Restore time machine backup

OSX would not load up for me on my iMac. I was on the latest version of Leopard. I reinstalled Leopard onto my Mac and then booted from the Leopard disc and chose the restore from backup option. I selected a Time Machine backup that I had done a couple of days ago and restored the Time Machine backup.
When the system went to restart after the restore, I now get, what I assume to be a Kernal Panic (prohibited screen/universal no sign, or whatever else it is called). Should I try to restore an earlier backup to see if that will work? I ran the Hardware test which did not point to any problems, so I am assuming that there might be something wrong with the time machine backup.
The only other thing that I can think of is that the Leopard that was installed on the system was an earlier version from when I bought the computer. But, I assume that wouldn't be an issue as I am restoring a full backup.
Any help/thoughts? Thanks in advance.

D wrote:
OSX would not load up for me on my iMac. I was on the latest version of Leopard. I reinstalled Leopard onto my Mac and then booted from the Leopard disc and chose the restore from backup option. I selected a Time Machine backup that I had done a couple of days ago and restored the Time Machine backup.
Reinstalling Leopard before you restored a full Time Machine backup was a waste of time, I'm sorry to say! The reinstall was completely erased when you subsequently restored from Time Machine.
When the system went to restart after the restore, I now get, what I assume to be a Kernal Panic (prohibited screen/universal no sign, or whatever else it is called). Should I try to restore an earlier backup to see if that will work? I ran the Hardware test which did not point to any problems, so I am assuming that there might be something wrong with the time machine backup.
While booted up from your Leopard DVD, launch Disk Utility from the Utilities menu. Do a Repair Disk on both your internal hard drive, and on your Time Machine hard drive. Repairing the TM drive could take several hours. Post back if any errors were reported that it cannot fix. If everything checks out OK, just try restoring a full backup again.
The only other thing that I can think of is that the Leopard that was installed on the system was an earlier version from when I bought the computer. But, I assume that wouldn't be an issue as I am restoring a full backup.
Correct. If the TM backup was only a few days old then there should have been no problem restoring it. My guess is that some hiccup happened along the way (it happens, just try again) or your TM disk has some corruption in it that Disk Utility might be able to repair.

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    "Unless you backed up another system to the 2TB volume since November 20, then that volume definitely has everything from your Macintosh HD as of Nov 20 ...and anything that was already on the 2TB volume was moved aside to the _CCC Archives folder. With the exception of the presence of the _CCC Archives folder, the 2TB volume was an *exact* replica of your Macintosh HD volume when that backup task finished on Nov 20.
    Oddly enough, it wasn't: for one example, the Time Machine backups, which were NEVER on the Macintosh HD volume, are still on the 2TB backup volume, untouched, and so are literally thousands of files and folders I had backed up directly to the 2TB backup volume -- and thousands more I'm pretty sure weren't -- that DIDN'T end up in the _CCC Archives folder, but at the root level of the 2TB volume.
    I wish I'd done a window grab of the 2TB backup volume's window before I did my 11/20/11 backup, and before I restored Macintosh HD from Time Machine, but I was so caught up in testing -- 60 hours worth, and all to no purpose -- for what a senior advisor fromr a company whose name is associated with the pomaceous fruit of the species M. domestica (genus Malus, family Rosaceae) was positive was a problem with third-party memory, just before we finally set up the FOURTH Malus domestica store appointment and I had to bundle the iMac up and drag it 40 miles to discover that the "Senior Advisor" was wrong and I was right -- for a change -- that it was a failed main logic board, well... I was working against time, I finally ran OUT of time, and all I can come up with to account for the current state of 2TB is that didn't do the CCCloner backup correctly. (I know that sentence is really poor grammatically, but when one has to tiptoe around landmines, circumlocution is better than circumambulation.
    Last night, I had to restore Macintosh HD from Time Machine, which worked fine, except I now have literally hundreds of gigabytes of duplicate files (better than lost ones!) spread over 3 drives. The only recourse I can think of now is to use TidyUp! to winnow out the duplicates and try to understand better how to use CCCloner for backups, or surrender and use Time Machine.
    Thanks for all your help. I have a couple other projects I wanted to finish up today, but I can see the day is going to be devoted to salvage operations...
    I will just add this: The 2TB USB drive I use as a backup for Time Machine has been bootable since before I started using it as a backup, as is my 1TB USB drive, and all three -- Macintosh HD, 1TB, 2TB -- are at OS X 10.6.8. I also manually back up individual items to both 1TB and 2 TB drives.
    Bottom line is, I obviously don't quite know how CCC works, and I thought I could back up -- at the last minute -- my internal, regular start-up drive, "Macintosh HD," to a Disk Image with CCC.
    As for Time Machine, its constant and unfathomable-to-me backing up drove me nuts, so I turned it off, and used it to back up, manually, about once a week. Stupid? Yes.
    Mea culpa
    Bart

