Time machine, did it perform a full backup?

A bit new to this. Upgraded to a new MBPro retina, mt lion from an older MBP using migration assistant.
After all was finished and all the files were on my new machine (I did not use Time machine to migrate or backup to the new mac, I used migration assistant), I connected to time machine to perform a completely new backup of the new machine. I have 295GB to copy over. So, it seemed to take forever. I was on day 2, noticed all the threads about the slowness, but then the new machine froze. It said it was around 170GB through it. I could have also had a bit of interuppted internet too in that time. I also could not access the internet on the new machine at all by that point. So, I rebooted and I assume by finding the disc and starting again, it looked like it picked back up at roughly 125GB. that took about 6 hours or so. So, I think that roughly it may have gotten the whole 250 gb but not sure.
Also, on my select disc option I have two listings for my time capsule now. Not sure if that makes a difference.
My question really is how can I see what exactly went through? I have entered time machine but can't tell really if everything in those files copied. Can I at least see the size of the backup on time machine? I would even be willing to do a forced full backup again of all 295GB, but can't seem to see how to do that.
I am a bit new to this part, so sorry if I am asking really obvious questions. I just didn't want to find out at a later time that I only have partial backups. Thanks for any advice.

Launch the Terminal 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. Click Utilities, then Terminal in the page that opens.
Drag or copy — do not type — the following line into the Terminal window, then press return:
sudo tmutil compare
You'll be prompted for your login password, which won't be displayed when you type it. You may get a one-time warning not to screw up.
The command will take at least a few minutes to run. Eventually some lines of output will appear below what you entered.
Each line that begins with a plus sign (“+”) represents a file that has been added to the source volume since the last snapshot was taken. These files have not been backed up yet.
Each line that begins with an exclamation point (“!”) represents a file that has changed on the source volume. These files have been backed up, but not in their present state.
Each line that begins with a minus sign (“-“) represents a file that has been removed from the source volume.
Files that you’ve excluded from backup, or that are excluded automatically, are ignored.
At the end of the output, you’ll get some lines like the following:
Added:
Removed:
Changed:
These lines show the total amount of data added, removed, or changed on the source(s) since the last snapshot.

Similar Messages

  • Time Machine Has Never Performed a Full Backup that Can Be Restored From

    I've been backing up my system via time machine to a time capsule. I'm using the same time capsule for both my mac and my wife's. My wife's mac is backing up fine with numerous full backups that can be restored from. However, when I recently booted into recovery mode, I discovered there were no full backups of my mac that I could restore from. I've been using this time capsule for about a year now so I'm concerned as to why there are no full backups. I can enter time machine and see my docs and files...just no full backups. Thanks for your help.

    There was a bug in Mountain Lion that caused TM to fail to backup system files.
    See D10 here. http://pondini.org/TM/Troubleshooting.html
    Honestly if you want a reliable full backup get CCC or other clone type backup and do a disk image to a USB drive that you can then test boot from. Then use TM for incrementals..
    What the change to Maverick will bring I am not sure.. ??
    We went from big cats to card sharps in Westerns..
    http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Maverick_(TV_series)

  • I recently did a full reinstall from my time machine and now my MacBook pro won't back up to the time machine. It starts a full backup ignoring the original back up, can anyone help?

    I recently did a full reinstall from my time machine and now my MacBook pro won't back up to the time machine. It starts a full backup ignoring the original back up, can anyone help?

    Did you follow the instructions on the page linked below?
    OS X Yosemite: Recover your entire system

  • Time Machine wants to do a full backup.  How do I point it to my previous backups so it will do an incremental backup?

    I lost my wireless connection to my backup drive for a short time.  Now time machine wants to do a full backup.  It doesn't know that I have previous backups.  How do I point it to the previous backups so that time machine continues to do incremental backups rather than doing another full backup.

    I did some more reading and I found that Time Machine would find the older backups once a new backup is completed.  The backup ended up being a little larger than previous backups (2.65 GB vs typical incremental backups of several MB's)  but when it completed, time machine updated the last backup time/date and the oldest backup time/date properly.  So I guess, I don't have a problem.

