Restoring Time Machine backup to a drive in a "Voyager Dock"

Restoring Time Machine backup to a drive in a "Voyager Dock"
I would like to restore a Time Machine volume to a hard drive not installed in the computer it has backed up.
I have an iMac 24” with a failing drive. It will eventually need to be replaced.
I have my Time Machine back up for this computer in a Voyager Docking station.
I would like to have Time Machine “restore” the iMac’s data to a drive in another Voyager Dock running from a computer other than the iMac involved.
What I hope to do is bring the “restored” drive and the iMac to my Mac service provider and just have them swap the old drive for the new.
How do I get Time Machine to do this?

So, You're saying I can do this from a different computer with its own Time Machine?
In other words, I have my Time Machinedrive  from the dead iMac and a fresh, formatted drive both hooked up to an unrelated computer with its own Time Machine.
If I enter Time Machine on that computer won't it show me the data it backs up for that computer only?
Will Time Machine know that there are two Time Machine backups (the one from the iMac and the one from the new host machine), and allow me to select the one from the iMac?

Similar Messages

  • Restore Time Machine backup after hard drive crash

    My hard drive on the mac book crashed, so I replaced it.  Now I need to get my time machine back up on the new drive.  I've already started using the computer and reinstalled lion, so I'm not getting the original "backup" screen.  How do I find my old time machine backups?

    Your best bet is to do a full restore from your backups.  See #14 in Time Machine - Frequently Asked Questions.

  • Restoring Time Machine backup to new drive in G5 iSight

    Hi all
    I successfully replaced the hard drive in my G5 and installed OS 9. Man, what a chore to get into the old beast.
    However, I have not been able to upgrade to Leopard using my upgrade disk - this is to bring it back to the same OS as before the HDD upgrade.
    Now I need to restore the Time Machine backup but when I try to boot off the Leopard disk it fails.
    Are there any other ways to get the G5 to see and restore the Time Machine backup?
    Cheers
    Scott

    So, You're saying I can do this from a different computer with its own Time Machine?
    In other words, I have my Time Machinedrive  from the dead iMac and a fresh, formatted drive both hooked up to an unrelated computer with its own Time Machine.
    If I enter Time Machine on that computer won't it show me the data it backs up for that computer only?
    Will Time Machine know that there are two Time Machine backups (the one from the iMac and the one from the new host machine), and allow me to select the one from the iMac?

  • HT1553 Advice on restoring time machine backup after hard drive replacement install?

    Can't get past "Select a Destination". Did I miss a step?

    If your replacement disk isn't showing up on 'Select a Destination', the new drive might not be formatted correctly.
    How is it formatted?
    Allan

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    Try to restore time machine backup to my mac mini. I have made backup right after I got the machine from apple. Now due to some reason I am trying to restore it but failing again and again. Error is something like this:
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    Yes same. When I try booting MBP with same usb it goes to recovery menu, (one which comes when you press Cmd+R) I think my MBP is running mavricks thats why it dont go to 10.8 setup. Further when I select same usb in mac mini it shows following screen.
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  • My time machine backup external hard drive has failed.  I have a newer external drive already connected to my MAC but can't figure out how to get Time Machine to set up on it?

    My time machine backup external hard drive has failed.  I have a newer external drive already connected to my MAC but can't figure out how to get Time Machine to set up on it

    http://pondini.org/TM/21.html

  • Can i transfer my time machine backup to another drive?

    can i transfer my time machine backup to another drive?

    Did you prep the new drive?
    Drive Preparation
    1. Open Disk Utility in your Utilities folder.
    2. After DU loads select your hard drive (this is the entry with the mfgr.'s ID and size) from the left side list. Click on the Partition tab in the DU main window.
    3. Under the Volume Scheme heading set the number of partitions from the drop down menu to one. Click on the Options button, set the partition scheme to GUID then click on the OK button. Set the format type to Mac OS Extended (Journaled.) Click on the Partition button and wait until the process has completed.
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    5. Set the format type to Mac OS Extended (Journaled.) Click on the Security 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 can take up to several hours depending upon the drive size.
    New drives usually are pre-formatted for Windows, not Macs. WD is generally well known for their poor level of Mac support.

