Update OS or time machine restore first?

I lost my HD and had a new one installed.
Should I first update my OS to Snow Leopard or do the Time Machine restore first?

Does this help?

Similar Messages

  • Update from 10.7.2 to 10.7.3 blown - Time Machine Restore blown

    Hello,
    summary of events:
    Update form 10.7.02 to 10.7.3 went wrong
    After Time Machine Restore no more Recovery Partion
    Lost about what to do
    On Saturday, I startet to update 10.7.2 to 10.7.3 on my MB Pro 15" (2007) Apples Software Update showed the combo update, and so I started download and installation. Just before that, I had run Time Machine on an external USB drive, so I was relaxed.
    After about 2 hours, the update was still running with no progress. After another hour, I forced a restart. Not very suprisingly, after the login, the wheel beneath the Apple logo kept on running.
    So I restarted from the Recovery Partition, selected my Time Machine-Backup from the external USB drive, selected my internal HD as target and clicked on "go".
    While the progress bar showed progress, I waited. Then it seemed to be complete and the MBP restarted. Now I got a folder with a question mark. My heart rate did not yet accelerate, since I had a back up, right?
    So I restarted again trying to boot from Recovery Partition - BUT, there was no longer a Recovery Partition. Or at least, nothing I could boot from.
    What options do I have? I could get my hands on a DVD that contains an Lion installation from the app store, but that is not the most recent version, as far as I can tell. If I would go that  way:
    Does the version of the Lion-app matter?
    Will it create a Recovery Partition?
    If not, how else could I restore a complete Time-Machine backup?
    Any help and suggestions are very welcome :-)
    Regards
    Jimbo
    Naturally, I a am mad as **** at Apple. First, that they abandoned physical media for Mac OS distribution, and secondly that some not so bright lad thought it not necessary to secure the availability of the Recovery Partition under any circumstances short of phyical damage. This really *****, guys!

    Ok... I'm not sure if the following suggestions will work with Filevault 2 enabled. I guess you can try after you create a backup for safety.
    You can recreate the Recovery HD two ways. One is to reinstall Lion using a bootable USB thumb drive of the Recovery HD created with the Lion Recovery Disk Assistant. Or from a bootable USB thumb drive with the Lion installer restored to it.
    A second way, which I have used many times, is to follow the instuctions at this site using Terminal commands. Step 3 is what you want to follow. The instructions use the RecoveryHDUpdate.dmg file downloaded from Apple to recreate the Recovery HD. It works great!

  • 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

  • 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:
    1.  Buy a different drive from another drive manufacturer, and to attempt to return the drive to COSTCO.  A lead genius suggested going with GTech drives, for instance.
    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.

  • Can Time Machine restore to a new internal HDD?

    hi all, i've got a 1tb external drive that's exclusively used by Time Machine. the 1tb drive is connected to my 500gb mac mini. i've been running time machine for 6 months now daily, i just wanted to know if it was backing up everything on my 500gb drive or not. how can i check that it's working properly?
    also, does anyone know how i'd go about restoring my mac mini in case i had to replace the 500gb hdd? can time machine restore everything if i needed it to? if i bought a new HDD tomorrow for example, how could i get my system running back to where it was running today with all of the current settings and files etc?  is there any way for me to check that Time Machine will actually restore OS X, all my videos, music and my work should the HDD actually die?
    is there an apple link i can read?
    thanks for any help.

    To answer your question about replacing a hard drive and recovering what was on your old one ...
    Yes, Time Machine was designed for that. You may have one of two scenarios:
    (1) Your hard drive is replaced by the Apple Store or another Apple repair shop, in which case they usually restore it with the operating system you had before and configure it so it has a new system with no users set up; the first time it starts up it runs Setup Assistant. When Setup Assistant runs, you select the option to restore from a Time Machine backup. It will then automatically restore your entire hard drive to the newly installed one. Everything will be just as it was with the old drive. Exceptions: you MAY have to enter user keys for software like MS-Office and Adobe Photoshop. and you MAY have to reinstall your printers and scanners.
    (2) If the hard drive is replaced but no operating system or anything is put on it, you need to boot from your Install-OS-DVD and install a new operating system on the new drive. Then, on the first reboot, Setup Assistant runs and you can follow the instructions from (1) above.
    A good informational site about Time Machine is here: http://pondini.org/TM/Home.html
    How do you know that your Time Machine backup is a good one? You can peruse through all the backups by running Time Machine and manually inspect that the files in those key folders (photos, music etc.) are all there and have the right sizes. You can "test recover" selected folders to a scratch location just to check that it works. I suggest you obtain another external drive and use it to make a "clone" of your internal drive using SuperDuper or Carbon Copy Cloner. This is like a second backup, a failsafe in case, say, your Time Machine drive were to fail. This is not unheard of, since a power failure could cause both your internal drive and Time Machine drives to crash at the same time. The "clone" should be unplugged and stored separately to avoid this issue. You can update the clone, say once a week or once a month.

  • Time Machine restore of multiple accounts

    Hi folks,
    My mac mini hasn't been reformatted for a couple of years now and is starting to creak a bit. I'm going to do a clean install of Snow Leopard from my OS disks and then use time machine to restore iTunes, accounts, documents etc.
    My questions/queries/worries (delete as appropriate) are..
    1. Will the time machine restore and 'put back' all 4 accounts on the machine automatically or do i select them from a list?
    2. Will I be given an option of which backup date/time to select from (i.e a backup done 20mins ago, one an hour ago, last week,last month) or will it just do the most recent backup?
    Thanks in advance

    iBook fan wrote:
    Hi folks,
    My mac mini hasn't been reformatted for a couple of years now and is starting to creak a bit. I'm going to do a clean install of Snow Leopard from my OS disks and then use time machine to restore iTunes, accounts, documents etc.
    That's unlikely to help much, if at all. Your best bet is to find out why it's "creaking" and fix that.
    My questions/queries/worries (delete as appropriate) are..
    1. Will the time machine restore and 'put back' all 4 accounts on the machine automatically or do i select them from a list?
    If all you want is to restore everything, don't bother with erasing your HD and installing OSX. Just do a full system restore, per #14 in Time Machine - Frequently Asked Questions (or use the link in *User Tips* at the top of this forum). The first thing it does is erase your internal HD. And it restores everything from the backup you select.
    If you want a fresh version of OSX, then erase your HD and install OSX. When your Mac boots up, +Setup Assistant+ will ask if you want to transfer your data, from the last (successful) backup. If you accept the defaults, it will copy everything but OSX. Or, you can omit some things, like a particular user, if you want. See #19 in the FAQ.
    When your Mac boots up again, download and install the 10.6.4 "combo" update. Info and download available at: http://support.apple.com/kb/DL1048 Be sure to do a +Repair Permissions+ via Disk Utility (in your Applications/Utilities folder) afterwards.
    2. Will I be given an option of which backup date/time to select from (i.e a backup done 20mins ago, one an hour ago, last week,last month) or will it just do the most recent backup?
    Depends on which procedure you use.