  • Time Machine will not do a full backup when set up

    I am trying to set up time machine for the first time on a external HDD, but it just won't do a full backup in the first time I set it up, I knew I had a problem when I entered the time machine and it would only show today and now, I had the time machine set up for about a week. I already checked the time machine options and it says full backup should be 178 GB, but when I set it up it does not do the full backup just a partial, the time machine disk is always empty, I see no errors in the time machine preferences and also formatted the external HDD the HDD Mac OS Extended, Mac OS Extended (Journaled), Mac OS Extended (Case Sensitive), Mac OS Extended (Case Sensitive Journaled) and even tried a different HDD and I always get the time thing, no full backup when I set it up, also fixed permissions on all my disks and no luck... can anyone help???

    this is the message I got;
    Starting standard backup
    Couldn't find en0.
    Unable to determine UUID for host. Error: 35 Resource temporarily unavailable
    * Terminating app due to uncaught exception 'NSInvalidArgumentException', reason: '* -[NSCFArray initWithObjects:count:]: attempt to insert nil object at objects[0]'\n* Call stack at first throw:\n(\n 0 CoreFoundation 0x00007fff833c05a4 __exceptionPreprocess + 180\n 1 libobjc.A.dylib 0x00007fff887d2313 objcexceptionthrow + 45\n 2 CoreFoundation 0x00007fff8336b317 -[__NSPlaceholderArray initWithObjects:count:] + 407\n 3 CoreFoundation 0x00007fff8337fc68 +[NSArray arrayWithObjects:count:] + 56\n 4 CoreFoundation 0x00007fff8338adb1 -[NSArray arrayByAddingObject:] + 193\n 5 backupd 0x000000010000989b 0x0 + 4295006363\n 6 backupd 0x000000010000a510 0x0 + 4295009552\n 7 backupd 0x0000000100006d00 0x0 + 4294995200\n 8 Foundation 0x00007fff80f04f65 _NSThread__main_ + 1429\n 9 libSystem.B.dylib 0x00007fff80876f66 pthreadstart + 331\n 10 libSystem.B.dylib 0x00007fff80876e19 thread_start + 13\n)
    terminate called after throwing an instance of 'NSException'
    2009-11-08 22:50:42.463 ReportCrash[235:2503] Saved crash report for backupd[146] version ??? (???) to /Library/Logs/DiagnosticReports/backupd2009-11-08-225042localhost.crash

  • Time Machine don't make a full backup

    I just started with Time Machine. I made my first backup with a USB cabel of my Mac book Pro (28 gb used) but the Time Machine folder is only about 22 gb - how can that be?
    Time Machine haven't come up with any errors but I think there is something wrong anyway.
    Do one of you have any ideas?
    Thanks in advance
    /Kudsk

    My first backup was with a usb cable but then I went wireless I wanted to use Time Machine but this time it made a new file called "Lars Kudsks computer_001b63b12c5a.sparsebundle" instead of using the "Backups.backupdb" folder. - How can that be?
    And my mac book pro only finds the external drive if I open the Finder window (and in some way show "Time Machine" where to find the external drive - if you understand what I mean).

  • Time Machine doesn't do a full backup

    Hi there,
    I have a 320GB external hard drive I use as a Time Machine backup. This has always worked before.
    Recently I reformatted it and made a small partition (70GB) for other bits and bobs. Now though, whenever it backs up only a few KB of data seem to change, nothing I add or delete on my MacBook HD gets backed up to the external drive. Which is worying!
    There's ample room in the backup partition to add the updated files, but it doesn't.
    I've troubleshooted it, done a full reset etc, but I can't work it out. Any help would be greatly appreciated. Is it best not to have any partition at all?
    Thanks in advance.
    - Stevie

    I did some more reading and I found that Time Machine would find the older backups once a new backup is completed.  The backup ended up being a little larger than previous backups (2.65 GB vs typical incremental backups of several MB's)  but when it completed, time machine updated the last backup time/date and the oldest backup time/date properly.  So I guess, I don't have a problem.

  • HT3728 Time Machine only wants to do full backup not incremental

    just replaced hard drive and restored from time machine  however time machine looks like it is trying to do a full back up and  says not enough space available when should be enough for incremental. Do I delete backup and reconnect to time machine?

