Using Disk Utility To Restore

Last month I did a Disk Restore onto my large external hard drive using Disk Utility.
I would like to do that monthly, so as to ensure that whenever I add, change, delete data, configurations, etc. on my internal hard drive..that I have the latest restore data..plain and simple.
My question is: In doing subsequent disk restore maneuvers on a monthly basis, do I need to manally delete the previous month's restore data from my external hard drive or will it just overwrite (like copy and replace) the current data on my ext drive?
I don't want the restore feature to duplicate any data from previous transactions on my ext drive. That's why I am asking. Does anyone know?
Thanks,
Henri
Powerbook G4, 1.67Ghz Superdrive 2GB RAM   Mac OS X (10.4.7)  

Disk Utility->Help->Restoring files from a disk or disk image
You can choose to erase the destination disk and then have the disk image copied to it. Alternatively, you can choose not to erase the disk and add the disk image information to the current contents of the destination disk.
As I read this, if you don't erase the previous copy, when your restore, everything that's on the source will overwrite similarly named items on the destination. You cannot do incremental updates using DU's restroe function. For that, you need something like Carbon Copy Cloner, SuperDuper!, etc.

Similar Messages

  • Hi, I have a hard disk failure so to recover my data I am using disk utility to restore the data on an external drive while booting from a second external hard drive. When I perform the operation it gives me an input/output error and stops. Any tips?

    Hi, I have a hard disk failure so to recover my data I am using disk utility to restore the data on an external drive while booting from a second external hard drive. When I perform the operation and after having selected both my destination and source drives, the operation begins but soon fails due to input/output error. If I try to create an image of the drive it gives me the same error message. Any help would be much appreciated.

    Disk Utility only creates a image of the drive, so it's no help getting exactly what you want, which is your files. If the file structure is messed up or the drive is failing then it's no help.
    If you have a external boot drive and you can't access the internal non-booting drive though the typical Finder and windows to transfer your files via drag and drop methods, then you need to install Data Rescue on the external boot drive and it will do as best as it can to recover your files. (works on non-encrypted/non-Filevaulted drives only)
    .Create a data recovery/undelete external boot drive
    Are you sure you have hard drive failure, or that OS X isn't merely not booting?
    Because if the drive is working physically, then there is a host of fixes
    ..Step by Step to fix your Mac
    https://discussions.apple.com/community/notebooks/macbook_pro?view=documents#/

  • Using Disk Utility to restore/copy disk - who is correct?

    I had two long talks with two separate Apple Care people online today who both insisted what they were saying was right and the other person was wrong.
    Hmm....
    My question is this.
    I have a MBP and the internal HD is currently empty. I've been running off of an external HD for about a year now.
    I want to clone my external HD into my internal HD and use the internal HD as my system disk now.
    One Apple Care person said to go into Disk Utility, select the source disk, from the tabs on the right hand side select Restore and then drag the source disk into the source field, drag the target disk into the target field and press restore. She said this will make a complete clone of the external HD in the internal HD.
    The other Apple Care person said "No no no. You can't do that to clone a system disk that way." He said the best thing was to install a new system and then use the restore as a new system from Time Machine option (where I also have a backup.)
    I believe the second method will work, but it's more cumbersome for me because I haven't been backing up everything in Time Machine. I have excluded items, such as podcasts and Parallels disk images.
    If I could do this from the external system disk life would be easier.
    But is the first Apple Support person right or wrong about this? Can I use Disk Utility to copy the system disk from one external HD to another that way?
    Thanks,
    doug
    p.s. I am not in the market for 3rd party software to deal with this one-time issue, so if possible I would like to accomplish this using OS X included features...

