Time Machine restore system disk, get back to work such a thing ?

Someone please tell me if it is possible to ask time machine to restore the system disk that has been fully backed up that includes all apps and documents. I want to make a brand new startup hard drive that is exactly what I was just working with due to a failure that I am trying to resolve. It seems like a myth that this can take place. Please tell me how to do this. I want to believe that Time Machine will allow for me to choose a date and time and the entire system 10.5.8 disk drive that I have been backing up, and walla poof my computer is fresh and running like nothing ever happened and booting from a brand new drive and all my programs are running and remember all the passwords and serials that were entered to authorize them. Isn't this why we all use Time Machine ? HOW DO I DO THIS ???  Thank you

Well, mostly I use Tri-Backup to have everything, but keep a clone or 2 of good solid Installs so I can continue with my work in a minute or two.
Truthfully, I haven't even bothered with TM for some time, & I know it's improved, but not once did I ever get a useful/good restore even though supposedly the "backup" went well.
With TB I've had flawless clones/backups/restores/evolutive backups/Incremental backups/Syncronizatinon of Disks or Folders, & restores from these since at least OS9, maybe OS 8.6
Also it's error reporting & recovery is supperior & it continues backups & such without failing at every error, yet reporting the errors when done so you cn deal with those files.
Also, Tri-edre's Back-in-time blows away TM's restore incomprehensibleness to this uneducated soul.

Similar Messages

  • Time Machine restore left disk info on icons

    The other day I had to use Time Machine to restore my system back a couple of days. Everything seemed to work fine, but afterwards all my disk icons on the desktop have fonts under them showing disk size and remaining free space.
    This doesn't seem to affect anything, but it looks kinda hinky. Is there any way I can get rid of this info?

    control-click anywhere on the desktop and select 'show view options" . in the resulting popup uncheck the box "show item info".

  • Can time machine restore system language files deleted by "monolingual'?

    I've removed some important language files while using monolingual (namely -English (American) -English (British) not realizing these are subset and required).
    I should've read the FAQ first... now some programs are appearing in weird character formats.
    Can I replace those files with my Time Machine back ups?
    Which folder would I need to replace back with previous file?
    Since I did this only late last night, I should be able to just replace a certain system file folder, without causing much headache, I'm hoping!

    kacmaz wrote:
    Can I replace those files with my Time Machine back ups?
    Yes.
    Which folder would I need to replace back with previous file?
    That's the problem; language files aren't in a central location; each application has it's own set of language files, containing the translations of the messages for that application.
    Since I did this only late last night, I should be able to just replace a certain system file folder, without causing much headache, I'm hoping!
    I don't know much about Monolingual; I don't know if it removes language files from your System folders, or only Applications. And if you've installed any apps anywhere else, I don't know if it got them, too.
    If you're only having trouble with apps, you might be ok to restore only Applications, but to get everything back the way it was, you'd need to do a full system restore, per #14 in the Time Machine - Frequently Asked Questions (or use the link in *User Tips* at the top of this forum).

  • Can't Boot After New HD + Time Machine Restore

    So a couple days ago my 27" iMac running Snow Leopard started making some weird noises and stalling out. Annoyed, I talked for a couple hours with apple tech support which eventually lead me to run an Apple Hardware Test. This test returned the error
    "Alert! Apple Hardware Test has detected an error.
    4HDD/11/40000000 SATA(0,0)"
    I scheduled an appointment at the Genius Bar, and they replaced the hard drive.
    After that I got it home and did a System restore from my time machine backup. It finished fine, but when I restarted it got stuck on the grey apple screen with the spinning dial thing.
    I called apple back and they had me do a couple things like repair disk, verify disk, and one person had me reboot into this command line mode and type some stuff in. Nothing worked. After that They had me try to reinstall the OS first from archive, and next by erasing the hard drive and doing it. Both times the install fails with a big yellow exclamation point saying that it couldn't install support files and the OS couldn't be installed.
    Any ideas how to fix this?
    I'm currently trying to restore from my time machine backup again, but I'm not hopeful.