  • Unable to restore time machine backup onto a new hard drive

    I recently bought a new hard drive for my mid-2010 white Macbook. I have kept this computer regularly backed up with time machine, but just to be sure I made sure I hooked up my external hard drive prior to changing the hard drive and made sure it was fully backed up. I checked my exceptions and saw that my system files and applications were listed, so I removed them from the exceptions list and let it back up again (it only backed up a further 60MB though, so that made me a little uneasy).
    I successfully switched over the hard drive and then plugged in my external hard drive so I could do a restore from Time Machine. My external hard drive has 3 partitions: 2 time machine backups for each of my computers, and one partition for storing files that also has an old copy of 10.6 on it.
    When I booted the computer, I held option, then selected Macbook TM. When it came to the window with 4 options, including disk utility and restore from time machine backup, I selected restore from Time Machine backup. When I did so it said "No OS X Backups Were Found." Why wouldn't it have backups listed if I have been consistently backing it up? How else do I do a full system backup?
    Also, how can I be sure that I'm restoring this backup onto the new hard drive? It didn't prompt me to select that drive at any point, and I want to make sure I'm not overwriting the middle partition on the backup drive (or anything else).

    Please visit Pondini's Time Machine FAQ for help with all things Time Machine.
    You will find that Mountain Lion stores an invisible copy of the Recovery HD. You can boot from your Time Machine backup drive by restarting with OPTION boot:
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      5. Click on the arrow button below the icon.
    Your computer should boot into the Recovery HD. You will be presented with a main window of options. Select the option to restore from a Time Machine backup then click on the Continue button.

  • Need to reformat hard drive and restore Time Machine backup. What's the safest way to proceed?

    I have a Mac desktop, purchased in 2007. We upgraded last year to Snow Leopard. It has been slow for a few days, and yesterday wouldn't go past the gray screen. Tried booting in recovery with no success, same for safe mode. Even tried fsck -fy. Eventually went to the Snow Leopard install disk and tried to repair disk, but got an "Disk Utility can't repair this disk. Back up as many of your files as possible, reformat the disk, and restore your backed-up files" message. I've got Time Machine back ups on an external hard drive, but I want to make sure I do this right and don't make things worse. What steps do I need to take?

    In most of the cases, that Disk Utility message means that the hard drive is damaged.
    However, you can try to erase the disk and restore the Time Machine backup to see if it works. Follow these steps:
    1. Insert the Snow Leopard DVD and press the C key while your Mac is starting.
    2. Go to Utilities menu > Disk Utility, select Macintosh HD on the sidebar, go to Erase tab and erase the disk. If there's an error during this step, take the Mac to an Apple Store to get a new hard drive.
    3. Close Disk Utility, go to Utilities menu, choose the option to restore a Time Machine backup and follow the steps.
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  • How do i reformat imac hard drive and restore time machine backup?

    How do I reformat my iMac internal hard drive and restore from a Time Machine backup?
    I have an iMac 20" Mid 2007 with a problematic hard drive.
    IntelCore 2 Duo, Processor speed 2 Ghz
    800 Mhz Bus speed
    4 GB RAM
    250 GB Western Digital Hard Drive
    10.6.3
    Was getting a question mark upon booting up, so I booted from a 10.6.3 Snow Leopard CD and ran disk utility. Repair disk was interrupted with an error message. 'Disk utility can't repair disk. Backup files, reformat disk and restore backed up files.'
    1. Should I select Erase, Mac OS Extended Journaled, Erase?
    2. If I do this, won't I lose my networkability, and therefore lose access to Time Machine backups?
    3. If it were you, would you go ahead and replace the hard drive? Not sure I should trust this hard drive!
    4. If I need to replace the hard drive, can you send instructions?
    Thanks!

    Clean Install of Snow Leopard
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             with your computer.  Insert the disc into the optical drive and restart the computer.
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             and select GUID, click on OK, then set the format type to MacOS Extended
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         3. When the formatting has completed quit DU and return to the installer.  Proceed
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         4. When the installation has completed your computer will Restart into the Setup
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             Assistant will complete the installation after which you will be running a fresh
             install of OS X.  You can now begin the update process by opening Software
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    Download and install Mac OS X 10.6.8 Update Combo v1.1.
    If you have your Time Machine backup drive connected, then you can use Setup Assistant to migrate your Home folder, application support files, and third-party applications and system preference files. I recommend doing this via the Setup Assistant when the option appears.

  • Restoring full Time Machine backup of a drive--from the same drive

    Apparently, I somehow got a full backup of my boot drive on the drive itself.  At least, when I boot up from the Snow Leopard install disc and go to restore from a time machine backup, it shows that I have backups on the same drive.  I'm not sure how this happened; it might have been generated when I upgraded from Leopard to Snow Leopard, or I might have specified the wrong target when performing a backup.  Anyway, my file system went belly-up, so I'm wondering:  Can I actually restore this backup even though the backup is located on the same drive?
    Difficulty:  So far as I can tell, the backup is not on a separate partition unless this is somehow hidden to me.  It's on the same partition that I boot from.