    The advantage is CCC has built in routines that "bless" (see the Terminal.app command "bless") the
    os x installation so it will boot properly on the new volume it is being installed on.
    Disk Utility simply copies (restores) files from one volume to another. Many times this works just fine.
    Sometimes it won't boot afterwards. Most of the time (as long as there are no system files missing
    or corrupted) a person may "bless" the drive and restore it to working condition.
    CCC is not a "magical" application, it is in fact a front end to applications that already exist separately
    in OS X (asr, hdiutil, diskutil, bless, etc.).
    It doesn't matter to me how you do it. It's your time not mine. Everyone should spend some time
    behind the command line in terminal. I do many tasks using the command line, including and not
    limited to complete system restores, backing up data, disk partitioning, installing software, disk
    repair, permissions repair, ACL management, restoring data, managing disk images, network
    management, user management, file management, etc. Many people are fearful of the command
    line. I feel just the opposite, I'm fearful without it.
    Say Hello to my little friend.
    http://manuals.info.apple.com/enUS/Command_Line_Adminv10.5.pdf
    http://www.apple.com/downloads/macosx/unixopensource/clix.html
    http://www.macobserver.com/tips/macosxcl101/index.html
    http://www.matisse.net/OSX/darwin_commands.html
    Kj

  • Using Disk Utility to restore an image stored on the network

    Hello --
    I have a disk image, Image.dmg. When I boot from the 10.4 installer DVD, Disk utility is able to restore this image from a firewire drive to an internal drive.
    Image.dmg is also on a network share, hosted via AFP. When I boot from the 10.4 installer DVD, select "Restore," and specify that share as the source:
    afp://172.28.40.XX/Image_Share/Image.dmg
    I get this message:
    "You must authenticate in order to restore."
    I imagine that the server would like for me to log on before giving me access to the share. However, Disk Utility doesn't provide me with an authentication dialog.
    Any ideas?

    Can't really tell if you are trying to restore an image from a locally attached firewire drive or (as from the original poster of the message) from a remotely shared location. If you are restoring from a remote share location then have you tried:
    afp://username:[email protected]/Image_Share/Image.dmg
    Replacing username and password with the account information which has access to that remote share location.
    Good luck,
    TK

  • I recently downloaded is x mountain lion and while it finished it erased all my data, some of which I need. When using disk utility I found my old data but it says corrupted. I can't repair and while restoring the error code 32 Broken Pipe appears. Help?

    My data I need is on my computer but it needs to be repaired but can't and when I try to restore it/back it up it ends abruptly with error code 32 broken pipe.
    It was damaged while installing os x mountain lion and I found my data on disk repair (utility)

    Sounds like your hard drive is badly corrupted, likely due to problems that were already there when you started trying to install Mountain Lion. The problem is, if you don't have any backups already, you may not be able to recover all your data from this state. Do you have backups of that data already?
    If not, I assume when you say that "it needs to be repaired but can't," you mean that Disk Utility tells you there is a problem with the disk, but that it is unable to repair it? If so, you can try repairing the drive using DiskWarrior, which can repair problems that Disk Utility cannot. That may give you access to your data again, but may not.
    Also, it's important to understand that if your data is not backed up, everything you do with the computer runs the risk of overwriting or corrupting that data. You may want to go straight to trying to recover your data. See Recovering deleted files.
    Regarding the error code, if you're trying to back up the drive using Disk Utility's Restore tab, note that that is often not successful when the drive you're trying to back up is corrupt.
    Once the situation is resolved - either because you have backups, are able to recover your data files or are forced to accept that they are gone permanently - you will need to erase the hard drive and reinstall the system and all your apps from scratch.

  • Using Disk Utility Restore function to clone external hard drives

    Hi all,
    I have a WD 3Tb My Book external hard drive which I want to use as a replacement for an older WD 1Tb My Book external hard drive. I would like to use Disk Utility's built-in Restore function to clone my old external hard drive onto my new external hard drive. Unfortunately, Disk Utility will not allow me to drag the new drive to the "Destination" box; I can drag the old drive to the "Source" box just fine. Why is this? Am I doing something wrong?
    It might be important to note that my old external drive is formated to FAT32, whereas the new drive came pre-formatted to NTFS. Do I need to reformat the new drive to FAT32 before dragging the disk to the "Destination" box? In other words, do the source and destination drives need to be the same format in order to use Disk Utility's Restore function?
    Thanks very much in advance.