    Here's what I got - apologies for any formatting peculiarities.
    The problem: 10.6.6 mac won't boot after time machine restore to disk.
    Further symptoms: Booting with Command-v shows several errors: usually blued and loginwindow collapse with errors from launchd. Errors will be of the style "dyld: Symbol not found: CSSMOID_APPLE_TP_MACAPPSTORERECEIPT" and other CommerceKit / CommerceCore framework errors.
    A solution: Your Framework Security library may be an older version (possible cause with Time Machine below). The easiest way to fix this is to find another, working 10.6.6 Mac, and update the Security library on the broken machine.
    Identifying if you're affected:
    1) Boot the broken machine into "target" mode - hold "Command-t" during boot until the [Firewire|http://itunesu.utah.edu/terms/images/Firewire_Icon.png] icon appears.
    2) Connect the broken machine to the working 10.6.6 machine with a firewire cable.
    3) On the working machine, the disk of the broken machine should mount.
    4) Open Terminal
    5) Run "ls /Volumes" - the name of disk you mounted should be there (in this example, we'll use "Macintosh HD".)
    6) Typing in the path of the broken machine, run:
    <pre>
    nm /Volumes/Macintosh HD/System/Library/Frameworks/Security.framework/Versions/A/Security | grep random_fd | cut -d. -f2
    </pre>
    (this does a dump of the library, looking for the version value)
    If this comes back with the value 22457 (or less?), your Mac is not booting because it does not have the updated version of the Security library, which is required in 10.6.6 since Snow Leopard added the Appstore / Commerce framework.
    Fixing if you're affected:
    1) First, make sure the working 10.6.6 Mac has a correct version of the framework:
    <pre>
    nm /System/Library/Frameworks/Security.framework/Versions/A/Security | grep random_fd | cut -d. -f2
    </pre>
    For 10.6.6, this should be at least "22458"
    2) *Be extremely careful at this point* - Make sure on the mounted disk (not the machine you are working on!) run the following
    <pre></pre>
    2a) Make a backup of the broken library
    <pre>
    mkdir /Volumes/Macintosh HD/savedLibrary
    cp /Volumes/Macintosh HD/System/Library/Frameworks/Security.framework/Versions/A/Security /Volumes/Macintosh HD/savedLibrary
    </pre>
    2b) Copy the working version over the non-working version:
    <pre>
    cp /System/Library/Frameworks/Security.framework/Versions/A/Security /Volumes/Macintosh HD/System/Library/Frameworks/Security.framework/Versions/A/Security
    </pre>
    3) Eject the mounted disk from the working Mac, disconnect the firewire cable, and reboot the "broken" Mac. It should come up.
    If it doesn't, you have problem(s) that are probably outside the scope of this. I'd also suggest restoring your original security library that you saved off.
    Suspected cause:
    It appears that Time Machine never recorded the change to the Security library after the update. If the library hadn't changed, the machine should have failed to boot like it did after restore the moment a 10.6.6 update was applied.
    Inspecting the contents of my Time Machine backups before and after updating shows that Time Machine never updated the Security Framework library - why is still not 100% determined, but restoring from it is definitely broken. Combing through the backup databases on my Time Machine disk:
    (I upgraded to 10.6.6 on January 6)
    <pre>
    for name in 2010-12-30-093337 2011*
    do
    echo -n "In backup on ${name}, version of Security library is: "
    nm "${name}/Macintosh HD/System/Library/Frameworks/Security.framework/Versions/A/Security" | grep random_fd | cut -d. -f2
    done
    </pre>
    In backup on 2010-12-30-093337, version of Security library is: 22457
    In backup on 2011-01-04-100707, version of Security library is: 22457
    In backup on 2011-01-05-082402, version of Security library is: 22457
    In backup on 2011-01-06-092846, version of Security library is: 22457
    In backup on 2011-01-07-094827, version of Security library is: 22457
    In backup on 2011-01-10-093559, version of Security library is: 22457
    In backup on 2011-01-11-110542, version of Security library is: 22457
    In backup on 2011-01-12-094137, version of Security library is: 22457
    In backup on 2011-01-13-103238, version of Security library is: 22457
    In backup on 2011-01-14-113145, version of Security library is: 22457
    In backup on 2011-01-18-112856, version of Security library is: 22457
    In backup on 2011-01-20-114953, version of Security library is: 22457
    In backup on 2011-01-21-103642, version of Security library is: 22457
    In backup on 2011-01-24-102321, version of Security library is: 22457
    In backup on 2011-01-27-002508, version of Security library is: 22457
    In backup on 2011-01-27-011931, version of Security library is: 22457
    In backup on 2011-01-27-104406, version of Security library is: 22457
    In backup on 2011-01-27-114322, version of Security library is: 22457
    In backup on 2011-01-27-123928, version of Security library is: 22457
    In backup on 2011-01-27-134523, version of Security library is: 22457

