Time Machine problem after clean install

I installed an SSD drive on my mac and did a clean install of OS X Lion.
Now, when I access my time machine backup disk I can only restore applications and not any files.
Is there anything I should do to be able to restore files etc.?

Erase Lion from the hold commnad r boot into Recovery, then reinstall it again.
Next when you setup Lion,  have teh TM drive connected and use Setup Assistant to transfer from TM drive.
What I suspect happened is you have the same named account and it's conflicting.
Most commonly used backup methods explained

Similar Messages

  • Time machine problems on clean-install, doesn't recognize old backups as such/permissions issues

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    Everything's fast now! It's remarkably like it was when it was brand new with Tiger, which is pretty good for a nearly-six-year-old computer running today's OS. I'm having problems with the Time Machine part, though. Even after ensuring that my username is the same as it was before and making all the permissions my own in both Finder and with chmod, it throws me permissions errors when restoring some, but not all files, with no pattern about it. This isn't a big deal for restoration because I've just used sudo cp to put everything back where I wanted it, but now I have issues with backups. Even though TM sees my old backups and can restore the ones that don't give permissions errors, it still wants to take new backups of things I've manually restored, such as my iTunes folder of about 50GB. That's the big conflict now; I don't want to take up all that space for files that are already backed up. Can anyone offer a fix? Thanks!

    coldcaption wrote:
    Yes, the other drive was backed up before. If it was previously associated then perhaps something was messed up trying to re-associate.
    As long as you pointed it to the backups of that disk, it should be fine.  If not, or if in doubt, just run the command again.
    It changes whether or not I have the previously-backed up external drive added to the things to back up (unless it's supposed to do delete the old ones in this case?),
    I don't quite follow that.  The Estimated size of full backup is just the total data on the drives that are included (unfortunately, there's no display of them), less any exclusions of files/folders on them.
    Finally, though, the size of a backup if I were to take one right now would be 363 GB;
    How do you know that?  The only way to tell what Time Machine thinks is new or changed is to actually start a backup, and see what the display ("xxx GB of yyy GB") and/or log messages (". . . xxx MB/GB requested (including padding), yyy MB/GB available.") say.  See #A1 in Time Machine - Troubleshooting for a handy widget to display the log messages.

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    See
    What is a kernel panic,
    Technical Note TN2063: Understanding and Debugging Kernel Panics,
    Mac OS X Kernel Panic FAQ,
    Resolving Kernel Panics, and
    Tutorial: Avoiding and eliminating Kernel panics for more details.

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    Inherit a Backup
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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.

  • Migration Assistant and Time Machine Problems on Clean Install of OS Lion

    I just completed a clean install of Mac OS X Lion. However, the Migration Assistant application does not detect my time machine backup on my external hard drive when I try to copy my files to my mac. Is there a way where I can transfer my files?

    Are you sure its not shown?  It should have a yellow or green icon, and list the name of the system and HD that was backed-up, not the one it's on.
    If not, try to repair the backups, per #A5 in Time Machine - Troubleshooting.

  • Can not access my Time machine HD after CLEAN install Mountain Lion

    Hi Everyone!
    Thank you in advance for your interest and help, I really appreciate it.
    I recently did a clean Install of Mountain Lion and already did all the updates that appeared. However, before doing these clean install, I did a back up with Time Machine on my external Hard drive. Now I can't access to it, doesn't even appear on my sidebar when I connect it. On the other hand it does appear as connected when I open Disk Utility, but I can not access to it. There I have all my 5 years of University works and classes, photos, and music. This Hard drive is only dedicated for my Mac Backups and nothing more.
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    What can I or should I do to access my Hard Drive again?
    Best Regards
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    Hi Mende,
    Sorry for my late reply but I want to thank you for your help.
    I followed your instructions and now I can access the drive thank you a lot for this. However, now I don't want to restore everything from my last back-up just some files, How can I do this? Also I want to restore My iLife, but the copy I have from the CD that came with my mac doesn't allow to install it, what can I do.
    Take good care, and happy holidays.
    Best Regards
    Edd
    PD. Are you from Spain?