  • Older MB (Core Duo [not '2']) Time Machine restore issues

    The hard drive in a family-member's MacBook died and I'm trying to find the path to restoration. Regular Time Machine backups were made right up to the point of failure. I've installed a "new" drive in the MacBook (an Apple-sourced drive which formerly lived in a Mac Mini) and attempted to use the utility functions on the Snow Leopard install disk but have had no luck.
    Note that this is a "Core Duo" MacBook. Not a "Core 2 Duo" machine. It cannot run Lion due to the hardware limitations enforced by Apple.
    The MacBook had been updated to the latest versions of software on a regular basis. I think that the O/S version may have reached the point where the TIme Machine backups are in the "new" format where the Snow Leopard disk utilities cannot be used to restore the backup and only the Lion utilities work. (I just went through this with my MB Air.)
    I have tried using a Lion install disk to run the restore but receive the "No Entry"/"Banned" symbol at boot. This makes sense as the MB is beneath the minimum hardware requirements for Lion.
    When I first tried the old Mini drive in the MacBook, it booted up just fine to the Mini's condition 3 years ago. Surprising and encouraging.
    I then booted from the Snow Leopard DVD and ran the Time Machine restore utility to restore the most recent backup to the newly-installed HD. All seemed to go well. The restore completed but on restart, the system hung in the gray-screen/apple-logo/spinning-gear in perpetuity. I tried restoring the second and third eldest backups with the same result.
    In order to verify the health of the HD, I used the Snow Leopard disk to erase the drive. Then I installed a fresh copy of Snow Leopard. And then I patched it up to current standards.
    So. Now I have a squeaky-clean new install of Snow Leopard on a MacBook (Core Duo, which cannot run Lion), a dated Snow Leopard installation DVD in hand, a solid series of dutifully-recorded Time Machine backups on a Time Capsule, and no freaking clue of where to go from here.
    Everything I've read online seems to be based on the assumptions that I can a) use the older utilities on the Snow Leopard disk to install Time Machine backups made under a version of Snow Leopard compatible with the disk utility, or b) I can boot up using Lion installation media (USB or DVD pulled from the DMG in the downloaded Lion app-store installation app) and restore the "late model" Time Machine backup to the hard drive.
    Has Apple just f'd me over? This computer is used by my college-student child and I would appreciate any suggestions.
    A bit about me: I'm an IT professional -- a DBA -- who is by no means a Mac expert. After years of Windows machines, I returned to the Mac fold 4 years ago after a 14-year absence.
    I could really use a good piece of solid advice at this point.
    Thanks,
    - Eric

    It sounds like it's working perfectly. With Fusion I don't believe it is backed up, I know for sure Windows isn't. You may want to contact Pondini to ask about Fusion. As for your Adobe apps you can thank Adobe for that, you will need to re-install the apps, I believe this is one way Adobe ensures users aren't violating their licensing. I believe you will need to manually install the Adobe apps which shouldn't be a big deal as long as you have licensed software. Your data should have come over smoothly and frankly that's the most critical part. Reinstalling some apps should not be a problem.  
    I'd recommend looking over Pondini Time Machine Tips and if need be contacting Pondini directly (he has a contact section on the page) he has a lot of experience with TM and as you have already seen migrating Macs. He can provide much more information than me.