    There are some cases when you can continue to use the old TM backups and situations where you cannot or should not.. but before you delete your backups .. something I am always very reluctant to do, make sure you have all your files.. If you are talking about a Time Capsule you can archive off the old backup to a USB drive using 5.6 version utility or new 6.3 version. It is not available in 6.0-6.2
    Then you can safely erase the drive and start over.
    Read pondini on continuing your backups.
    B5 and B6 here.
    http://pondini.org/TM/Troubleshooting.html

  • How to set time machine to only do a full backup manually?

    I just want to do a full backup every once in a while, manually. Then turn TM back off. Can this be done? Or maybe set the frequency to just once a week/month?

    To set the frequency, Set to OFF and then place the following launchd plist in ~/Library/LaunchAgents/ (mine is saved as "com.tonyt.StartTimeMachine.plist") and then log-out and back in (or re-boot)
    This is set for weekly, Monday at 12:00am:
    <?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?>
    <!DOCTYPE plist PUBLIC "-//Apple//DTD PLIST 1.0//EN" "http://www.apple.com/DTDs/PropertyList-1.0.dtd">
    <plist version="1.0">
    <dict>
              <key>Label</key>
              <string>com.tonyt.StartTimeMachine</string>
              <key>ProgramArguments</key>
              <array>
                        <string>/usr/bin/tmutil</string>
                        <string>startbackup</string>
              </array>
              <key>QueueDirectories</key>
              <array/>
              <key>StartCalendarInterval</key>
              <dict>
                        <key>Hour</key>
                        <integer>0</integer>
                        <key>Minute</key>
                        <integer>0</integer>
                        <key>Weekday</key>
                        <integer>1</integer>
              </dict>
              <key>WatchPaths</key>
              <array/>
    </dict>
    </plist>
    For the 2nd of each month at 12:00am use:
    <?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?>
    <!DOCTYPE plist PUBLIC "-//Apple//DTD PLIST 1.0//EN" "http://www.apple.com/DTDs/PropertyList-1.0.dtd">
    <plist version="1.0">
    <dict>
              <key>Label</key>
              <string>com.tonyt.StartTimeMachine</string>
              <key>ProgramArguments</key>
              <array>
                        <string>/usr/bin/tmutil</string>
                        <string>startbackup</string>
              </array>
              <key>QueueDirectories</key>
              <array/>
              <key>StartCalendarInterval</key>
              <dict>
                        <key>Day</key>
                        <integer>2</integer>
                        <key>Hour</key>
                        <integer>0</integer>
                        <key>Minute</key>
                        <integer>0</integer>
              </dict>
              <key>WatchPaths</key>
              <array/>
    </dict>
    </plist>

  • Time machine will not perform initial backup

    Hey,
    time machine is not performing my initial backup, this is the error it gives
    http://img27.imageshack.us/img27/6425/screenshot20100419at522.png
    The error shows up anywhere from the first few megs to the first few gigs during the backup (and the backup is incredablly slow, I don't know why...(not like the apple videos where it goes 0.5gigs/s))
    It is the second partition on a 1TB USB drive.
    I tried several formats (pretty much everything in disk utilities).
    How do I fix this?
    Thanks
    Message was edited by: Positron1234

    Positron1234 wrote:
    Shoot, my partition scheme is MBR and not GUID or Apple....
    Is there anyway to fix this without wiping the entire harddrive (I don't have enough storage in everything that I have to store stuff to backup this entire harddrive (at least 10 years worth of stuff))
    It's risky. iPartition, and perhaps some other 3rd-party apps, claims to be able to change formats and/or the partition map without erasing, but they very prominently recommend backing the drive up first. And it costs about half what a new HD will.
    If the things in the other partition aren't backed-up some other way, your best bet might be to get a larger internal HD, so you can keep all your originals on it, and reformat the external and let TM start over.
    Or, get a second drive, and let it back up both your internal HD and the current external.

  • Time Machine will not complete a system backup and terminates with "Unable to complete backup. An error occurred while copying files to the backup volume.  This follows a problem when Time machne terminated when the volume was almost full.