  • HT201250 When getting a replacement Seagate hard drive for my Imac through Apple, will they restore my system to it's current state? Or will I have to do it myself though Time Machine? Will Time machine restore all the programs as well?

    Apple has determined that certain Seagate 1TB hard drives used in 21.5-inch and 27-inch iMac systems may fail. These systems were sold between October 2009 and July 2011.
    Apple or an Apple Authorized Service Provider (AASP) will replace affected hard drives free of charge.
    Will this replacement program restore my system to its current state after the new drive is installed? If not, will I have to have all my original disks to re-install all the programs on my current computer, or will Time Machine restore them as well?

    Most of them will tell you to backup your data.
    Time Machine is nice, but unless you are interested in archival backup, Carbon Copy Cloner is a lot easier to recover from:
    https://discussions.apple.com/docs/DOC-1992

  • HT3275 For the past several days, I have been getting this message during backups: Time Machine could not complete the back up.  The backup disk image "Volumes/Data/iMac.sparsebundle" could not be accessed (error-1).

    For the past several days, I have been getting this message during backups:
    Time Machine could not complete the back up.  The backup disk image "Volumes/Data/bhoppy2's iMac.sparsebundle" could not be accessed (error-1).  When I click on the 'help' icon on the message, it reverts to a blank page, and I cannot find anything online regarding the term 'sparsebundle.'  In addition, I cannot access previous backups any longer. 
    Help?

    See C17 in Time Machine Troubleshooting by Time Machine guru Pondini:
    http://pondini.org/TM/Troubleshooting.html

  • Replaced HD yesterday  Was able to restore from Time Machine Now, it won't back up to Time Machine.  I removed the TM and tried to add it- the error is "The disk image for "computername.sparsebundle" is in use.  Try ejecting the disk image - How do I do?

    Replaced HD yesterday  Was able to restore from Time Machine Now, it won't back up to Time Machine.  I removed the TM and tried to add it- the error is "The disk image for "computername.sparsebundle" is in use.  Try ejecting the disk image - How do I do?

    Hello jfilbey,
    Thanks for using Apple Support Communities.
    Power cycle the disk Time Machine is backing up to.
    For more information on this, take a look at:
    Time Machine: Troubleshooting backup issues
    http://support.apple.com/kb/HT3275?viewlocale=en_US&locale=en_US
    Best of luck,
    Mario

  • Is it possible to boot or Time Machine restore from an external Thunderbolt disk drive?