    Shouldn't be any problem.
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    Shortly into the installation process, you'll be asked if you want to migrate data from another source. Select 'from a Time Machine Backup' and follow the prompts.
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  • Restore Time Machine backup from WD My Could (a network drive)

    Good morning.  I recently had my hard drive replaced on my iMac.  I had been using My Cloud as the repository for my Time Machine backups.  When I started my iMac when I got it home, it is not recognizing where the Time Machine backups are and it does not allow me to navigate to a location to find it.  It seems as if the utility is looking for the backups to be directly connected to the machine and not over my network.
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    Time Machine does not support the use of a 3rd party NAS.
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  • Time Machine backup and main drive corrupted. Help! (REWARD OFFERED)

    Here's the deal:
    I have a Macbook Pro and a Mac Mini both runnign Snow Leopard. I use the Mac Mini as a kind of media center / server, it has a few external drives connected to it. On of these drives (1GB) is dedicated to Time Machine, the Mac Mini (80 GB hard drive) backs up to it directly and the Macbook Pro (500 GB hard drive) does it over the network (Time Machine created a sparsebundle). This has worked well for years now. Occasionally I got the error that Time Machine needed to start a new backup because the old one was corrupt. That happened about 2-3 times a year (did the same thing when I backued up via USB). Now about 2 weeks ago, that error came up and I just let the Macbook Pro on overnight and connected the ethernet cable for faster transfer.
    When I woke up, the Macbook Pro didn't respont at all, spinning beachball, no response at all beside mouse movement. I let it do it's thing for another 10 hours (while I was at work) and just held down the power button to power off and restart it. But all I got was the gray-on-gray flashing folder with the question mark in it, that's what you get when the Mac can't find bootable partitions. So I popped in the OSX Snow Leopard install disk, ran disk utility. It saw the hard drive, but no partition (i.e. Machintosh HD) on it. I checked the Time Machine backup and the sparsebundle was 300 GB (the Macbook Pro had 400 GB used, the remaining 100 GB were free). There is no way to restore from an unfinished Time Machine backup...
    First thing I did was clone the internal (Macbook Pro) hard drive to a DMG disk image using DiskDrill (the only program I found that could recognize the drive at all, not even DiskWarrior could). I also bought the exact same hard drive model and partitioned it like the cloned the corrupted hard drive to the new one using ddrescue (a command line tool that doesn't quit upon i/o errors but proceeds and tries to recover as much as it can). It copied everything except 65 kilobytes, the corrupted drive seemed to be physically damaged in a bunch of sectors relatively at the beginning of the disk. Since I had now an exact copy on a fresh, healthy drive, I went crazy trying out Disk Warrior (didn't recognize the drive at all), data rescue, testdisc, p a Windows isk, etc. Only R-Studio (on windows) showed the EFI and Macintosh HD partitions on there, they started and ended on the same sectors on the corrupted drive and its clone. After some research, I figured that the partition table was corrupt so I reformated the clone disk using the OSX Snow Leopard install disk (1 HFS Journaled Partition with GUID Partition table). R-Studio showed the EFI and Macintosh HD on that reformated drive, again, same sectors as before. So I figured I could just copy just the bytes where the Macintosh HD starts from the corrupted drive to the clone (using ddrescue). That worked, after almost 24 hours, I had the clone drive with a "disk1" partition on it that even disk utility could see.
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    - Is there any way to re-build that catalog file from what is there left on the original hard drive? I can't imagine 65 kilobytes destroys it all.
    - Are there other ways to recover my iPhoto Library? The raw JPEG (and AVI) files with correct file names or metadata would suffice.
    Thanks in advance for any help, I'll actually reward the person with a working solution, 5 years of photo memories are somewhat important. It really ***** that a failure during a backup destroys that...