    Are these drives being used on Windows machines? If so then you will need to create a new partition from the Partition Scheme dropdown menu after which you can set the scheme to MBR. If the drives are being used only on the Mac then you have to prep the new drive as follows:
    Drive Preparation
    1. Open Disk Utility in your Utilities folder.
    2. After DU loads select your hard drive (this is the entry with the mfgr.'s ID and size) from the left side list. Click on the Partition tab in the DU main window.
    3. Under the Volume Scheme heading set the number of partitions from the drop down menu to one. 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.
    After you copy your files from the old drive to the new one you want to repartition and reformat the old drive in the same way as outlined immediately above.

  • Transferring data from one HDD to a new HDD using disk utility?

    I do not have a time machine backup of my HDD.  I was wondering if it is posssible to use disk utility to restore data from the old HDD to the new HDD.  Will I need the system disks to partition the new HDD first or is this even possible.  If it is possible, will everything transfer using the Restore in disk utility?

    How to replace or upgrade a drive in a laptop
    Step One: Repair the Hard Drive and Permissions
    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.) 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 installer.
    If DU reports errors it cannot fix, then you will need Disk Warrior and/or Tech Tool Pro to repair the drive. If you don't have either of them or if neither of them can fix the drive, then you will need to reformat the drive and reinstall OS X.
    Step Two: Remove the old drive and install the new drive.  Place the old drive in an external USB enclosure.  You can buy one at OWC who is also a good vendor for drives.
    Step Three: Boot from the external drive.  Restart the computer and after the chime press and hold down the OPTION key until the boot manager appears.  Select the icon for the external drive then click on the downward pointing arrow button.
    Step Four: New Hard Drive Preparation
      1. Open Disk Utility in your Utilities folder.
      2. After DU loads select your new 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.  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. 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.
    Step Five: Clone the old drive to the new drive
      1. Open Disk Utility from the Utilities folder.
      2. Select the destination volume from the left side list.
      3. Click on the Restore tab in the DU main window.
      4. Check the box labeled Erase destination.
      5. Select the destination volume from the left side list and drag it to the
          Destination entry field.
      6. Select the source volume from the left side list and drag it to the
          Source entry field.
      7. Double-check you got it right, then click on the Restore button.
    Destination means the new internal drive. Source means the old external drive.
    Step Six: Open the Startup Disk preferences and select the new internal volume.  Click on the Restart button.  You should boot from the new drive.  Eject the external drive and disconnect it from the computer.

  • Migration Assistant fails to recognize a Time Machine disk (itself migrated using Disk Utility)

    So I outgrow my Time Machine disk. I listen to the advice (repeated in multiple places) that one can simply use Disk Utility's Restore tab, select the old time machine disk as source and the new one as destination, and click restore to copy block-by-block, then rename the disk.
    This works very well. I have indeed been able to use Time Machine on the new disk without losing any of the history.
    But now I am in trouble. I am also outgrowing my MacBook disk. I put a larger disk in and install Snow Leopard from scratch. Now Migration Assistant does not recognize the new Time Machine disk (perpetually spinning wheel). Renaming the disk to the old name does not help. M.A. does recognize the old Time Machine disk, but that means manually managing the changes (and giving up on the larger TM disk). I reinstall Snow Leopard and do not miss that time the option to restore from Time Machine, but it still does not see the new Time Machine disk.
    How does one convince Migration Assistant to use a Time Machine disk that duly has Backups.backupdb as a root folder and where "ignore ownership on this volume" is not set?