    On 11/1/2011, Time Machine (TM) terminated with an error message I did not record.  I noted that the drive was full and decided to do a separate complete bootable  system backup using Carbon Copy Clone (CCC), before clearing the TM volume and trying to start it over clean.  Part way through the full system backup CCC put up a message that there was a Physical Problem  "Library/Application Support/Techtool Protection/McIntosh HD/Directory Backup 2011-11-01-16-28-16".  That was about the time that TM malfunctioned, so I assumed they were related.  After starting CCC over a couple of times, and getting the same error message, I let it go through to completion of the backup, which took three or four hours.  I then ran tests using Disk Utility and verified that there was nothing physically wrong with both the internal hard drive and the TM volume.  I also erased and reformatted the TM volume.  However, every time I started Time Machine, it would record a few GB and terminate with "Unable to complete backup. An error occurred while copying files to the backup volume".  I restarted the computer with no change in results.  Note that prior to starting the CCC backup, I "Repaired Permissions", "zapped the PRAM" and "re-set the SMC", hoping to have a clean bootable system on the backup.  I ran Techtool and no problems were found.
    I'm running this on an Intel iMac under 10.5.8 and recording to a 500GB My Passport drive.  My hard drive is only about half full at 246 GB.  My assessment is that something happened at 16-28-16 on 11/1/2001 to screwup the Backup Directory in the file at "Library/Application Support/Techtool Protection/McIntosh HD/Directory Backup 2011-11-01-16-28-16". My question is, how do I fix it?
    I had just completed writing everything above here, explaining the problems I had been encountering for the past 24 hours.  I had the Time Machine window standing open on the desktop where I could see it, having recentlycleared it after the last termination.  As I was proofing what I had written, I looked at the window and noted that the clock had started a new run for a full back up, since all prior efforts had failed and the TM volume was empty.  As I watched and waited for it to fail again, as it had been doing at about 13 GB, it kept going and going until it just finished a complete backup, about 4.5 hours later, with my having done nothing.  Now my question would have to be - what could possiibly have happened to make it perform this way?   It will be interesting to see if it continue to operate normally, or if the problem will return, in a later backup run.

    jcm21 wrote:
    CCC put up a message that there was a Physical Problem  "Library/Application Support/Techtool Protection/McIntosh HD/Directory Backup 2011-11-01-16-28-16"
    You should not keep those files for long, and probably shouldn't back them up (if you need them at all -- since you do regular backups, I'm doubtful just how worthwhile that feature is).
    "Unable to complete backup. An error occurred while copying files to the backup volume".
    One of Apple's maddeningly incomplete messages. Most likely, there's a problem with a file (quite possibly the one CCC didn't like).  See #C3 in Time Machine - Troubleshooting for details and instructions on finding and fixing it.
    If you continue running the Directory Protection app, be sure to exclude your Time Machine drive from it (as it will just take up lots of room, and won't help repair your backups if there's a problem);  and exclude the folders it creates from being backed-up by Time Machine (as they'll create large backups, and you probably can't use the backed-up folders anyway), per #10 in Time Machine - Frequently Asked Questions.

  • I bought a new external hard drive for backups, but time machine won't do a full back up.  I think it is remembering backing up onto previous external hard drives, which I don't own anymore.  How do I do a new full backup?

    I bought a new external hard drive for backups, but time machine won't do a full back up. 
    I think it is remembering backing up onto previous external hard drives, which I don't own anymore.  How do I do a new full backup?
    When I bought the new (used) iMac, I also bought an external hard drive for backups.  It worked fine, but my husband stole it.
    Then I bought a new external hard drive (Seagate) and it worked fine for three weeks, then died.
    So I just got a new external hard drive, which was put together from an internal hard drive and a hard drive enclosure. 
    Time machine did the first backup today, and it should have taken 9 hours like it did on the previous first time full back up.  Instead, it took 30 minutes.  That can't be right.  I want to start over and do a full backup to make sure everything gets onto my new external hard drive, but I can't figure out how to do that.  Please help.

    Triple-click anywhere in the line below to select it:
    tmutil compare -E
    Copy the selected text to the Clipboard (command-C).
    Launch the Terminal 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. Click Utilities, then Terminal in the icon grid.
    Paste into the Terminal window (command-V).
    The command will take at least a few minutes to run. Eventually some lines of output will appear below what you entered.
    Each line that begins with a plus sign (“+”) represents a file that has been added to the source volume since the last snapshot was taken. These files have not been backed up yet.
    Each line that begins with an exclamation point (“!”) represents a file that has changed on the source volume. These files have been backed up, but not in their present state.
    Each line that begins with a minus sign (“-“) represents a file that has been removed from the source volume.
    At the end of the output, you’ll get some lines like the following:
    Added:
    Removed:
    Changed:
    These lines show the total amount of data added, removed, or changed on the source(s) since the last snapshot.