  • Can you import photos from time machine backup after clean install

    I had to do a clean install of Mt. Lion.  So now I have all my photos on the time machine backup.  Is there a way to get those photos in to my library?

    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.

  • TS1338 time machine restore after clean install

    My MacPro 2 x 2.66 GHz Dual core Intel Xeon with 8 Gb RAM was having trouble booting and the drive was unable to be repaired 2x in 30 days, so I wiped the drive and did a clean install of Snow Leopard and brought everything back to date (10.6.8) cleanly.
    How do I get all my apps, preferences, keychain etc back from my most recent Time Machine backup? My user now is different, so Time Machine is giving me a hard time now that I am a new "me."
    Thanks!
    Artboard

    You would use Migration Assistant to migrate the old "you" from your backup.
    If your issue was user specific all along, you may reintroduce the issue by migrating. If you fear it was user specific, you should log into Root and manually navigate into your backups.backupdb folder and find the desired apps, docs, music, movies, and pictures, and then copy them to the desired and respective locations of the volume, but you will have to address the permissions using "Apply to Enclosed Items" to make sure they will open, edit, and save correctly, depending on the contents that you bring over. Permissions can be a pain sometimes.

  • Time machine full after clean install of snow leopard

    I recently upgraded to Snow Leopard by doing a clean install. I just connected my external HD to backup Time Machine, and it's telling me the disk is full and there's not enough space to backup, even though it spent some time deleting files. I'm guessing that it's not deleting files from before I installed Snow Leopard? I'm not sure of the best way to manually clear the earlier backups. (in case it matters, my external HD is partitioned with Super Duper backups on one half, and TM on the other).
    I tried looking at the TM troubleshooting tips, but wasn't sure of the best way to deal with this - rather safe than sorry!
    Thanks for any advice.

    The "proper way" is while in time machine, go to the specific backup you want to delete. Then click the gear shape or the settings on the menu bar. There is an option "delete backup".
    When opening your time machine HD and open "Backups.backupdb" are there two machines appearing or just one? If there are two, go to the time machine icon in your doc and control click on the icon. Select the option "Browse Other Time Machine Disks" and select the older machine to access and/or delete backups.
    I believe at times I've also just deleted the specific backups when accessing the time machine HD in the finder.

  • Time machine restore after clean install

    I use a WD My Cloud drive 4 TB to make time machine backups of my Macbook Pro. I never partitioned this external drive but simply connected it as the backup disk for my time machine backups. I am on the latest software version of the Mac OS.
    As the disk on my Macbook pro was running out and my machine was becoming slow, I chose to wipe the disk clean by reformatting it. I did not want my entire time machine back up to be restored, I figured I will be picking and choosing the files I desired from the time machine and pulling them on my local disk as and when required
    I noticed recently that my newly formatted machine was also utilizing the same external disk as backup and it had started creating time machine backups - there isn't much data on my new machine as this has been only a few weeks old.
    When I click to enter the time machine, the last back up I can go back to is dated Dec 2014 which feels like it is the newly formatted disk's first back up and I cannot figure out how to get to my old backups. I see purely from the utilized capacity of my external disk that it has about 500 GB sitting on it which corresponds to the size of my original backup but I am not sure how to get to it.
    I don't recall ever selecting an option on overwriting the existing backup, so confused as to what I might be doing wrong
    I see some other posts on this topic but these people at least see their folders - I havent changed a version on my OS or my login id so this does not seem like a permission issue
    Appreciate your help on this issue

    You would use Migration Assistant to migrate the old "you" from your backup.
    If your issue was user specific all along, you may reintroduce the issue by migrating. If you fear it was user specific, you should log into Root and manually navigate into your backups.backupdb folder and find the desired apps, docs, music, movies, and pictures, and then copy them to the desired and respective locations of the volume, but you will have to address the permissions using "Apply to Enclosed Items" to make sure they will open, edit, and save correctly, depending on the contents that you bring over. Permissions can be a pain sometimes.