    (There are several questions - search for "?".)
    I purchased a Seagate Backup Plus for Mac Desktop Drive 3 TByte with default USB 3.0 interface, and also acquired the Seagate Thunderbolt Adapter for Backup Plus Desktop Drives and Thunderbolt cable.
    I do a redundant backup to the Seagate Drive using both Carbon Copy Cloner (nightly) and Time Machine (hourly) using its Thunderbolt adapter.  BTW:  One never knows when Time Machine will choke - see discussion titled, "UPDATED: Serious Time Machine bug on Mountain Lion", which I had; Rest In Peace Pondini (James Lewis Pond).
    Booting from the external Seagate Backup Plus via Thunderbolt inteface from System Preferences -> Startup Disk:
    I select the Time Machine OS X, 10.8.5 Startup Disk (Thunderbolt attached drive), click Restart, confirm my choice, the computer reboots, however, it reboots from the internal Macintosh HD OS X, 10.8.5, NOT the selected external Thunderbolt drive.  The SSD drive was used as the Startup Drive, not the selected external Time Machine volume as indicated by the display free disk space command (df(1)) and seeing that the Macintosh HD OS X, 10.8.5 volume is mounted as root.  That is very deceptive in that both the internal and external drives will appear in the same manner from a GUI point of view!  OS X doesn't even inform me that it did not boot off the selected volume.  This is the first half of the problem, that is, Is it possible to boot from an external Thunderbolt disk drive?  In my case, the answer is deceptively No.  Can anybody else boot off a Thuderbolt attached disk drive?  Note that if I remove the Thunderbolt adapter, and attach the drive via its USB 3.0 cable, the MBP boots off the external Seagate Backup Plus just fine, as is expected.
    Booting from the external Seagate Backup Plus via Thunderbolt inteface from boot-time "Option - Select startup disk" method:
    When I restart the MBP using the startup Option key to select the startup volume, the externally connected Seagate drive ONLY SHOWS UP if it is attached with the USB 3.0 cable, not when it is attached with via the Thunderbolt interface.  Can anyone else boot off a Thunderbolt drive with the startup Option key sequence?  At least the MBP doesn't deceive me in this case - I know right away that the external Thunderbolt drive is not an option when connected as such.
    Time Machine restore from the external Seagate Backup plus via Thunderbolt interface from the "command-R - Recovery Parition" method:
    After booting from the recovery partition, I attempt to perform a Time Machine restore from the Thunderbolt connected Seagate Backup drive.  When Time Machine attempts to present me with a viable backup Time Machine volume, the external Thunderbolt drive is never offered as an option.  So I switch the Time Machine volume to use its USB 3.0 interface, and then Time Machine displays that drive as an option, and the MBP proceeds with the restoration as expected.  The interesting thing to note is that while booted in the recovery partition via the Thuderbolt cable, the MBP Disk Utility may be selected, and the Thunderbolt attached drive may be operated on just fine.  Can anybody else restore their MBP using Time Machine and the Recovery Partition via the Thunderbolt interface?
    This is also a big problem for me in that I am forced to restore my MBP via Carbon Copy Cloner using the USB 3.0 interface, because I cannot even boot off that volume's Thunderbolt interface.  Of course, the option may be that I could use yet another eternal USB 3.0 drive, boot from it, and then use Carbon Copy Cloner to restore the Macintosh HD via the aforementioned drive connected by a Thunderbolt cable, but that is less than ideal and not elegant, so I'm not going there.
    Another side issue is that the commercially available program, TechTool Pro 7's eDrive, which I installed on the Time Machine volume, will not boot off that eDrive as advertised, but I won't got through those steps here, because that would be beyond the scope of this issue, however, I must say, It does not work either when the Time Machine volume is connected via the Thunderbolt interface, but works just fine when connected via the USB 3.0 interface.

    If this helps anybody else make a decision about whether to consider Apple because of Apple's superior customer service:
    Apple sells this entire line of drives right in their store, from 1TB to 4TB.  I spent 1 and 1/2 hours, yesterday, confirming that  the 3TB model IS NOT 100% Thunderbolt compliant.  A MBP cannot boot, nor can it Time Machine restore from this drive, though EVERYTHING about the drive is normal.
    Apple's South Coast Plaza store management had at least two responses to me personally about how to proceed:
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    2.  Wait for Seagate to fix their problem.
    I told Apple management in the store that the drive is advertised as Mac Compatible (see  picture) and that it is advertised as being a Thunderbolt drive (see picture).  I pressed management that my purchasing decsion to get the best possible MBP Retina was based on the availablity of Inexpensive Devises (raID), and that not having this complete compatibility is a show-stopper for my needs, and that I wanted a refund.  Their response?  They needed to talk with "Merchendising" to see if they are on or off the hook for these kind of 3rd party assertions, and would get back to me.
    I am not holding my breath.
    Note:  I do not hold this against the Geniuses that helped me, nor against the management I've dealt with, nor the upper level engineers that I've corresponded with through Apple Care - their problem solving skills were helpful - although I could have arrived at similar conclusions given enough $$$.  (For instance, try a Lacie TB drive and see if that works - we did, and it did not work.  Or, we have a different TB cable and a different TB adapter, let's try those - we did, and it did not work.)  I blame myself for not doing enough homework before going with Apple's solutions.