    Final Update:
    The catalog file on the original hard drive could not be fixed. Seems like Mac OSX tried to repair the catalog file while the sectors this file resides on failed. To make things worse the partition table was also broken beyond repair, even overwriting the sectors with a new correct partition table didn't help. DiskWarrior found less then 100 MB worth of stuff, mainly Applications folders.
    I recovered pretty much everything from the incomplete Time Machine backup by right-clicking the sparsebundle and browsing through the folders with the long alphanumeric names, looking for the version of the folder with the most files in there. All I was missing was part of the ~/Pictures folder, i.e. photobooth pictures and the whole iPhoto Library. My best option was to recover these files using data recovery tools.
    DiskDrill proved to be the absolute best, fast, responsive, efficient, and the only one able to mount the DMG-file with no valid file system on it. As there were many i/o errors and broken sectors on the original hard drive, I made a copy of it using a free command line tool called ddrescue (the standard dd tool just aborted when it encountered the i/o error). ddrescue copied the whole drive to a DMG image, I had 56 kilobytes with errors on the first pass, but it managed to shrink that down to just 4 kilobytes (wow!) after the second pass where it tries to re-read the broken secors. It took about 24 hours for a 512 GB 2.5" drive (5400 rpm) but well worth it. Be advised that ddrescue is really persistent and tries everything to recover those last errorneous bytes. At the very end of the process, the read/write head of the hard drive just goes wild trying to catch the data on the sectors with different momentum. This works but I assume this is pretty damaging for the original drive. I also copied it all to a new hard drive (again using ddrescue) and tried partition and catalog repair tools on that (DiskWarrion, testdiks, pdisk, etc.). Still no hint of a good result.
    I made a deep scan on the clone hard drive with DiskDrill. At the end (after about 8 hours over USB) it found 13 partition (I assume that's the Macintosh HD, EFI and some DMG files lying around) and  hundreds of thousands of pictures. I restored some JPG files just to check the quality, some were damaged, some were good with all the EXIF data intact. I just made it copy all JPG files into a folder. I know the pictures taken from my camera produce JPGs larger than 1 MB and smaller than 5 MB, so I sorted them by size and moved the smaller and larger files into seperate folders. I took the remaining folder (100 GB) and just dragged it into iPhoto. It imported them overnight. Auto-Split by events and I got my library back, alas with different file names, originals and edited versions side by side, lots of duplicates, some damaged, some not. But hey, all the pictures in chronological order. Okay there was also one large event with all the JPGs without valid EXIF data landed inside, iPhoto just takes the file creation date (i.e. the date where the recovered file was copied). As far as I can tell, these are all just data corpses, halfway overwritten copies, random pictures from the internet, desktop pictures, etc.
    I started to work my way back through the events, deleting the duplicates and renaming the events. There's an app called "Duplicate Annihilator" which apparently can find duplicate pictures in iPhoto and mark them for you. The free version only does 500 pictures but if it works, I'll get the full version. It can mark th eduplicate photos by adding something to the picture comment in iPhoto so you can manually review it all. Good stuff!

  • Restore Time machine backup from a stolen computer to a different Mac Pro

    *My Mac Book Pro was stolen.* It had some Time Machine backups, but Time Machine had stopped working about 6 months before it was stolen. I had stopped using the USB drive since TM would never complete. (2 issues)
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    The old MacBook Pro definitely did not have Snow Leopard but the MacPro does to which I want to copy the data. It probably had Leopard. But honestly my user data is not necessary, just primarily the data, pictures, DVD projects, etc.
    As a side note: My old laptop and my MacPro used the same username and password.

    lhbilly wrote:
    *My Mac Book Pro was stolen.* It had some Time Machine backups, but Time Machine had stopped working about 6 months before it was stolen. I had stopped using the USB drive since TM would never complete. (2 issues)
    1. When I plugged in this USB backup disk to the Mac Pro just now, it asked me whether to use Time Machine with it. It told it no, ask me later so I could browse it first.
    2. It looks like the old problem with Time Machine not backing up the stolen laptop shows up as a file called "2008-09-22.204132.inProgress". I am hoping that the backups previous to that one are okay. So far, browsing the files appears to me that my data is intact but perhaps spread across 40 folders.
    So now, what should I do to retrieve the data I want?
    start Migration Assistant located in /Application/Utilies. it has an option to migrate your data and applications from a TM backup. migrate what you want. note that users will be migrated to new users so to access your old home directory you'll have to log out and log in as the migrated user.
    A. Copy the data files and pictures manually without Time Machine? How do I know I will get the latest versions?
    B. Use Time Machine with this disk and somehow ask TM to restore to a different machine? (Is that even possible?) (Will it merge the files into my user folders?)
    C. Use Migration Assistant?
    D. Copy and paste the entire file structure to a directory someplace and pull off the data as I need it?
    *End result: I want my external hard disk wiped ASAP, and in the meantime I want my data files preserved.*
    The old MacBook Pro definitely did not have Snow Leopard but the MacPro does to which I want to copy the data. It probably had Leopard. But honestly my user data is not necessary, just primarily the data, pictures, DVD projects, etc.
    As a side note: My old laptop and my MacPro used the same username and password.

