Restore System Files From Time Machine

Hello,
Is it possible to to restore system files from Time Machine? I was trying to make the Imac a local host, and something is not working right. I just need to go back one day and over write some of the system files. Is this possible with TM?
Thanks JR

See Here  >  How do I restore my entire system?
From Here  >  http://pondini.org/TM/FAQ.html
More Info Here  >  http://pondini.org/TM/Troubleshooting.html

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  • How to Restore System Preferences From Time Machine

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    Launch the Console application in any of the following ways:
    ☞ Enter the first few letters of its name into a Spotlight search. Select it in the results (it should be at the top.)
    ☞ In the Finder, select Go ▹ Utilities from the menu bar, or press the key combination shift-command-U. The application is in the folder that opens.
    ☞ Open LaunchPad and start typing the name.
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    Please don't indiscriminately dump thousands of lines from the log into this discussion.
    Please don't post screenshots of log messages—post the text.
    Some private information, such as your name or email address, may appear in the log. Anonymize before posting.

  • Restoring individual files from time machine.

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    you can do it but it has to be done in two steps. first, make a TM backup. to speed things up just choose 'backup now" from the TM menu. next, do a full system restore by booting from the leopard install dvd. once the system is restored log out of your current account and log into another admin account. create one using system preferences->accounts. then go to the folder /users at the top level of the drive and restore the home directory of your main user from the most recent TM backup available. then log into your main account and all your recent data will be there.

  • I cant restore raw files from time machine. HELP!?

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    Were these RAW files in an iPhoto Library or just a folder on the hard drive.  For problem with Restoring from Time Machine see this website: Time Machine - Troubleshooting
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  • Restoring backup files from Time Machine without system preference/Library files

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  • Ho do i restore my files from time machine after a full system restore?

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    See Here  >  How do I restore my entire system?
    From Here  >  http://pondini.org/TM/FAQ.html
    More Info Here  >  http://pondini.org/TM/Troubleshooting.html

  • Restoring selected files from Time Machine

    I have a total of 160Gb on my white MacBook.  I've hit the point now where the hard disk is almost full and causing me grief.  Although I can go through my hard disk and selective delete all of the music files, applications, photos, videos, etc that I no longer want to retain I was considering the following sequence of steps:
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    Kevin le Bevin wrote:
    I have a total of 160Gb on my white MacBook.  I've hit the point now where the hard disk is almost full and causing me grief.  Although I can go through my hard disk and selective delete all of the music files, applications, photos, videos, etc that I no longer want to retain I was considering the following sequence of steps:
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    performing a full Mac OSX reinstallation
    after my OSX reinstall has completed, selectively restoring the files (mainly music and photos) that I want.
    That may work fairly well with most types of data -- data that's in separate files. 
    If your photos are in iPhoto, it will be very hard to find the ones you want, but you can use the procedure in the gray box at the bottom of Time Machine - Frequently Asked Question #15.
    Assuming your music is in iTunes, it may be difficult to find the ones you want.
    If you have 3rd-party apps, there's a problem.   You can restore individual "simple" apps (that were just dropped into your Applications folder), and if you work at it, the associated preferences files (in ~/Library/Preferences).  But "complex" apps, that came with their own installers, won't work properly, if at all, because they have other files (and perhaps "helper" apps) in other places.  Those will have to be reinstalled from the original discs.
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  • Restoring ALL files from Time Machine

    I replaced my hdd in my iMac and after installing my OS I used the Migration app to restore my files, settings and apps. That went pretty good until I went to look for something through Time Machine that was prior to my new install. Time machine would only go back to the date of my new install. All the other windows behind that date were black and not accessible. Did I do something wrong and is there a way I can fix it?

    First make sure you have read & write access to the folder you're trying to restore to. You should be able to see its contents in the Finder, and to move files in and out of it.
    This is an exception to the rule that you should never make any changes to backup data. I've tested this procedure in OS X 10.8 only. It should work with later versions, but I don't know whether it works in earlier versions. Use this procedure  only for files that were backed up from your home folder, or a folder on another volume created by you, and would normally be writable by you. Do not touch backups of system or application files.
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  • Restoring system folder from Time Machine

    I've installed Security Update 2008-002 and now our Mac at work cannot print to the Printer on the Widows 2003 server. I'm wondering if I can use Time Machine to restore the system folder to a state previous to the update and get my ability to print back. Would this cause any problems?