  • Unable to boot after Time Machine full system restore!!

    I was having some serious slowdowns with my computer. I did multiple RAM and HD hardware tests, everything seemed to be working fine. I had recently deleted a bunch of files in order to free up some HD space, so I thought that may be the culprit. So I did a Time Machine backup and restored the Powerbook to it's original 10.3 software. All was fine. Then I upgraded back to 10.5 and all was fine. Then I did a Time Machine full system restore overnight and got the message "Your restore was successful, you must now restart your computer" (or something to that effect). Now I get the start-up chime and startup screen (apple logo) but then the computer shuts itself down. I have reset the PMU and PRAM to no effect. I have tried booting up in safe made, also no dice. I have tried starting it up with the time machine HD attached - doesn't help. I guess I'll need to hit the genius bar but wanted to ask the friendly discussion forum folks first. thanks in advance.

    Hi coldengray
    Did you try to start from your System-CD? Hold down C-key during startup, start DiskUtility from the menu and verify/repair disk and permissions there.
    If the CD is not available you can also connect your TimeMachine-Disk, select it as startup volume in System Preferences/StartupDisk, restart and then run DiskUtility from folder Applications/Utilities
    Good luck P

  • Time Machine restored an older version of my system

    Hi!
    I had to wipe my drive clean before bringing my macbook pro to applecare technicians, and restored the whole back up from time machine upon reinstalling.
    Now I realize there are weird discrepancies between my backups and what is reinstalled. I had the latest version of Leopard installed originally, but Time Machine restored the version from the DVD (10.5.1) - so I have the old version of iTunes, for example. I did pick to move ALL my old files back, including the system prefs and apps.
    How weird, right?
    Or is that normal? Since I have to bring my machine back to the techs on Monday (I will wipe it clean again), anything I can do to avoid this in the future? I'd love to have just one button to push and my computer would be back up and running Tuesday morning, as it is today, with no difference.
    Let me know what you think?
    Thanks!

    Princess Karlotta wrote:
    Oh crap. I didn't do that. I waited until the end of the install and chose the "migrate my info back from a TM backup" or something like that.
    That's the +Setup Assistant+ (see #19 in the FAQ Tip).
    It gives you 4 yes/no options: Users, Applications, Settings, Other Files and Folders.
    Now I wonder whether I should do that. It sounds a bit like a pain (I had like 560 new emails, and I downloaded 1500 pictures from my camera since then) but maybe it won't be as horrible asfinding out all the bugs and discrepancies on the way.
    What would you advise?
    First, if you haven't already, download and install the "combo" update to get back to the proper version of Leopard. That's a combination (thus the clever name) of all the updates to Leopard since it was first released, so installing it should fix anything that's gone wrong since then, such as with one of the normal "point" updates. Info and download available at: http://support.apple.com/downloads/MacOS_X_10_5_8_ComboUpdate (If you weren't on 10.5.8, change the last digit of the link accordingly). Be sure to do a +Repair Permissions+ via Disk Utility (in your Applications/Utilities folder) afterwards.
    Then you've got three options:
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    If all you omitted were Applications, you should be able to selectively restore the ones you're missing with the normal "Star Wars" display.
    I don't think it's a good idea, but if you have done new backups, you could do the full restore from the last backup before you reinstalled (in that case you don't need the "combo" update). That will, of course, erase all the new data.
    Then use the normal "Star Wars" display to selectively restore the new stuff from the last backup. Take a look at #15 in the FAQ Tip -- depending on where the new emails are, you may be able to selectively restore from the various mailboxes, then move the restored items into the proper mailboxes.
    Ditto your photos. Again there's special handling for iPhoto, but if you tell it to restore the whole thing, you'll get a prompt about what to do with duplicates, so although it may take a while, you should be able to get them all back.
    But if you have a lot of other things, and aren't real sure what and where they are, this could be trouble.
    Think about this, and post back if I've missed something or you have more specifics or questions.