  • Using old Time Machine backup after clean install of system

    I had a system crash on my G4 iBook running Leopard. Based on advice given at the Apple store genius bar, I reinstalled Leopard from an install DVD, reformatting the drive. During the system installation process I used my Time Machine backup to reinstall the former users (but nothing else). I then installed my needed applications. So far so good.
    Now I'm in the situation where I have an external drive with the Time Machine backup of the pre-crash iBook, and I'm not sure how to proceed. Do I start over and do a new backup (effectively erasing all my pre-restore data)? Or can the old backup still be used, and added to? While losing the pre-restore time machine data would not be a major loss, it would be kind of nice to have.
    Any suggestions? Thanks!
    Dan

    DanK wrote:
    I had a system crash on my G4 iBook running Leopard. Based on advice given at the Apple store genius bar, I reinstalled Leopard from an install DVD, reformatting the drive. During the system installation process I used my Time Machine backup to reinstall the former users (but nothing else). I then installed my needed applications. So far so good.
    You didn't want any of your settings, preferences, data, etc.? The +MIgration Assistant+ app will let you do that, for one or more users. And of course, you can use the +Star Wars+ display to restore selected items.
    Now I'm in the situation where I have an external drive with the Time Machine backup of the pre-crash iBook, and I'm not sure how to proceed. Do I start over and do a new backup (effectively erasing all my pre-restore data)? Or can the old backup still be used, and added to? While losing the pre-restore time machine data would not be a major loss, it would be kind of nice to have.
    Your next backup will be a full one; everything on your internal HD is considered as changed, so will be backed-up again.
    If there's room for that, it will just be a large incremental backup, added to the existing ones.
    If not, Time Machine will begin deleting your oldest backups, one by one, trying to make enough room for the new backup (the amount on the internal HD plus 20% for workspace). But it won't delete the latest backup -- if that's the only one left, and there still isn't enough room, the backup will fail.
    If there is room, the first backup may appear to be very slow; why is not clear, but as long as it's making progress, let it run. Subsequent ones should be normal.

  • Time machine issue after Yosemite install

    After performing a clean install of Yosemite and migration from my TimeMachine backup I experienced the following:
    I opened iTunes and selected some music to play, then got a dialog box saying the files could not be found.  Spotlight couldn't find them either... they were just gone.  Naturally I went to my Time Machine backups and was surprised the music was gone from the backups, all the way back to the first backup.  Very wierd.  During the migration I went through the "Cleaning up old backups" process, not sure exactly what this process is.
    I was pretty bummed that I had permanently lost a lot of music, some was recordings of friends playing live that could never be replaced.  I then remembered that some time ago, just for the **** of it, I copied my sparsebundle backups to an external drive and stashed it in a drawer.  I browsed it, and lo and behold there were the missing files.  So I narrowly escaped a big problem, but wy did this happen?  What are they doing over at Apple?

    Hatrabbit wrote:
    Naturally I went to my Time Machine backups and was surprised the music was gone from the backups, all the way back to the first backup.  Very wierd.
    This is really bad luck. And what can be seen here, it is not related to Yosemite but Mavericks, since I asume your backups were made with Mavericks. Though, it is possible that this bug still persists with Yosemite.
    I have a similar problem. I am still on Mavericks. I see missing files in ~/Library/Preferences on a regular basis. When I come aware of it, I fix it manually by excluding Preferences folder from backup, run backup, include folder Preferences and finally backup again. But this fix does not last for long. Suddenly after some weeks I see a again missing files in that folder, when browsing the "Latest" backup.
    I have found some related discussion:
    Time machine missing files
    http://forums.macnn.com/90/mac-os-x/509489/potential-time-machine-issue-maverick s-leaving/
    http://apple.stackexchange.com/questions/130955/some-files-are-gone-after-recove ry-from-time-machine-backup-why/150230
    http://apple.stackexchange.com/questions/136453/time-machine-not-detecting-chang es-in-certain-folders
    https://twitter.com/ThatDJJP/status/526429152153714690
    missing mail after installation
    No solution until today. Very frustrating.
    My feeling is, that many users do not recognize, that they are victim of this horrible bug, cause in most cases only few folders are hit by this bug.
    And now since Yosemite is out, people are actually using there backups for the first time since Mavericks and run into a disaster.
    Atm I am trying to test, if maybe fsevent daemon is the problem, in the past there have been issues like http://openradar.appspot.com/10207999
    I did a check on my drive, and I found issues with realpath()/readdir(). Though, those issues may just be old and have not been detected by me for a very long time. My MBP is 5 years old and I upgraded all the way from 10.5 to 10.6 to 10.9.
    With 10.6 I never had such an issue.
    But more likely, the issue is related to the "Cleaning up old backups" process. Cause I also have the feeling, that when my backup drive gets full and  the shrink process took place, then the result are missing files in younger backups then the ones cleaned. If that is true, then maybe the hard-link-approach of Time Machine is somehow involved.