  • Safari crashes and gives error after time machine restore

    Hi Apple,
    My Safari crashes and gives error after time machine restore. See error (log) below:
    Process:    
    Safari [1868]
    Path:       
    /Applications/Safari.app/Contents/MacOS/Safari
    Identifier: 
    com.apple.Safari
    Version:    
    7.0.1 (9537.73.11)
    Build Info: 
    WebBrowser-7537073011000000~21
    Code Type:  
    X86-64 (Native)
    Parent Process:  launchd [174]
    Responsible:
    Safari [1868]
    User ID:    
    501
    Date/Time:  
    2014-03-24 22:31:09.115 -0400
    OS Version: 
    Mac OS X 10.9.1 (13B42)
    Report Version:  11
    Anonymous UUID:  71F3CB6C-F8A0-C67D-EE17-D79E8AACA56F
    Crashed Thread:  15
    Exception Type:  EXC_BAD_ACCESS (SIGSEGV)
    Exception Codes: KERN_INVALID_ADDRESS at 0x0000000105aa5400
    External Modification Warnings:
    Thread creation by external task.
    VM Regions Near 0x105aa5400:
    -->
    __TEXT            
    000000010c5a3000-000000010c5a4000 [
    4K] r-x/rwx SM=COW  /Applications/Safari.app/Contents/MacOS/Safari
    Application Specific Information:
    dyld: in dlopen()
    /System/Library/PrivateFrameworks/CalendarFoundation.framework/Versions/A/Calend arFoundation
    Process Model:
    Multiple Web Processes
    Enabled Extensions:
    com.conduit.safari-QAMAD5CQ5Z (20 - 1.0) Conduit Search for Safari
    Thread 0:: Dispatch queue: com.apple.main-thread
    0   dyld                     
    0x00007fff6e800b7e open + 10
    1   dyld                     
    0x00007fff6e7e5566 dyld::loadPhase5(char const*, char const*, dyld::LoadContext const&, std::__1::vector<char const*, std::__1::allocator<char const*> >*) + 689
    2   dyld                     
    0x00007fff6e7e5291 dyld::loadPhase4(char const*, char const*, dyld::LoadContext const&, std::__1::vector<char const*, std::__1::allocator<char const*> >*) + 158
    3   dyld                     
    0x00007fff6e7e5179 dyld::loadPhase3(char const*, char const*, dyld::LoadContext const&, std::__1::vector<char const*, std::__1::allocator<char const*> >*) + 1433
    4   dyld                     
    0x00007fff6e7e49c6 dyld::loadPhase1(char const*, char const*, dyld::LoadContext const&, std::__1::vector<char const*, std::__1::allocator<char const*> >*) + 135
    5   dyld                     
    0x00007fff6e7e0426 dyld::loadPhase0(char const*, char const*, dyld::LoadContext const&, std::__1::vector<char const*, std::__1::allocator<char const*> >*) + 190
    6   dyld                     
    0x00007fff6e7e01bb dyld::load(char const*, dyld::LoadContext const&) + 179
    7   dyld                     
    0x00007fff6e7e4337 dyld::libraryLocator(char const*, bool, char const*, ImageLoader::RPathChain const*) + 52
    8   dyld                     
    0x00007fff6e7eacb4 ImageLoader::recursiveLoadLibraries(ImageLoader::LinkContext const&, bool, ImageLoader::RPathChain const&) + 368
    9   dyld                     
    0x00007fff6e7eb01e ImageLoader::recursiveLoadLibraries(ImageLoader::LinkContext const&, bool, ImageLoader::RPathChain const&) + 1242
    10  dyld                     
    0x00007fff6e7ea9d4 ImageLoader::link(ImageLoader::LinkContext const&, bool, bool, bool, ImageLoader::RPathChain const&) + 80
    11  dyld                     
    0x00007fff6e7e1764 dyld::link(ImageLoader*, bool, bool, ImageLoader::RPathChain const&) + 166
    12  dyld                     
    0x00007fff6e7e876d dlopen + 440
    13  libdyld.dylib            
    0x00000001130757ef dlopen + 59
    14  com.apple.Safari.framework
    0x000000010c821558 AOSAccountsFramework() + 39
    15  com.apple.Safari.framework
    0x000000010c82025d getMMAOSAccountStatusLoginNotification() + 27
    16  com.apple.Safari.framework
    0x000000010c6a4fa9 ___ZL29aosAccountsFrameworkAvailablev_block_invoke + 11
    17  com.apple.Safari.framework
    0x000000010c6a2f11 aosAccountsFrameworkAvailable() + 33
    18  com.apple.Safari.framework
    0x000000010c6a2e09 -[CloudTabStore init] + 65
    19  com.apple.Safari.framework
    0x000000010c6a2db8 +[CloudTabStore sharedCloudTabStore] + 58
    20  com.apple.Safari.framework
    0x000000010c8464c0 -[ToolbarController _canShowToolbarItemForCloudTabs] + 29
    21  com.apple.Safari.framework
    0x000000010c846c03 -[ToolbarController toolbarDefaultItemIdentifiers:] + 154
    22  com.apple.AppKit         
    0x0000000110afad21 -[NSToolbar _defaultItemIdentifiers] + 80
    23  com.apple.AppKit         
    0x0000000110afab14 -[NSToolbar _setConfigurationFromDictionary:notifyFamilyAndUpdateDefaults:upgradedConfigura tion:] + 291
    24  com.apple.AppKit         
    0x0000000110afa95c -[NSToolbar _setConfigurationUsingName:domain:] + 324
    25  com.apple.AppKit         
    0x0000000110afa804 -[NSToolbar setConfigurationUsingName:] + 201
    26  com.apple.AppKit         
    0x0000000110afa641 -[NSToolbar _loadFromUDIfNecessary] + 121
    27  com.apple.AppKit         
    0x0000000110afa385 -[NSWindow setToolbar:] + 535
    28  com.apple.Safari.framework
    0x000000010c8450cb -[ToolbarController initWithBrowserWindowController:] + 587
    29  com.apple.Safari.framework
    0x000000010c671608 -[BrowserWindowControllerMac windowDidLoad] + 739
    30  com.apple.AppKit         
    0x0000000110c8c35c -[NSWindowController _windowDidLoad] + 450
    31  com.apple.Safari.framework
    0x000000010c8a3f8d -[WindowController _windowDidLoad] + 43
    32  com.apple.AppKit         
    0x0000000110c73076 -[NSWindowController window] + 110
    33  com.apple.Safari.framework
    0x000000010c671d3a -[BrowserWindowControllerMac showWindow:] + 50
    34  com.apple.AppKit         
    0x0000000110d404c5 -[NSDocument showWindows] + 100
    35  com.apple.Safari.framework
    0x000000010c6400ab -[BrowserDocument showWindows] + 39
    36  com.apple.AppKit         
    0x0000000110d3f028 -[NSDocumentController openUntitledDocumentAndDisplay:error:] + 458
    37  com.apple.AppKit         
    0x0000000110d3ee1f -[NSDocumentController newDocument:] + 36
    38  com.apple.Safari.framework
    0x000000010c7d3793 -[WindowReopener reopenWithArrayOfWindowControllerNames:] + 120
    39  com.apple.Safari.framework
    0x000000010c7d3954 -[WindowReopener init] + 117
    40  com.apple.Safari.framework
    0x000000010c7d3a63 +[WindowReopener reopenWindows] + 43
    41  com.apple.Safari.framework
    0x000000010c5b5597 -[AppController _openUntitledFileWhileLaunching:] + 157
    42  com.apple.Safari.framework