  • Time machine restore selective intonation vs full installation compromised system

    I have some questions regarding the above mentioned issue
    I have reviewed notes regarding selective app restore method and am aware that there are issues assossiated with failed apps since the original app installer installs files in various libraries and system settings
    My backed up Mac contains rogue programs such as the programming app python 3 and various rogue bugs and system settings.
    1 Does a full restore reset all backed up system settings or does it keep the fresh installation and include all your apps and settings such as mail accounts mail folders documents pictures movies podcasts etc without the bugs
    2 Should the answer to 1 be a yes all compromised settings will be restored, then will I have issues with installing VMware fusion as its an encripted integrated app that I keep all my master business applications but store documents in the Mac documents area.
    Other factors
    1 My accounting tax business has been hacked over and over again for the last 7 months from start of tax season
    2 I have lost 50% of my clients due to the interruptions and been hospitalized twice from sitting on the computer for extended hours and days reinstalling fresh system and restoring Mac documents only, 3 times over,  as well as trying to learn everything about best practice, hacks etc
    3 I'm using fire vault 2 however the time machine backup is not encripted are there any potential problems with either of the two methods?
    4 I will be using a proxy server when I next build the Mac will this be enough to mitigate potential security breach using the full time machine restore method?
    5 I have many apps that I have not purchased through the app center and have not kept the keys and will be a headache to get all my details
    6 what implications are there as far as the prior keychain access is consurned? How does that get restored?
    What is the most effective and efficient method to restore from time machine given above scenario?
    Thanking you in advance
    Peter

    Thank you for your advice
    I tried consulting Telstra premium services and other third party security consultants. I explained my steps and procedures upon each fresh installation and the extent of the hacking and they refused to service me. Additionally Telstra security center replied on the issue of using a proxy server that they only support windows operating systems. Last night an apple consultant told me to obtain the proxy server address and he will guide me through to setting it up. I hope this will resolve the security issue. However I'm not entirely sure. My iPhone was also hacked and 8 GB of data used in 1 day untill I caught on. Freaked me out since I had disconnected from the wifi.
    I'm currently installing from flash drive and transferring my information from time machine. I think it's a full restore.
    I am investing in a website in a couple of weeks however I'm not currently hosting one on my laptop.
    Cheers
    Peter

  • Since installing Lion, I have not been able to utilize Time Machine (does not recognize the back-up drive); my wireless mouse does not function properly; I have experienced unreasonable delays in the system.  Is there a fix or upgrade coming?

    Is there a fix or upgrade to deal with the many problems I am experiencing since I installed Lion?  I can no longer utilize Time Machine (Does not see the back-up drive); my wireless mouse does not work properly; my iMac has slowed down considerably.  I am reminded of having a PC machine again.  Bummer!

    Either downgrade to Snow Leopard or try reinstalling Lion.
    Reinstalling Lion Without the Installer
    Boot to the Recovery HD: Restart the computer and after the chime press and hold down the COMMAND and R keys until the menu screen appears. Alterhatively, restart the computer and after the chime press and hold down the OPTION key until the boot manager screen appears. Select the Recovery HD and click on the downward pointing arrow button.
    Repair the Hard Drive and Permissions: Upon startup select Disk Utility from the main menu. Repair the Hard Drive and Permissions as follows.
    When the recovery menu appears select Disk Utility. After DU loads select your hard drive entry (mfgr.'s ID and drive size) from the the left side list.  In the DU status area you will see an entry for the S.M.A.R.T. status of the hard drive.  If it does not say "Verified" then the hard drive is failing or failed. (SMART status is not reported on external Firewire or USB drives.) If the drive is "Verified" then select your OS X volume from the list on the left (sub-entry below the drive entry,) click on the First Aid tab, then click on the Repair Disk button. If DU reports any errors that have been fixed, then re-run Repair Disk until no errors are reported. If no errors are reported click on the Repair Permissions button. Wait until the operation completes, then quit DU and return to the main menu.
    Reinstall Lion: Select Reinstall Lion and click on the Continue button.
    Note: You can also re-download the Lion installer by opening the App Store application. Hold down the OPTION key and click on the Purchases icon in the toolbar. You should now see an active Install button to the right of your Lion purchase entry. There are situations in which this will not work. For example, if you are already booted into the Lion you originally purchased with your Apple ID or if an instance of the Lion installer is located anywhere on your computer.
    Downgrade Lion to Snow Leopard
    1.  Boot from your Snow Leopard Installer Disc. After the installer loads select your language and click on the Continue button.  When the menu bar appears select Disk Utility from the Utilities menu.
    2. After DU loads select your hard drive (this is the entry with the mfgr.'s ID and size) from the left side list. Note the SMART status of the drive in DU's status area.  If it does not say "Verified" then the drive is failing or has failed and will need replacing.  SMART info will not be reported  on external drives. Otherwise, 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. Set the format type to Mac OS Extended (Journaled.) Click on the Options button, set the partition scheme to GUID then click on the OK button. Click on the Partition button and wait until the process has completed.
    4. Quit DU and return to the installer. Install Snow Leopard.
    This will erase the whole drive so be sure to backup your files if you don't have a backup already. If you have performed a TM backup using Lion be aware that you cannot restore from that backup in Snow Leopard (see below.) I suggest you make a separate backup using Carbon Copy Cloner 3.4.1.
    If you have Snow Leopard Time Machine backups, do a full system restore per #14 in Time Machine - Frequently Asked Questions.  If you have subsequent backups from Lion, you can restore newer items selectively, via the "Star Wars" display, per #15 there, but be careful; some Snow Leopard apps may not work with the Lion files.