  • Time Machine problem after 10.6 upgrade

    Hi Guys,
    After I installed the snow leopard, I got a prompt regarding the time machine: "cancel backup" "create new backup" "replace backup". I clicked on "create new backup" but that seemed to have been the wrong choice. The time machine said that the last backup was November 28 2008, despite me backing up data every hour since November 28. My question is:
    Have I lost all the data between now and Nov. 2008? Is there anyway to access it?
    Second, can I resume backing up as before instead of the new back up I accidentally created?
    Thanks.

    valoo wrote:
    I deleted the newly created sparsebundle. I also realized that the computer name had been changed and I changed it back to the original one. Here's the new problem. The TM says that I only have 127 GB and the amount of space needed to back up the disk is 140GB. I don't understand. It almost seems like it is trying to duplicate the entire backup. And this time around, I don't even see any new sparsebundle. I am stuck here.
    Something caused TM to decide to start a new "sequence" of backups, as if you'd gotten a new Mac. That means a new, full backup to start with. The only thing that seems to have worked for some folks is a Restart. So if you haven't done one since the latest changes and failed backup attempt, it's worth a try.
    If it still wants to do a full backup, you can't prevent it.
    Depending on how much space you have on the TM drive/partition, your only choice may be to delete the "old" sparse bundle and let TM start over.
    You may be able to delete some of the older backups to make room for the new, full backup, but that's tedious and time-consuming (see item #12 of the Frequently Asked Questions *User Tip.)*
    But that still leaves two problems: you'll have to manually "compact" the sparse bundle via Terminal to shrink it; and you'll have to continue to delete old backups this way (and manually compact them) to make room for new ones. Since TM is treating them as if they were from a different Mac, it won't delete them automatically, but will delete the oldest backups from the new set instead.

  • Time Machine problem after restoring to a new HD (after my original HD failed)

    I am running Lion 10.7.5 on a MacBook Pro Late '11
    My HD was getting SMART errors, so I did a complete back up using Time Machine using a WD My Passport 1TB external, and then sent my MBP to Apple for HD replacement (under my Applecare plan).
    I collected it yesterday and restored my system using Time Machine (using the data from my external HD) and everything was restored perfectly, which was great,
    However, I'm now encountering a problem after plugging my external HD back into my MBP on the new system. Rather than Time Machine doing a swift 'top up' back up, it appears that TM is attempting to do a full back up. (I have 300GB and it took nearly 24hours to backup on the faulty drive) Is this normal after installing a new HD? Bearing in mind the Time Machine data is still on my external drive?
    It's also appearing to be taking FOREVER to do this entire back up again. It is stuck on 'preparing back up' and when I do get some movement, it's doing a couple of KB's at a time and with no genuine back up progress.
    Fundamentally, I just want to just top up my Time Machine back up without having do a complete back up, again. (which doesn't actually seem possible, viable at the min)
    Any help / support would be much appreciated

    AFAIK, it'll do that since the HD has a different UUID and the old TM backup won't recognize it. See Pondini's TM FAQs, for starters.

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