    0x000000010c5b2441 -[AppController applicationOpenUntitledFile:] + 22
    43  com.apple.AppKit         
    0x0000000110c6de90 -[NSApplication _doOpenUntitled] + 447
    44  com.apple.AppKit         
    0x0000000110b90f41 __58-[NSApplication(NSAppleEventHandling) _handleAEOpenEvent:]_block_invoke + 254
    45  com.apple.AppKit         
    0x0000000110b90c63 __78-[NSDocumentController(NSInternal) _autoreopenDocumentsWithCompletionHandler:]_block_invoke_2 + 140
    46  com.apple.AppKit         
    0x0000000110b9084d -[NSDocumentController(NSInternal) _autoreopenDocumentsWithCompletionHandler:] + 746
    47  com.apple.AppKit         
    0x00000001109fb9fb -[NSApplication _reopenWindowsAsNecessaryIncludingRestorableState:registeringAsReady:completion Handler:] + 323
    48  com.apple.AppKit         
    0x00000001109fb789 -[NSApplication(NSAppleEventHandling) _handleAEOpenEvent:] + 557
    49  com.apple.AppKit         
    0x00000001109fb1eb -[NSApplication(NSAppleEventHandling) _handleCoreEvent:withReplyEvent:] + 242
    50  com.apple.Foundation     
    0x000000010ef4beaa -[NSAppleEventManager dispatchRawAppleEvent:withRawReply:handlerRefCon:] + 294
    51  com.apple.Foundation     
    0x000000010ef4bd1d _NSAppleEventManagerGenericHandler + 106
    52  com.apple.AE             
    0x0000000113a2ee1f aeDispatchAppleEvent(AEDesc const*, AEDesc*, unsigned int, unsigned char*) + 381
    53  com.apple.AE             
    0x0000000113a2ec32 dispatchEventAndSendReply(AEDesc const*, AEDesc*) + 31
    54  com.apple.AE             
    0x0000000113a2eb36 aeProcessAppleEvent + 315
    55  com.apple.HIToolbox      
    0x00000001125c95f1 AEProcessAppleEvent + 56
    56  com.apple.AppKit         
    0x00000001109f70f6 _DPSNextEvent + 1026
    57  com.apple.AppKit         
    0x00000001109f68db -[NSApplication nextEventMatchingMask:untilDate:inMode:dequeue:] + 122
    58  com.apple.Safari.framework
    0x000000010c604ec0 -[BrowserApplication nextEventMatchingMask:untilDate:inMode:dequeue:] + 161
    59  com.apple.AppKit         
    0x00000001109ea9cc -[NSApplication run] + 553
    60  com.apple.AppKit         
    0x00000001109d5803 NSApplicationMain + 940
    61  com.apple.Safari.framework
    0x000000010c7d6f3d SafariMain + 267
    62  libdyld.dylib            
    0x00000001130765fd start + 1
    Thread 1:
    0   libsystem_kernel.dylib   
    0x0000000113206e6a __workq_kernreturn + 10
    1   libsystem_pthread.dylib  
    0x0000000113320f08 _pthread_wqthread + 330
    2   libsystem_pthread.dylib  
    0x0000000113323fb9 start_wqthread + 13
    Thread 2:: Dispatch queue: com.apple.libdispatch-manager
    0   libsystem_kernel.dylib   
    0x0000000113207662 kevent64 + 10
    1   libdispatch.dylib        
    0x000000011304143d _dispatch_mgr_invoke + 239
    2   libdispatch.dylib        
    0x0000000113041152 _dispatch_mgr_thread + 52
    Thread 3:
    0   libsystem_kernel.dylib   
    0x0000000113206e6a __workq_kernreturn + 10
    1   libsystem_pthread.dylib  
    0x0000000113320f08 _pthread_wqthread + 330
    2   libsystem_pthread.dylib  
    0x0000000113323fb9 start_wqthread + 13
    Thread 4:: WebCore: IconDatabase
    0   libsystem_kernel.dylib   
    0x0000000113206716 __psynch_cvwait + 10
    1   libsystem_pthread.dylib  
    0x0000000113321c3b _pthread_cond_wait + 727
    2   com.apple.WebCore        
    0x000000011665ac0b WebCore::IconDatabase::syncThreadMainLoop() + 507
    3   com.apple.WebCore        
    0x000000011665779f WebCore::IconDatabase::iconDatabaseSyncThread() + 303
    4   com.apple.JavaScriptCore 
    0x000000010d0870af ***::wtfThreadEntryPoint(void*) + 15
    5   libsystem_pthread.dylib  
    0x000000011331f899 _pthread_body + 138
    6   libsystem_pthread.dylib  
    0x000000011331f72a _pthread_start + 137
    7   libsystem_pthread.dylib  
    0x0000000113323fc9 thread_start + 13
    Thread 5:
    0   libsystem_kernel.dylib   
    0x0000000113206e6a __workq_kernreturn + 10
    1   libsystem_pthread.dylib  
    0x0000000113320f08 _pthread_wqthread + 330
    2   libsystem_pthread.dylib  
    0x0000000113323fb9 start_wqthread + 13
    Thread 6:
    0   libsystem_kernel.dylib   
    0x0000000113206e6a __workq_kernreturn + 10
    1   libsystem_pthread.dylib  
    0x0000000113320f08 _pthread_wqthread + 330
    2   libsystem_pthread.dylib  
    0x0000000113323fb9 start_wqthread + 13
    Thread 7:: com.apple.CoreAnimation.render-server
    0   libsystem_kernel.dylib   
    0x0000000113202a1a mach_msg_trap + 10
    1   libsystem_kernel.dylib   
    0x0000000113201d18 mach_msg + 64
    2   com.apple.QuartzCore     
    0x000000010e1813b7 CA::Render::Server::server_thread(void*) + 195
    3   com.apple.QuartzCore     
    0x000000010e1812ed thread_fun + 25
    4   libsystem_pthread.dylib  
    0x000000011331f899 _pthread_body + 138
    5   libsystem_pthread.dylib  
    0x000000011331f72a _pthread_start + 137
    6   libsystem_pthread.dylib  
    0x0000000113323fc9 thread_start + 13
    Thread 8:: com.apple.NSURLConnectionLoader
    0   libsystem_kernel.dylib   
    0x0000000113202a1a mach_msg_trap + 10
    1   libsystem_kernel.dylib   
    0x0000000113201d18 mach_msg + 64
    2   com.apple.CoreFoundation 
    0x000000010fb22315 __CFRunLoopServiceMachPort + 181
    3   com.apple.CoreFoundation 
    0x000000010fb21939 __CFRunLoopRun + 1161
    4   com.apple.CoreFoundation 
    0x000000010fb21275 CFRunLoopRunSpecific + 309
    5   com.apple.Foundation     
    0x000000010ef91907 +[NSURLConnection(Loader) _resourceLoadLoop:] + 348
    6   com.apple.Foundation     
    0x000000010ef9170b __NSThread__main__ + 1318
    7   libsystem_pthread.dylib  
    0x000000011331f899 _pthread_body + 138
    8   libsystem_pthread.dylib  
    0x000000011331f72a _pthread_start + 137
    9   libsystem_pthread.dylib  
    0x0000000113323fc9 thread_start + 13
    Thread 9:
    0   libsystem_kernel.dylib   
    0x0000000113206e6a __workq_kernreturn + 10
    1   libsystem_pthread.dylib  
    0x0000000113320f08 _pthread_wqthread + 330
    2   libsystem_pthread.dylib  
    0x0000000113323fb9 start_wqthread + 13
    Thread 10:
    0   libsystem_kernel.dylib   
    0x0000000113206e6a __workq_kernreturn + 10
    1   libsystem_pthread.dylib  
    0x0000000113320f08 _pthread_wqthread + 330
    2   libsystem_pthread.dylib  
    0x0000000113323fb9 start_wqthread + 13
    Thread 11:: JavaScriptCore::BlockFree
    0   libsystem_kernel.dylib   
    0x0000000113206716 __psynch_cvwait + 10