  • Time Machine does not automatically delete old backups when drive is full

    I back up to a 1TB external drive with TM.  It will not delete old back-ups and instead tells me that the drive is full.  I thought TM was supposed to manage all of this on its own.

    It will, if it can.  But it will never delete your last remaining backup.
    See #C4 in Time Machine - Troubleshooting, probably the pink box there.
    Basically, if Time Machine has to do a full or very large backup, and your Time Machine drive isn't well over twice the size of the data it's backing up, there won't be room for the last backup, plus the new one, plus some workspace.

  • Time Machine ejecting internal hard drive during backup

    I originally posted this in the Time Machine group. It was suggested I post to the Xserve group.
    We have an XSERVE running 10.6.4 server. It has 2 internal 1TB drives. The plan is to use one as the main drive and the second as a Time Machine backup. This used to work in 10.5, but since about 10.6.2 or so, it has not worked correctly.
    Time machine will come on, begin the backup, and then error off with a message that the drive has been ejected. I have erased the drive, but still no joy. I have partitioned the drive, still no joy. I have verified the drive repeatedly, and all is fine. I can copy files to and from the drive until the cows come home, and all works fine, which means I do not think it is the drive itself. Activate TM, however, and it will fail before the first backup is completed. The only way to get the drive back is to do a complete power down and then power up. Needless to say, that is not a good thing for a server that we rely on.
    Any ideas?
    10/14/10 10:41:27 AM com.apple.backupd1230 Backup content size: 542.8 GB excluded items size: 474.1 GB for volume Server HD
10/14/10 10:41:27 AM com.apple.backupd1230 No pre-backup thinning needed: 82.46 GB requested (including padding), 930.13 GB available
10/14/10 10:41:27 AM com.apple.backupd1230 Waiting for index to be ready (101)
10/14/10 10:41:27 AM mds70 (Normal) DiskStore: Creating index for /Volumes/backup/Backups.backupdb
    10/14/10 10:47:38 AM kernel FusionMPT: Notification = 22 (SAS Discovery) for SCSI Domain = 0
10/14/10 10:47:38 AM kernel Discovery condition = 0x000f0001
10/14/10 10:47:38 AM kernel FusionMPT: Notification = 18 (SAS Phy Link Status) for SCSI Domain = 0
10/14/10 10:47:38 AM kernel SAS Phy Link Status: PhyNum = 0, old link rate = 8, new link rate = 0, SASAddress = 50080007002e8c04
    10/14/10 10:48:10 AM kernel SCSIPressurePathManager: Timed out waiting for inactive/error path to become active, loops = 0
10/14/10 10:48:10 AM kernel 
10/14/10 10:48:10 AM kernel disk0s2: media is not present.
    10/14/10 10:48:10 AM com.apple.backupd1230 Stopping backupd because the backup volume was ejected!

10/14/10 10:48:10 AM com.apple.backupd1230 Error writing to backup log. NSFileHandleOperationException:* -NSConcreteFileHandle writeData:: Input/output error
10/14/10 10:48:10 AM com.apple.backupd1230 Error writing to backup log. NSFileHandleOperationException:* -NSConcreteFileHandle writeData:: Input/output error
10/14/10 10:48:10 AM com.apple.backupd1230 Error writing to backup log. NSFileHandleOperationException:* -NSConcreteFileHandle writeData:: Input/output error
10/14/10 10:48:10 AM com.apple.backupd1230 Copied 13416 files (4.0 GB) from volume Server HD.
10/14/10 10:48:10 AM com.apple.backupd1230 Error writing to backup log. NSFileHandleOperationException:* -NSConcreteFileHandle writeData:: Input/output error
10/14/10 10:48:10 AM servermgrd64 servermgr_backup: TimeMachinePostBackupHook called.
10/14/10 10:48:10 AM servermgrd64 servermgr_backup: TimeMachinePostBackupHook done.
10/14/10 10:48:11 AM kernel jnl: disk0s2: close: journal 0xffffff8012b15d20, is invalid. aborting outstanding transactions 