  • Changing backup disk after time machine restore

    I recently had to get a new harddrive and used my time machine back up to restore all the data i had. Now however when i plug the time machine in to do another back up it starts a new "time machine backup disk" instead of just using the disk that it was using. Is there any way to manually set it to update this older backup disk?

    Not at this point. If you had used Setup Assistant or Migration Assistant to restore your data, you would have been given that option. TM will still do a full copy of all your files either way. The main difference is that old snapshots from the previous backup will never be automatically deleted. You'll have to do that yourself, through the TM interface, if necessary.

  • Insufficient disk space time machine restore

    I try to restore my complete system from a time machine backup, but I get an insufficient disk space error. What can I do?

    The reason was that my iMac wouldn't startup after the 10.6.8 update. There was an error about a not good downloaded file (the 10.6.8 update package). After that message I only could  press the restart button, but the system didn't restart anymore.
    I checked also with the shift, cmd, v option, and there were missing io-thing files, and after that the system stopped.
    Then I took my Snow Leopard DVD, and booted from that disk. I choosed for restoring from a Time Machine backup, and picked the latest version, the night before. At that moment the restore procedure told me that there was not enough space on the destination disk.
    I have a 500 GB disk with 2 partitions, 1 350GB for Mac OS, 1 150 GB for Boot Camp.
    I have a 600GB external for my Time Machine backups, and the size of that folder was about 450GB. 150Gb of that external disk was free.
    At this moment I have my system up and running. I took a Time Machine backup from a couple of days older. That version I could restore. Finaly, I missed maybe a very little bit of data, but I can live with that.
    But I think it is very strange that I couldn't restore my latest Time Machine Backup.

  • I installed lion. and lost all my previous apps also my email. my desktop is cleared. i have time machine and the disk that was used to back up is still oK and what did i do wrong. I can't use final cut or any of my software or applications

    I lost all my applicatons when I upgraded to Lion.  I have a backup disc with all my informatioin..  I am not sure what happened but under my harddrive i still have my user tab my orginal name is there and informaton. but its like i have a new computer with new harddrive.  I have final cut and many other programs that do not show up. can i get them back ?  also my emails are all gone.   can I do a restore ? to get back to normal ?   at this point i feel i have to reload safari and do a restore from time machine.  
    can i get lion to see my old username ?
    thanks
    rock

    Thanks so much but none of that helped.  It was driving me crazy because it would back up another external drive.  I just changed the name of the drive from iPhoto/iTunes Library to Media Libraries and IT WORKED!! I guess for some reason it didn't like the drive being called iPhoto or iTunes ???? I don't understand but I have tried so many solutions and exchanging things out but the name change did it????!!!
    Thank you for your help and replying to this.  Guess I made my own issue!

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