  • Time Machine Backup on External Drive Invalid sibling link

    I've used time machine to backup macbook air for several months.  From Feb 2011 without any problems until about 2 months ago.  I started to get the message that backups could not be started.
    I realized that the disk would not mount right away.  And after about 10 minutes or more I would get the message that my disk could not be mounted.  The error said my data could be backed up and I should do it right away.
    Okay, so I try to copy my backup files using finder and get an error saying I don't have permissions to copy data.
    My research indicates my hard drive is failing, which is unfortunate, since I bought it within the last year :-(
    Okay, so now I am trying to get my months worth of backups off the drive and this is proving to be quite difficult...actually, impossible.
    Here are my latest attempts at resolving my issue:
    1.  Ran Repair Disk - reusts:
              error:  Could not repair disk and something about backing up my data and reformating the disk
    2.  Ran fsck_hfs -f command in terminal
         The system indicated it was executing the command and about 2 or 3 minutes, I think the command prompt appeared.  No other message
    3. Run repair disk again - My results:
         Checking catalog file.
         INvalid sibling link
         rebuilding catalog B-Tree
         The volume My Passport could not be repaired
         Volume repair complete
         Updating boot support partitions for the volume as required
         Error:  Disk Utility can't repair this disk...disk, and restore your backed up files
    4.  Created a new partition on another external drive and did a restore in Disk Utility from the broken drive to the new partition on the other drive.  Took a few hours.  Unfortunately, I just created the same problem on that partition (invalid sibling link)
    Any other ideas on how I can rescue my backup data from the My Passport drive? I can see it in finder but I can't copy it do my other drive!
    Research on forums and other sites have mentioned cloning the drive using "dd" command.  Is this the same as the disk utility restore?
    Is there some way I can change the permissions of the disk/partitition/files to enable me to copy the data to the new external drive?
    Here is what the system looks like:  Mac HD is my mac mini; My book is the WD 1TB external drive usb connected;  My Passport is the broken external drive with the time machine backups that I can't get access to.
    unknown3c07544bc705:Volumes oshunj$ ls -ale
    total 8
    drwxrwxrwt@  5 root    admin   170 Dec  4 09:40 .
    0: group:everyone deny add_file,add_subdirectory,directory_inherit,only_inherit
    drwxr-xr-x  29 root    wheel  1054 Dec  3 18:17 ..
    lrwxr-xr-x   1 root    admin     1 Dec  3 18:10 Macintosh HD -> /
    drwxr-xr-x@ 15 oshunj  staff   578 Dec  3 20:46 My Book
    drwxr-xr-x@ 14 oshunj  staff   544 Oct 16 19:32 My Passport
    unknown3c07544bc705:Volumes oshunj$ ls -Orbitlake /Volumes
    total 4
         2 drwxr-xr-x@ 14 oshunj  staff  -       544 Oct 16 19:32 My Passport
    335990 lrwxr-xr-x   1 root    admin  -         1 Dec  3 18:10 Macintosh HD -> /
         2 drwxr-xr-x  29 root    wheel  -      1054 Dec  3 18:17 ..
         2 drwxr-xr-x@ 15 oshunj  staff  -       578 Dec  3 20:46 My Book
    10710 drwxrwxrwt@  5 root    admin  hidden  170 Dec  4 09:40 .
    0: group:everyone deny add_file,add_subdirectory,directory_inherit,only_inherit

    ***Update to ask question***
    I would love to setup my new mini like my MBA.  Is there anything wrong with restoring my entire drive, I think it starts at /User/ level, to my mini????
      You know you never know when you will need the backups.  This makes me angry especially since I can see the files but can't repair the disk.
    OTOH, I attempted something I just now read about, option-click on time machine icon. Funny thing, I selected other disk and my passport (original broken drive) popped up with time machine backups on it.
    I, quite timidly, selected the disk, opened the time machine and traversed my broken drive with backups from feb.
    hmmm.  I then, selected some random pdf file to restore and behold, It was restored to my mac mini right before my eyes.
    I'm confused.  But I think I will go with your suggestion and just put the drive away in a closet somewhere and hope to never really need it.  It is quite interesting though that I am unable to repair this disk but I can restore files from it....Odd, I tell you, odd....
    Thanks

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