    No, it is not always at the same point/file/bytes transferred. It will vary from a few GB (say 3GB) to quite a few GB (say 30GB). I would add amongst the things I have done was to:
    Perform numerous Disk Utility Checks. Never any errors found.
    Erased the backup drive on multiple occasions. Double checked the GUID and format.
    Partitioned the drive and tried backing up to a new partition. (No joy there either)
    Copied lots and lots of data from the root disk to said partitions to test them. All went fine.
    It really is Time Machine that is causing the issue. I can use the drive all day long as long as TM does not run. When it does, I eventually get a failure message that the drive has been ejected.
    While I have not tried making a partition on the home drive (I'd rather not, lots of data there, make users mad, and since TM is not working, I have no backups at present), I do limit the data that is being backed up to JUST that of the system. /Users is being excluded at the moment. So I doubt there is anything out of the ordinary in the system. And, yes, I did a disk check on the root disk and all is fine there too.

  • Time machine is deleting all my old backups after moving to different iMac

    Hi - I had to move my data to a different machine and so I prepared a different iMac (early 2008). This is what I did:
    I booted into Snow Leopard from my DVD
    erased the HD
    installed SL 10.6
    booted into SL
    ran software update to upgrade to 10.6.8 (to get the App Store)
    installed Mountain Lion 10.8.2
    used Migration Asistant to restore all my data, apps, and settings from my time machine backup
    This all worked fine and at some point time machine asked me whether to inherit the time machine history. I confirmed this and all seemed fine until I noticed that time machine was backing for a long time and a lot of space was being freed on the time machine volume. I found that it was deleting all my old backups. Before I had data going back to 2010 but now I only have backups left from JAN 2012 onwards.
    After some searching I found the excellent Pondini time machine site and performed the actions under B6 ("Reconecting" to your backups):
    exxi:~ michael$ sudo tmutil inheritbackup /Volumes/tm2/Backups.backupdb/exxi
    Password:
    exxi:~ michael$ sudo tmutil associatedisk -a / /Volumes/tm2/Backups.backupdb/exxi/2013-02-03-150320/exxi_hd
    I restarted the backup after applying the command above but it still is deleting old backups. I tried the same comand by associating it with an older backup but still it keeps deleting my backups.
    What can I do to stop it from erasing all my backups?
    Cheers
    Michael

    Just found this info in the Backup dashboard widget:
    Starting manual backup
    Backing up to: /Volumes/tm2/Backups.backupdb
    Inheritance scan required for /, associated with previous UUID: [deleted]
    Event store UUIDs don't match for volume: exxi_hd
    Deep event scan at path:/ reason:must scan subdirs|new event db|
    First backup after disk inheritance for / - complete scan required
    Finished scan
    Found 839161 files (154.88 GB) needing backup
    188.83 GB required (including padding), 145.37 GB available
    Deleted backup /Volumes/tm2/Backups.backupdb/exxi/2012-03-04-160328 containing 2.25 GB; 147.63 GB now available, 188.83 GB required
    Deleted backup /Volumes/tm2/Backups.backupdb/exxi/2013-02-05-181442.inProgress/57E7F008-929C-4 DF8-B062-F034FEE7A606 containing 4 KB; 147.63 GB now available, 188.83 GB required
    Deleted backup /Volumes/tm2/Backups.backupdb/exxi/2013-01-07-112745 containing 130.8 MB; 147.76 GB now available, 188.83 GB required
    Removed 3 expired backups so far, more space is needed - deleting oldest backups to make room
    Deleted backup /Volumes/tm2/Backups.backupdb/exxi/2012-03-11-191620 containing 2.08 GB; 149.86 GB now available, 188.83 GB required
    Removed 4 expired backups so far, more space is needed - deleting oldest backups to make room
    Backup deletion was canceled by user
    Deleted 4 backups containing 4.46 GB total; 149.86 GB now available, 188.83 GB required
    Backup date range was shortened: oldest backup is now Mar 31, 2012
    Backup canceled.

Maybe you are looking for