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    https://discussions.apple.com/message/22248885?ac_cid=op123456#22248885
    Help would be appreciated.

    lonniebrunet wrote:
    Hi there,
    I had a look through and I tried to do option A5 - which is repair or verify disk. I dragged the sparebundle for the mackup to disk utility and after trying to do a repair I got the message "disk utility stopped repairing "Time Machine backups".
    Does this mean that my backup is corrupted and useless for a restore with time machine?
    Yes. 
    And that also means copying via the Finder may not get everything.  Corrupted is corrupted.
    Assuming you copied from the most recent backup, you might want to try copying just the iPhoto Library from an earlier one -- that might not be damaged.  If you have room, put it somewhere else, like your desktop.  Or if you have an external HD, that would work.

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    Simply said, can I use Data Rescue or Disk Drill to restore old Time Machine backups instead of just the entire glob of files? I'm specifically looking for an iPhoto backup with albums and metadata, instead of just restoring the photos themselves. See below for more details.
    I am an amateur or hobbyist photographer. Recently I noted that I have over 70,000 photos in iPhoto and it was really dragging. Kept telling myself to clean it up but never found the time. The other day, it said this version needs to be upgraded. Clicked ok, and when done, all my photos were gone. I have the iPhoto Library on an external and I could see that "it" was still there (almost 700gb) so I went to work trying to find a solution. Went through all of the rebuilding options with no luck and then got my stupid, "I got this" hat on. I said, no problem, I have Time Machine and I'll just restore the iPhoto Library from a few days ago when I know it was working fine. Deleted that "corrupted" library first, went to Time Machine and didn't realize that TM, at the VERY same time, must've run out of room and reset itself - it only had a brand new backup with the now-empty iPhoto Library in it. Luckily, I found all of my photos and have them safe on an external. I've also decided to backup to a cloud site (should've done a long time ago!!) and I'm researching which photo-management software will be best to catalog my pix going forward (likely Lightroom) as the Apple peeps said iPhoto isn't really built to handle that type of load.
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    2 - run Option #4, Rebuild Database.
    If that doesn't do the trick continue with
    Using iPhoto Library Manager  to Rebuild Your iPhoto Library
    1 - download iPhoto Library Manager and launch.>Click on the Add Library button,
    2 -  select the library you want to add from those in the selection window.
    3 - make sure that in the rebuild window the checkbox  "Scavange orphaned photos" is checked.
    4 - now that the library is listed in the left hand pane of iPLM, click on your library and go to the Library ➙ Rebuild Library menu option
    5 - in the next  window name the new library and select the location you want it to be placed. Click on the Create button.
    Note 1: This creates a new library based on the LIbraryData.xml file in the library and will recover Events, Albums, keywords, titles and comments. However, books, calendars, cards and slideshows will be lost.
    Note 2:  Your current library will be left untouched for further attempts at a fix if so desired.

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