    1   libsystem_pthread.dylib  
    0x0000000113321c3b _pthread_cond_wait + 727
    2   com.apple.JavaScriptCore 
    0x000000010d092266 ***::ThreadCondition::timedWait(***::Mutex&, double) + 118
    3   com.apple.JavaScriptCore 
    0x000000010d091d85 JSC::BlockAllocator::blockFreeingThreadMain() + 117
    4   com.apple.JavaScriptCore 
    0x000000010d0870af ***::wtfThreadEntryPoint(void*) + 15
    5   libsystem_pthread.dylib  
    0x000000011331f899 _pthread_body + 138
    6   libsystem_pthread.dylib  
    0x000000011331f72a _pthread_start + 137
    7   libsystem_pthread.dylib  
    0x0000000113323fc9 thread_start + 13
    Thread 12:: JavaScriptCore::Marking
    0   libsystem_kernel.dylib   
    0x0000000113206716 __psynch_cvwait + 10
    1   libsystem_pthread.dylib  
    0x0000000113321c3b _pthread_cond_wait + 727
    2   com.apple.JavaScriptCore 
    0x000000010d092887 JSC::GCThread::waitForNextPhase() + 119
    3   com.apple.JavaScriptCore 
    0x000000010d092718 JSC::GCThread::gcThreadMain() + 88
    4   com.apple.JavaScriptCore 
    0x000000010d0870af ***::wtfThreadEntryPoint(void*) + 15
    5   libsystem_pthread.dylib  
    0x000000011331f899 _pthread_body + 138
    6   libsystem_pthread.dylib  
    0x000000011331f72a _pthread_start + 137
    7   libsystem_pthread.dylib  
    0x0000000113323fc9 thread_start + 13
    Thread 13:: JavaScriptCore::Marking
    0   libsystem_kernel.dylib   
    0x0000000113206716 __psynch_cvwait + 10
    1   libsystem_pthread.dylib  
    0x0000000113321c3b _pthread_cond_wait + 727
    2   com.apple.JavaScriptCore 
    0x000000010d092887 JSC::GCThread::waitForNextPhase() + 119
    3   com.apple.JavaScriptCore 
    0x000000010d092718 JSC::GCThread::gcThreadMain() + 88
    4   com.apple.JavaScriptCore 
    0x000000010d0870af ***::wtfThreadEntryPoint(void*) + 15
    5   libsystem_pthread.dylib  
    0x000000011331f899 _pthread_body + 138
    6   libsystem_pthread.dylib  
    0x000000011331f72a _pthread_start + 137
    7   libsystem_pthread.dylib  
    0x0000000113323fc9 thread_start + 13
    Thread 14:: JavaScriptCore::Marking
    0   libsystem_kernel.dylib   
    0x0000000113206716 __psynch_cvwait + 10
    1   libsystem_pthread.dylib  
    0x0000000113321c3b _pthread_cond_wait + 727
    2   com.apple.JavaScriptCore 
    0x000000010d092887 JSC::GCThread::waitForNextPhase() + 119
    3   com.apple.JavaScriptCore 
    0x000000010d092718 JSC::GCThread::gcThreadMain() + 88
    4   com.apple.JavaScriptCore 
    0x000000010d0870af ***::wtfThreadEntryPoint(void*) + 15
    5   libsystem_pthread.dylib  
    0x000000011331f899 _pthread_body + 138
    6   libsystem_pthread.dylib  
    0x000000011331f72a _pthread_start + 137
    7   libsystem_pthread.dylib  
    0x0000000113323fc9 thread_start + 13
    Thread 15 Crashed:
    0   ???                      
    0x000000010f6ec598 0 + 4553885080
    Thread 15 crashed with X86 Thread State (64-bit):
      rax: 0x0000000000000000  rbx: 0x0000000000000054  rcx: 0x000000010f639000  rdx: 0x0000000000000054
      rdi: 0x0000000000000000  rsi: 0x000000010eb53000  rbp: 0x000000010f63aff0  rsp: 0x000000010f63af70
       r8: 0x0000000000000000   r9: 0x0000000000000000  r10: 0x0000000000000000  r11: 0x0000000000000000
      r12: 0x0000000105aa5400  r13: 0x0000000000000000  r14: 0x0000000000000000  r15: 0x000000010eb53000
      rip: 0x000000010f6ec598  rfl: 0x0000000000010202  cr2: 0x0000000105aa5400
    Logical CPU:
    2
    Error Code: 
    0x00000004
    Trap Number:
    14
    Binary Images:
    0x10c5a3000 -   
    0x10c5a3ffd  com.apple.Safari (7.0.1 - 9537.73.11) <26B9451D-36DC-3EC9-AF48-B32519F9BFF6> /Applications/Safari.app/Contents/MacOS/Safari
    0x10c5a8000 -   
    0x10caaeff3  com.apple.Safari.framework (9537 - 9537.73.11) <D3F772B3-4AD9-32F1-A0CB-CF307FF1B283> /System/Library/PrivateFrameworks/Safari.framework/Versions/A/Safari
    0x10ce98000 -   
    0x10ce99ff7  libSystem.B.dylib (1197.1.1) <BFC0DC97-46C6-3BE0-9983-54A98734897A> /usr/lib/libSystem.B.dylib
    0x10cea3000 -   
    0x10cec1ff7  com.apple.Accounts (113 - 113) <FEB37642-C973-3CD2-B279-142492266A16> /System/Library/Frameworks/Accounts.framework/Versions/A/Accounts
    0x10cee3000 -   
    0x10cee4fff  libquit.dylib (161) <12162287-B8C8-36D0-B000-ADC28731FC66> /usr/lib/libquit.dylib
    0x10ceed000 -   
    0x10cf0aff7  com.apple.framework.Apple80211 (9.0 - 900.47) <C897AFE6-DD73-387D-816A-67252A564207> /System/Library/PrivateFrameworks/Apple80211.framework/Versions/A/Apple80211
    0x10cf1d000 -   
    0x10cf1dfff  com.apple.Carbon (154 - 157) <45A9A40A-78FF-3EA0-8FAB-A4F81052FA55> /System/Library/Frameworks/Carbon.framework/Versions/A/Carbon
    0x10cf20000 -   
    0x10cf20fff  com.apple.Cocoa (6.8 - 20) <E90E99D7-A425-3301-A025-D9E0CD11918E> /System/Library/Frameworks/Cocoa.framework/Versions/A/Cocoa
    0x10cf29000 -   
    0x10cf87ff7  com.apple.corelocation (1486.17 - 1486.24) <9FBB29F0-E000-3190-A96C-9EAA5CCCA2A0> /System/Library/Frameworks/CoreLocation.framework/Versions/A/CoreLocation
    0x10cfc6000 -   
    0x10cfd0ff7  com.apple.CrashReporterSupport (10.9 - 538) <B487466B-3AA1-3854-A808-A61F049FA794> /System/Library/PrivateFrameworks/CrashReporterSupport.framework/Versions/A/Cra shReporterSupport
    0x10cfdf000 -   
    0x10d049ff7  com.apple.framework.IOKit (2.0.1 - 907.1.13) <C1E95F5C-B79B-31BE-9F2A-1B25163C1F16> /System/Library/Frameworks/IOKit.framework/Versions/A/IOKit
    0x10d07e000 -   
    0x10d3f4ffa  com.apple.JavaScriptCore (9537 - 9537.73.10) <4A4AE781-6F76-3412-B0E5-67E0BAEE22A2> /System/Library/Frameworks/JavaScriptCore.framework/Versions/A/JavaScriptCore
    0x10d4ef000 -   
    0x10d6a7ff3  libicucore.A.dylib (511.27) <003B6C21-CBD1-3486-9A1D-030ADF5FA061> /usr/lib/libicucore.A.dylib
    0x10d751000 -   
    0x10d83bfff  libsqlite3.dylib (158) <00269BF9-43BE-39E0-9C85-24585B9923C8> /usr/lib/libsqlite3.dylib
    0x10d855000 -   
    0x10d886ff7  libtidy.A.dylib (15.12) <BF757E3C-733A-3B6B-809A-A3949D46466E> /usr/lib/libtidy.A.dylib
    0x10d898000 -   
    0x10d8a5ff7  libxar.1.dylib (202) <5572AA71-E98D-3FE1-9402-BB4A84E0E71E> /usr/lib/libxar.1.dylib
    0x10d8ae000 -   
    0x10d8bcfff  com.apple.opengl (9.0.83 - 9.0.83) <AF467644-7B1D-327A-AC47-CECFCAF61990> /System/Library/Frameworks/OpenGL.framework/Versions/A/OpenGL
    0x10d8c5000 -   
    0x10d906fff  com.apple.PerformanceAnalysis (1.47 - 47) <784ED7B8-FAE4-36CE-8C76-B7D300316C9F> /System/Library/PrivateFrameworks/PerformanceAnalysis.framework/Versions/A/Perf ormanceAnalysis
