i tested again but loading in a couple of new photos into iPhoto yesterday night, back it up and double check in Time Machine, it is (the new photos) there. about 6-hours later i make a check again (on Time Machine), the photos event became the black square again. this is really a pain for me as i have lost enough photos
    i desperately need help on this. anyone?
    here a couple of the screenshot from my Time Machine:
    http://i162.photobucket.com/albums/t272/mujiland/Screenshot2010-05-29at104554PM. png
    http://i162.photobucket.com/albums/t272/mujiland/Screenshot2010-05-29at104602PM. png

    Hello mook,
    So if I understand:
    1.) The goal is to restore the iPhoto Library from a point before the issues started happening
    2.) When you try to go backwards in Time Machine while inside the iPhoto window you get a blank Library when you get to the date range you want.
    What to do:
    - As you cannot seem to access the iPhoto contents using the iPhoto window I would suggest the following:
    1.) Navigate using the Finder to ~/Pictures (or whatever folder you are currently housing your iPhoto Library in)
    2.) Rename the current iPhoto Library to something else (Like iPhoto Library Old etc)
    3.) While looking at this Pictures window, activate Time Machine and go back in time to a date when YOU ARE SURE iPhoto was working fine and had the images you want
    4.) Click on the iPhoto Library in the Time Machine window and click on Restore
    -- This will restore the Library from the date in question
    -- You will have 2 libraries once the restore is complete. The freshly restored library and the old library. Keep the old library just for safe keeping until such time as you determine you have all the pictures you want. Then you can do whatever you want with it (trash it, etc)
    Hope that helps.

  • Duplicate Admin accounts on restoring from Time Machine backup

    I need help to remove duplicate accounts, created after restore from Time Machine Backup.
    Here is the situation:
    1. I was running SL on a Mac Pro with Time Machine backup. I had 5 User Accounts on the Login Window: Shared (Admin account), Dear Wife (DW, also Admin), Kid1 (managed), Kid2 (managed) and Guest (standard), and two 750 GB hard drives, HD1 and HD2.
    2. Mac Pro would not boot past the Apple logo with spinning icon.
    3. After talking to with Apple Support, it turned out that HD1 had crashed. I took it in to the Genius Bar, where they checked and confirmed HD1 crash and took it in for repair.
    4. Apple replaced HD1 and reinstalled SL.
    5. I picked up the Mac Pro. At home I reconnected TM and restarted.
    6. Upon restart, I clicked on restore from TM backup and there was only 1 TM backup visible to select. After several hours of Transferring Information, about 700 GB was restored
    7. Upon finishing restore, I saw the same Login Window as before crash, with the same 5 accounts - Shared, DW, Kid1, Kid2, Guest.
    8. Issue: From the Login Window, logging into Shared and clicking on HD1>Users, I now see: Home Icon with Shared1, and four additional folders: Shared, DW, Kid1, Kid2
    It seems I now have duplicate Shared accounts in the User folder - Shared1 with the Home icon, and a separate folder with name Shared.
    I cannot "Move to Trash" Shared, since I get the message: “Shared” can’t be modified or deleted because it’s required by Mac OS X.
    When I go into System Prefs>Accounts: I see My Account: Shared, and Other Accounts: DW, Kid1, Kid2, Guest. After unlocking the accounts, and right clicking on Shared for Advanced Options, I see:
    User: "Shared"
    -- Account Name: shared
    -- Home Directory:/Users/shared1
    Question: How do I consolidate or get rid of the duplicate Shared/Shared1 account? I have 350 GB of video/pictures/music in each of these accounts, which is unnecessarily eating up the new HD1.
    Any advice would be appreciated. Thanks!

    I solved the duplicate account problem.
    I had used Setup Assistant to restore from TM Backup and that gave me the duplicate accounts, i.e., method used was:
    http://web.me.com/pondini/Time_Machine/19.html
    After carefully reading Pondini's FAQs, I instead used the Restore and install Method, i.e.,
    http://web.me.com/pondini/Time_Machine/14.html
    No duplicate accounts anymore, problem solved.

  • 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.

  • 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.