    Yes you can. Boot off the Leopard install DVD and after selecting a language go to the utilities menu and select the "Restore from backup" (or something like that--the last item in the menu) option. That will prompt you for a Time Machine disk, and then you can select a specific backup to restore from.

  • How do I delete a system file from Time Machine?

    After consulting this support document, I tried to delete a Safari cache file that was captured by Sophos's Quarantine Manager as containing a common phishing hook. But it's in Library and Time Machine can't locate it. The Library folder, as you know, is typically hidden, and it wasn't there when I went to the starfield.
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    Enter Time Machine from within your user Library folder. That will bring you to your user Library within Time Machine. (Your user Library is visible under the Go menu in Finder if you hold down the Option key.)

  • Restore iBooks files from time machine backup after clean install

    I just did a clean install of Yosemite. I still have a Time Machine backup of my Mavericks install. iBooks in my new Yosemite install does not have all of my books and pdfs in it - just the ones I can download from the iBookstore.
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    When I go back to the backup it does not let me go back to the previous backupprobably because the last backup was Lion and I am on Mt. Lion now.  don't what to do another backup if that is going to mess up the old one.  I can access it though by just going to it.  So i am putting that one on my desktop and I am going to rename it and see if I can open in Iphoto.

  • Can't restore files from Time machine backup?

    I kinda successfully restored my files from Time Machine after a clean re-install of Snow Leopard (Time Machine thought they were new files, though, so backed up the 26 GB... waste of space), but now I'm trying to restore the files of the other user on the computer. In her pictures folder, I can't copy the iPhoto Library because I don't have permission to access it! The same problem occurred on my account too, but I was able to go to my Time Machine drive and manually change the permissions for the files I wanted, which doesn't work on her account.
    I have made a Youtube video of the error:
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    wrongusername wrote:
    But if I transfer everything with the Setup Assistant, won't I once again be experiencing the problems I had?
    If the problems were caused by your data. But that's extremely unlikely. It may have been an app, or, much more likely from your description, something corrupted in the Leopard OS. That's one of the problems with upgrading a sick system without knowing what or where the causes are. It's a bit like a brain surgeon operating on himself: if he isn't in tip-top shape to start with, his condition is likely to change, and not for the better.
    Most of us would have recommended first simply doing a +*Repair Disk+* on your internal HD; if that didn't help, installing the "combo" Leopard update; if that didn't work, doing an +Archive and Install+ and re-installing the "combo."
    After a clean re-install of Snow Leopard, my Mac worked fine again (except for the TM trouble). So it probably had something to do with my old files.
    Probably not. Much more likely OSX was somehow damaged. And you got a whole new one.
    How come I could read the files on my external HD and yet not be able to copy the files?
    Time Machine uses special "deny everybody everything" permissions on it's backups, among other things, in an attempt to keep us mere mortals from moving, changing, or deleting things and corrupting them.

  • Restoring hard drive from Time Machine

    I was having trouble starting up my computer, the gray screen with question mark was appearing over and over after other attempts to correct it I reinstalled the start up disk and then restored my files from Time Machine. Everything seemed fine for a day then my computer was freezing up again and grey screen with question mark appeared again. Is it time to go to the apple techs? Any help would be very much appreciated!
    Thanks,
    Cindy

    Cindy 2 wrote:
    I did as you suggested and my computer is running but Time machine will not back up. I tried to verify disk and got an error: filesytem verify or repair failed also incorrect number of extended attributes. Do I need to reformat it somehow?
    This is for your internal HD, right?
    If so, you need to repair the file system, as that can cause various other problems. Insert your Leopard Install disc and start up while holding down the "C" key. This will take a few moments. Select your language, then on the next screen select Utilities from the menubar, then +Disk Utility.+ Use that to +Repair Disk+ (not permissions) on your internal HD.
    Most likely, all the errors will be repaired. If not, run it again. If they still don't repair, you've got a more serious problem.
    Then reboot normally.
    Do a +Repair Disk+ on your Time Machine disk (you can use the version of DU in your Applications/Utilities folder for this one) to be sure there isn't trouble there, too.
    Then try a +Back Up Now.+ If it fails, download the +Time Machine Buddy+ widget from: http://www.apple.com/downloads/dashboard/status/timemachinebuddy.html. It shows the messages from your logs for one TM backup run at a time, in a small window. Copy and post the messages here (be sure to get them all, as sometimes they overflow the small window).
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    I don't know, since you still haven't specified what kind of Mac you have in your profile. But if your internal HD is GUID you must have an Intel Mac, and it's correct.

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