    0x10e15a000 -   
    0x10e2f6ff7  com.apple.QuartzCore (1.8 - 332.0) <994D1E0A-64B6-398C-B9A2-C362F02DE943> /System/Library/Frameworks/QuartzCore.framework/Versions/A/QuartzCore
    0x10e3d0000 -   
    0x10e628ff1  com.apple.security (7.0 - 55471) <233831C5-C457-3AD5-AFE7-E3E2DE6929C9> /System/Library/Frameworks/Security.framework/Versions/A/Security
    0x10e772000 -   
    0x10e7e5ffb  com.apple.securityfoundation (6.0 - 55122) <119D1C53-B292-3378-AEE1-A3B1FB02F43F> /System/Library/Frameworks/SecurityFoundation.framework/Versions/A/SecurityFoun dation
    0x10e82a000 -   
    0x10e858ff7  com.apple.securityinterface (9.0 - 55047) <0346D8A9-2CAA-38F3-A741-5FBA5E9F1E7C> /System/Library/Frameworks/SecurityInterface.framework/Versions/A/SecurityInter face
    0x10e886000 -   
    0x10e8e9ff7  com.apple.SystemConfiguration (1.13 - 1.13) <F05F4149-981B-380B-8F50-51CE804BBB89> /System/Library/Frameworks/SystemConfiguration.framework/Versions/A/SystemConfi guration
    0x10e924000 -   
    0x10ea5affa  com.apple.WebKit (9537 - 9537.73.11) <5F583526-8D71-30AD-B97C-56EC51E94E85> /System/Library/Frameworks/WebKit.framework/Versions/A/WebKit
    0x10eb4f000 -   
    0x10eb4ffff  com.apple.SafariDAVNotifier (1.1.1 - 1) <664A1157-0D98-3680-8C3B-091980DA7BC4> /System/Library/PrivateFrameworks/BookmarkDAV.framework/Versions/A/Frameworks/S afariDAVNotifier.framework/Versions/A/SafariDAVNotifier
    0x10eb55000 -   
    0x10ed45ff5  com.apple.WebKit2 (9537 - 9537.73.11) <FE8D26BB-F8B7-37D6-94A0-D82161541F30> /System/Library/PrivateFrameworks/WebKit2.framework/Versions/A/WebKit2
    0x10ef2a000 -   
    0x10f229fff  com.apple.Foundation (6.9 - 1056) <D608EDFD-9634-3573-9B7E-081C7D085F7A> /System/Library/Frameworks/Foundation.framework/Versions/C/Foundation
    0x10f468000 -   
    0x10f615f27  libobjc.A.dylib (551.1) <AD7FD984-271E-30F4-A361-6B20319EC73B> /usr/lib/libobjc.A.dylib
    0x10f63d000 -   
    0x10f68ffff  libc++.1.dylib (120) <4F68DFC5-2077-39A8-A449-CAC5FDEE7BDE> /usr/lib/libc++.1.dylib
    0x10f6f0000 -   
    0x10f7b2ff1  com.apple.CoreText (352.0 - 367.15) <E5C70FC8-C861-39B8-A491-595E5B55CFC8> /System/Library/Frameworks/CoreText.framework/Versions/A/CoreText
    0x10f824000 -   
    0x10f994ff6  com.apple.CFNetwork (673.0.3 - 673.0.3) <42CFC3DB-35C8-3652-AF37-4BCC73D8BDEF> /System/Library/Frameworks/CFNetwork.framework/Versions/A/CFNetwork
    0x10fa9f000 -   
    0x10fa9ffff  com.apple.ApplicationServices (48 - 48) <3E3F01A8-314D-378F-835E-9CC4F8820031> /System/Library/Frameworks/ApplicationServices.framework/Versions/A/Application Services
    0x10faa8000 -   
    0x10faa9ff7  libDiagnosticMessagesClient.dylib (100) <4CDB0F7B-C0AF-3424-BC39-495696F0DB1E> /usr/lib/libDiagnosticMessagesClient.dylib
    0x10fab1000 -   
    0x10fc96ff7  com.apple.CoreFoundation (6.9 - 855.11) <E22C6A1F-8996-349C-905E-96C3BBE07C2F> /System/Library/Frameworks/CoreFoundation.framework/Versions/A/CoreFoundation
    0x10fe0a000 -   
    0x10ff0ffff  com.apple.ImageIO.framework (3.3.0 - 1038) <2C058216-C6D8-3380-A7EA-92A3F04520C1> /System/Library/Frameworks/ImageIO.framework/Versions/A/ImageIO
    0x10ff7d000 -   
    0x11089905f  com.apple.CoreGraphics (1.600.0 - 599.7) <7D0FD5A7-A061-39BA-8E00-723825D2C4DD> /System/Library/Frameworks/CoreGraphics.framework/Versions/A/CoreGraphics
    0x1109c5000 -   
    0x1109c6ffc  com.apple.SafariServices.framework (9537 - 9537.73.11) <4E721B67-18FC-32FD-9482-E7D0FEC02ACE> /System/Library/PrivateFrameworks/SafariServices.framework/Versions/A/SafariSer vices
    0x1109cc000 -   
    0x1109ccfff  com.apple.CoreServices (59 - 59) <7A697B5E-F179-30DF-93F2-8B503CEEEFD5> /System/Library/Frameworks/CoreServices.framework/Versions/A/CoreServices
    0x1109d3000 -   
    0x111547ff7  com.apple.AppKit (6.9 - 1265) <0E9FC8BF-DA3C-34C5-91CC-12BC922B5F01> /System/Library/Frameworks/AppKit.framework/Versions/C/AppKit
    0x111cd4000 -   
    0x111d03ff5  com.apple.GSS (4.0 - 2.0) <ED98D992-CC14-39F3-9ABC-8D7F986487CC> /System/Library/Frameworks/GSS.framework/Versions/A/GSS
    0x111d28000 -   
    0x111d39ff7  libz.1.dylib (53) <42E0C8C6-CA38-3CA4-8619-D24ED5DD492E> /usr/lib/libz.1.dylib
    0x111d42000 -   
    0x111d44fff  com.apple.OAuth (25 - 25) <22D42C60-CA67-31D7-A4A4-AFD8F35408D7> /System/Library/PrivateFrameworks/OAuth.framework/Versions/A/OAuth
    0x111d51000 -   
    0x111d89ff7  com.apple.RemoteViewServices (2.0 - 94) <3F34D630-3DDB-3411-BC28-A56A9B55EBDA> /System/Library/PrivateFrameworks/RemoteViewServices.framework/Versions/A/Remot eViewServices
    0x111dc7000 -   
    0x111f1aff7  com.apple.audio.toolbox.AudioToolbox (1.9 - 1.9) <A0B7B007-9BD8-30E2-B644-47856DA29FEE> /System/Library/Frameworks/AudioToolbox.framework/Versions/A/AudioToolbox
    0x111fb7000 -   
    0x111fb7ffd  com.apple.audio.units.AudioUnit (1.9 - 1.9) <6E89F3CB-CC41-3728-9F9A-FDFC151E8261> /System/Library/Frameworks/AudioUnit.framework/Versions/A/AudioUnit
    0x111fbf000 -   
    0x112207fff  com.apple.CoreData (107 - 481) <E5AFBA07-F73E-3B3F-9099-F51224EE8EAD> /System/Library/Frameworks/CoreData.framework/Versions/A/CoreData
    0x112333000 -   
    0x112397ff3  com.apple.datadetectorscore (5.0 - 354.0) <9ACF24B8-3268-3134-A5BC-D72C9371A195> /System/Library/PrivateFrameworks/DataDetectorsCore.framework/Versions/A/DataDe tectorsCore
    0x1123db000 -   
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    simonun wrote:
    Hi guys,
    Hi, and welcome to the forums.
    hope somebody can help me with this issue with TM.
    I decided to restore my entire system from a backup I got in an external hard drive ( formatted mac Os Journaled). I didnt exclude any folder from the backup.
    Basically using the mac osx installation disk
    Which one? If you used a Leopard Install disc, that's the problem. You need to use a +Snow Leopard+ disc to restore a +Snow Leopard+ backup. (Unfortunately, Apple doesn't exactly make that clear -- you are far from the first!)
    If your system is not too large, and didn't take more than an hour or so to restore, just do it over.
    If it's a lot larger, though, you can just install Snow Leopard. Your Mac should boot up normally, but don't use any apps yet. First, download and install the 10.6.5 "combo" update. Info and download available at: http://support.apple.com/kb/DL1324 Be sure to do a +Repair Permissions+ via Disk Utility (in your Applications/Utilities folder) afterwards.