  • Restore From Time Machine Without DVD

    I'm trying to set up a "simple" robust backup system for my father-in-law who is computer/mac neophyte.
    I have an external USB drive with two partitions. One partition has a very thin bootable 10.5 which has only Disk Utility and DiskWarrior in the Dock; the other is set up for Time Machine, pictures, etc...
    My question is, from the 'boot' drive, how can I restore the main/internal drive with the Time Machine backups? Is there a way to extract that "Restore System From Backup..." utility from the DVD?
    Thanks

    Thanks for the response V.K. I did the "thin" OS to allow him to run Safari (web search, etc...) in the event his main drive didn't work. Yes, I did have the idea of installing the install image on a small partition, but that would mean there are two bootable options and extra levels of complexity. Plus, it seems a little silly to carve out 8GB just for that utility.
    Here's what I want to tell him (his name is Jim BTW) -
    Jim, if you are having problems with your computers, here's what you should do:
    1. Reboot and hold down the option key
    2. Select the "Boot" drive
    3. After the desktop shows, launch Disk Utility from the Dock
    4. Select "Jim" and press [Repair Disk]
    5. If you get errors try it again
    6. If you still get errors, quit Disk Utility and launch DiskWarrior from the Dock
    7. Select "Jim" and Press [Rebuild]
    8. Press [Replace]
    9. Quit DiskWarrior
    10. Reboot, hold option key, Select "Jim"
    11. If it still doesn't work/flaky, reboot hold the option key
    12. Select "Boot"
    13. After startup select <not available> to restore from Time Machine
    It's the "<not available>" utility that I'm looking for...

  • Restore from Time Machine fails

    I just got a new HD from the apple store and had them flash 10.5.8 onto it so that I could restore my MacBook right when I got home.
    The problem is that when I get through to the "Restore from Time Machine" screen, the mac only finds one backup available and even then it won't transfer the files to the new HD, the TM external sits and spins and then the macbook goes through the welcome video again and starts me all over again.
    what did I do wrong and did I lose everything?
    I just plugged in the TM external to another mac in the house and it sees every thing in TM fine.
    Message was edited by: MrBackpack

    MrBackpack wrote:
    I'm trying to use the set-up assistant.
    One of the problems that I am running into is that when I get to the point where is calculates the size of the files that I want to restore, it sits at calculating then it restarts the set-up assistant.
    Ah, that does sound like the backups may be corrupted.
    One question and three options:
    Did you get a larger drive, or was there a problem with the old one, requiring a replacement? If there was a problem, it's possible something got corrupted on your internal HD before the last backup. When the last backup ran, the damage would have been backed-up, too, and could be why Time Machine is having trouble dealing with it. If so, you probably want the first option below:
    Boot up from your Install disc. After selecting your language, select Utilities, then +Disk Utility+ from the menubar on the next screen. Use it to do a +*Repair Disk+* (not permissions) on your backup drive. If that finds no errors, or fixes whatever it finds, quit Disk Utility, return to the Utilities menu and select +Restore System from Backups,+ per #14 in the FAQ. The advantage here is, you'll get a list of backups to restore from. If the last one won't work, try an earlier one. Be sure to get the log window per step (h), so if it fails or hangs, you'll know where, and we can help figure out how to recover.
    Boot up from your Install disc and repair the backups as above. If that finds and fixes errors, boot up normally and try +Setup Assistant+ again. Note that +Setup Assistant+ always uses the most recent backup -- you don't get a choice as with the full restore.
    Skip +Setup Assistant.+ Select +Do not Transfer+ instead, and set up a temporary user account (use a different name from any that are on your backups). Then do the +*Repair Disk+* on the backups from the copy of +Disk Utility+ on your Mac. If that finds no errors, or fixes whatever it finds, use +MIgration Assistant,+ per the pink box in #19 of the FAQ. The advantage to it is, you can use it multiple times, so you can transfer one thing at a time, and perhaps bypass whatever's corrupted. But +Migration Assistant+ also uses the most recent backup -- you don't get a choice.
    (p.s.: I'll be going to bed soon, so if you post back after half an hour or so, I won't answer until tomorrow.)

  • New MBP set up - restore from time machine

    My old MacBook (mid 2007) running Snow Leopard has died. I just got a new MBP Retina running Yosemite.
    Now, I have a few question that I googled for answers, but I am confused. I would appreciate any help, guide, orientation.
    (1) Will I have problems restoring from Time Machine, created on a Snow Leopard, to a new MBP running Yosemite?
    (2) Should I say yes when the set up assistant ask me to "restore from a back up"?
    My goal is to have all the files, apps, and configuration from my old Mac into the new one keeping the new OS.
    Is that possible?
    Thanks in advance for your help.
    Vero.

    I got "stuck" here:
    "For details and instructions, see the appropriate page:
    Using Setup Assistant on Mountain Lion or Lion
    Using Setup Assistant on Snow Leopard or Leopard
    Using Setup Assistant / Migration Assistant on Panther or Tiger"
    I have Yosemite, should I follow the instruction for Using Setup Assistant on Mountain Lion or Lion?
    I apologize if my question is "dumb" I just don't wanna mess up anything. I also realize my time machine has been created in Lion not Snow Leopard.
    Thanks again!

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