  • Time Machine Restore - Empty Postgres Databases

    Hello,
    i just had to restore Lion Server and have a problem with it now. All files are back, but my the databases are completely empty.
    I have a dumpall.psql file, but i dont see how to get it back into the postgres database. I know how to deal with mysql, but this seems completely different to it.
    I also have PgAdmin installed and can connect to the database.
    Can someone point me the right way please?
    Another Problem i have is, that the server seems to forget my password. Everytime i try to login with my main user, the password field shakes. I am a 100 % sure it is the right password. I can only login with a second admin account. When i do a restore from an Open  Directory Backup in Server Admin it seems to work again for a while, but not for long.
    Please help me, i really need the server back to work.

    Ok, i'm at least some steps closer:
    I have my data back in postgre and all users have their data back on their devices. At least their data up to the last backup.
    Here is what i did:
    I restored another time machine backup.
    Apple claims, that serverbackup (and therefore Time Machine) does backups of the postgre data, which is true.
    Apple claims, that the postgre data will be restored in case of a Time Machine restore. In my case it didnt.
    You find a dumpall.psql in your time machine backups --> Library/Server/PostgreSQL/Backup (In my case there was a gzip file as well, but it didnt seem to be updated)
    I connected with postgre using pgadmin 3 following this tutorial: http://www.mactasia.co.uk/revisited-using-postgresql-in-lion-server
    I dropped all databases but the postgres-database.
    Open Terminal and write "sudo psql -f infile postgres" with infile being the path to your dumpall.psql (More commands at http://www.postgresql.org/docs/8.1/interactive/backup.html)
    This will write all data from the backup to your database.
    Voilá, you will have your data back.
    Give the clients time to get the content back from the server.
    Never start the wiki again, because it was the one which destroyed everything in the first place.
    Still i have a huge problem:
    I cant login with my main admin user. I can login with another admin. Then i reset the main user password and i can login with it again. But only once. Any advice on this?

  • 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:
    Have you done any backups since the reinstall? If not, you can use +Migration Assistant+ in your Applications/Utilities folder. It's almost the same as +Setup Assistant.+ Choose Applications (and Settings, if you didn't before). If you have done backups since then, this won't work, as +Migration Assistant+ uses the most recent backup -- you don't get a choice like you do with the full restore.
    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 at 149.7% and freezes.

    Hi there,
    Yesterday I had a bit of trouble with my Macbook - took a long while to start up, and it showed this "progress bar" under the little Apple at start-up etc. Had this before and the Mac store changed the HD saying it was damaged.
    So, fortunately I could start up, but not everything was working well enough. I managed to make a Time Machine back-up of my HD (some 250 Gb).
    Did a disk check after starting up from the OSX CD, which recommended I should erase and restore.
    Now, the HD has been erased now, and I started to do a Time Machine Restore.
    But, after some 5-6 hours, it appears to have frozen up, at 149.7% (why did it exceed 100%?).
    It's not doing anything now. I don't hear my laptop working, nor the external drive (and that one makes quite some noise when active). It's just sitting there at 149.7%. All I can do, is press a "Stop" button which I haven't done so far.

    Hi, and welcome to the forums.
    It's possible that whatever was going wrong on your system damaged or corrupted some of the data. Time Machine may have backed-up the corrupted files, so now it's trying to reload the same problem(s).
    By the way, be sure you're using a Snow Leopard Install disc to restore a Snow Leopard backup.
    It sounds like this was your very first Time Machine backup -- if not, and the restore fails, try again from an earlier one, done before the problems started.
    If you only have the single backup, and the restore fails, first run this: this: Intel-based Macs: Using Apple Hardware Test
    If that shows a problem, take it to Apple for repair.
    If not, about all you can do is start up again from the Installer disc, but instead of selecting +Restore System From Backup+ in the Utilities menu, select +Disk Utility,+ and use it to erase your internal HD. Then quit Disk Utility, back to the Installer, and install a fresh copy of OSX.
    When your Mac starts up again, use +Setup Assistant+ to restore everything else from your backups. See #19 in Time Machine - Frequently Asked Questions (or use the link in *User Tips* at the top of this forum), for details.
    If some of that data was damaged, that may not work well. If it doesn't, post back and we'll try a workaround.
    Then download and install the "combo" update to get back to 10.6.4. Info and download available at: http://support.apple.com/kb/DL1048 Be sure to do a +Repair Permissions+ via Disk Utility (in your Applications/Utilities folder) afterwards.

  • How do I safely stop a Time Machine Restore midway through?

    I started a Time Machine restore from backup at about 1pm this afternoon.
    After about 15 minutes of estimating the size of the files to be transferred, it gave me a 19hr estimate for transfer time. I had heard that it could take awhile, so I wasn't totally blown away by the number.
    I'm backing up about 200 GB. Well, I'm about 2 hours into it, and the time remaining has been fluctuating from 19+ hours to 14 hours. I'm at about 18 hours right now.
    I'm beginning to question the ethernet cable I'm using to transfer the data, and wishing I used a USB 2.0. I've also read up on a bunch of other threads about how painfully slow Time Machine can be, and there seems to be little rhyme or reason as to when it's slow vs when it's somewhat reasonable.
    So, I guess there are two questions.
    Question 1) Can I safely power down, swap cables, and retry? What happens to the data that's already been pulled over?
    Question 2) Should I just let it run for the next 18 hrs? I've also read other horror stories where people return to their machines after the time estimated, and it's hardly budged.
    Any help would be AWESOME! If i could give you a billion help points, i would!

    majmanMac wrote:
    Was doing a full restore from scratch - I lost a hard drive on Monday, and just got a new one put in. Turns out the estimate was about right, as I'm now writing this from my restored machine.
    Yay!
    I was restoring from a Time Capsule. For some reason I just assumed it had a USB port.
    Ah, yes, it does, but it's for connecting a printer or USB drive, not a Mac.
    My concern that i would come back to it this morning and find it still updating has been put to rest. Phew!
    Glad it's sorted out, but it does seem like there may be a problem -- that's awfully slow. See #D2 in [Time Machine - Troubleshooting|http://web.me.com/pondini/Time_Machine/Troubleshooting.html] (or use the link in *User Tips* at the top of this forum).
    And be forewarned: since you have a new drive, Time Machine's next backup will almost certainly be a full one, so remain connected via Ethernet. If there isn't enough free space for that, it will take an extremely long time for Time Machine to delete a lot of old backups to make room. You might consider manually deleting a lot of them, per #12 in [Time Machine - Frequently Asked Questions|http://web.me.com/pondini/Time_Machine/FAQ.html] (or use the link in *User Tips* at the top of this forum).

  • Can I use a Time Machine restore from an older OS to Mavericks?

    I ask because I tried about 2 years ago and had no luck. Here's a little back-story so my situation isn't confusing...
    My iMac (2010) has been having tons of issues lately. More specifically, when I attempted to upgrade to Mavericks last week, it came back with S.M.A.R.T. errors after a scan, so it wouldn't allow me to update. So, in preparation for the HDD to crap out on me, I did frequent back-ups using Time Machine. Well, the day finally came and my iMac won't "turn on" anymore. When I turn it on, it sits at the Mac loading screen for several minutes and then just goes to a blank white screen. (NOTE: This isn't part of my question but if anyone has any suggestions on fixing this, please let me know, thanks!)
    So, back to my question. If I buy a new iMac or a new macbook or whatever, will it be possible to use my Time Machine back-ups to restore everything on it or will it not allow me to because the operating systems are different? As mentioned, I attempted to make a restore on my friend's macbook that I purchased as a spare but when I tried, it came back saying "Different operating systems, cannot restore" or something to that degree. Is there a way around this? Do I have to somehow downgrade the OS on my new machine?
    Luckily, I use iTunes for all my movies/music & Adobe Creative cloud so I can easily restore those on any machine but my desktop personal data, photos, etc are on the Time Machine restore. Help me if you can, thanks in advance!

    If you live near an Apple Store, make a Genius Bar appointment to have the computer tested. Supposedly there is no charge for testing. They can also give you an estimate.
    Genius Bar Reservation US

  • Time Machine Restore Mangles Permissions and Groups

    Circumstance:
    My Macbook Pro running 10.5.5 gave a gray spinner after a restart last week. The restart was to clear out a couple of system processes eating up CPU when I had left it alone for a few hours.
    Action:
    After Disk Utility, zapping PRAM, and the probably some other standard trouble-shooting actions didn't fix the stuck start-up problem, I decided to try a full system restore from my Time Machine backups. I had previously successfully restored individual folders and files. Time Machine backs up wireless to a USB hard drive connected to my AirPort Extreme. To speed up the restore, I ran an Ethernet cable to the MBP from the Airport. The restore completed successfully. All the folders & files are correct, looks the same, etc. I restarted using the restored boot drive.
    Problem:
    The MBP is like a museum now--I can look but I can't touch. I first noticed something was wrong after logging in the first time because I couldn't move a file into a folder via drag-n-drop. Then Terminal went into a spinning beach ball when I opened it. Spotlight was not running. Then I noticed that my entire boot disk was read-only. I got info on the boot disk, and the Users & Groups list was strange--everyone was read-only, "wheel" had read-write and was the owner, and staff had read-write. Basically, it's like me, the Finder, an all applications have lost all their write/execute permissions on the entire drive.
    *Unsuccessful Steps Taken:*
    Ran Disk Utilities' Repair Permissions from Leopard dvd. Ran fsck -fy after mount / -uw from Leopard dvd Terminal and from single-user boot mode. Time Machine restore direct from TM disk via USB. Joined my user to wheel group. Changed my user password from Leopard dvd (which repairs home folder permissions). Played with chown to make all wheel-owned items staff-owned.
    *Open Theories:*
    Airport Time Machine restores strips ACLs and Permissions. I have to restore over wireless, not ethernet or usb. My TM backup is screwed up somehow.
    Whew. This has been going on for a while, so I'm ready to give up and do an Archive & Install and begin manual migration from the backups, but my MPB is a fine-tuned machine and I hate to lose that, especially since it taunts me by being so close to normal (I can see everything! My desktop background and apps are there!).
    Any help much appreciated!

    The "full restore" from Time Machine is only for OSX drives.
    For data-only drives, use the Time Machine browser (the "Star Wars" display).  See Time Machine - Frequently Asked Question #15.
    Depending on your setup, you may also want to review Transferring Home Folders not on a Startup volume.

  • Time machine restore help

    I've recently been having issues with my early 2008 black Macbook. I ran the apple HW diagnostics and determined it is a bad hard drive. I went out and bought a new 500GB SATA HD, and attempted to restore my system using a Time Machine backup. I booted into the Leopard Disc that came with my computer, formatted the drive, and ran the Time machine restore. Everything appeared to go fine (took about 2 hours, no error messages). However, after the machine rebooted and attempted to boot into OSX an error similar to this popped up. http://img149.imageshack.us/img149/7792/pict0017lo8.jpg
    Any thoughts as to why this is happening? I don't really want to start over with a clean install, that's why I have Time Machine!
    Other information:
    My computer originally had Leopard, and was upgraded to Snow Leopard.
    I have boot camp setup on my mac for Win 7. (I know this isn't backed up or restored as part of a time machine backup, which I'm O.K. with.)
    Thanks in advance for all your help.

    Any number of possibilities. First, did you prep the drive properly:
    Extended Hard Drive Preparation
    1. Boot from your OS X 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 Installer menu (Utilities menu for Tiger, Leopard or Snow Leopard.)
    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 (for Intel Macs) or APM (for PPC Macs) then click on the OK button. Click on the Partition button and wait until the process has completed.
    4. Select the volume you just created (this is the sub-entry under the drive entry) from the left side list. Click on the Erase tab in the DU main window.
    5. Set the format type to Mac OS Extended (Journaled.) Click on the Options 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.
    Any brand new drive should be setup per the above because they usually are configured for use on PCs rather than Macs.
    Second, depends on how you went about the process of restoring your system. Select Mac Help from the Finder's Help menu and search for "time machine." Look for an article specifically about performing a full system restore. Also, see User Tips for Time Machine for help with TM problems. Also you can select Mac Help from the Finder's Help menu and search for "time machine" to locate articles on how to use TM. See also Mac 101- Time Machine.
    What you saw was a kernel panic screen. Panics at startup may be indicative of a hardware problem. You might give this a try:
    How to run hardware diagnostics for an Intel Mac
    Boot from your original OS X Installer Disc One that came with your computer. After the chime press and hold down the "D" key until the diagnostic screen appears. Run the extended tests for a minimum of two or three hours. If any error messages appear note them down as you will need to report them to the service tech when you take the computer in for repair.
    Some "common" error indicators:
    SNS - sensor error
    MEM - memory error
    HDD - hard disk drive error
    MOT - fan error
    To assure the problem isn't with your backup you might consider installing OS X by itself. If all is OK, then you can complete the TM restore using Migration Assistant.

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