    Thanks, Pondini, but the Time Machine disk passes the Disk Utility repairs and only the spinning wheel was visible under both the Setup Assistant and the Migration Assistant.
    I now have some good news, and some bad.
    First the good news: Lion's Migration Assistant offers the option to copy user (and other) files from the previous OSX disk, not just the Time Machine disk. If this option was already in Snow Leopard, then I missed it.
    Now the bad news..
    I spent several hours reading (Pondini's and others') suggestions to ensure that my Time Machine is as seamless as possible, namely, for the next backup to be incremental. No luck: all user data are copied. Until the interface of Time Machine stops trying so hard to shield us naive users from making decisions on our own, one idea is to keep the iPod and pictures/video collection backed-up by the straight-forward rsync. Then whether Time Machine is really incremental will not matter, and in any case a spare copy of the documents you wrote by hand is nice in case the some blocks of the disk fail.
    But I may have been the one who messed it. In Preferrences \ Time Machine \ Options... I excluded all users except the user "Admin" who restored the user accounts. The idea was to test first whether the mildest user will get a full backup. It may be that Time Machine does not look in the history to see if a given file or set of files already have some copy in the past. If a file does not exist in the very last backup, it is saved to the Time Machine disk.
    If you're reading this and are keen on an incremental backup, try this: restore your user accounts using a user Admin, but do not start to backup until after the accounts are restored. Will the backup afterwards be incremental?

  • Upgrading HD and cloning using Disk Utility

    I'm going to upgrade my MacBook Aluminum Unibody with a larger and faster hard drive (500 Go Seagate Momentus 7200.4 SATA 2,5" 7200T 16 Mo).
    As you'd probably expect, I will need to clone my current system to the new HD.
    To achieve my needs, my strategy is the following:
    1) booting up using Snow Leopard install DVD
    2) connecting my new drive through a USB enclosure
    3) using Disk Utility's "Restore" feature with Macintosh HD as source, and the new drive as destination
    4) switching the drives
    I came across tons of people in the same scenario as mine during my research for the best solution, but it always ended up with Carbon Copy Cloner or Super Duper. Almost nothing about Disk Utility.
    If they seem to work fine for most of us, I find Disk Utility more trustful (1), and I prefer block-to-block to file-to-file copy (2), as the last method will necessarily skip some "uncopyable" files.
    I have none of the above software, and according to its documentation, I believed to understand that CCC can't achieve a block-to-block copy running on the source system (which does make sense).
    So, considering I only need to clone & switch (no backup purpose or whatever) my hard drives, why would I use CCC/Super Duper over Disk Utility?
    Yeah, a file-to-file copy will kind of defragment my system, but is there something wrong with my method? I really don't understand why DU is so underrated.
    Any feedback much appreciated!
    Thanks,
    Mickael

    Mickael
    I see nothing wrong with using disk utility to do what you want. If I'm correct, you can only create a disk image with disk utility, so it will not be bootable. It will accomplish the same goal as other software to restore as you described. The advantage to cloning you drive with the other applications is that you will be able to boot from the external drive if problems arise. Both applications are free to download.
    I used super duper to clone to an external drive as a backup and keep it updated. I always have it to boot from if my main drive fails. The process is up to you.
    Note: I though you needed a disk image to restore from, but I was wrong. You can do a restore from the drive itself.
    As i said, I see no problem. It's your choice.
    Message was edited by: Glenn Leblanc
    Message was edited by: Glenn Leblanc

  • I need help with boot camp. "Back up the disk and use Disk Utility to format it as a single Mac OS Extended (Journaled) volume. Restore your information to the disk and try using Boot Camp Assistant again."

    This message appears every time I try to partition my disk:
    "Back up the disk and use Disk Utility to format it as a single Mac OS Extended (Journaled) volume. Restore your information to the disk and try using Boot Camp Assistant again."
    I verified my Macintosh HD disk on Disk utility and then tried to repair it, but I am unable to click the repair button.
    It says it's not available because the startup disk is selected.
    I don't know what to do or how to go about both these problems.
    Please, any suggestions?

    This message appears every time I try to partition my disk:
    "Back up the disk and use Disk Utility to format it as a single Mac OS Extended (Journaled) volume. Restore your information to the disk and try using Boot Camp Assistant again."
    I verified my Macintosh HD disk on Disk utility and then tried to repair it, but I am unable to click the repair button.
    It says it's not available because the startup disk is selected.
    I don't know what to do or how to go about both these problems.
    Please, any suggestions?

  • Use Disk Utility "Restore" to clone system Drive

    I have always recommended that everyone use the Restore function under Disk Utility to clone their drive before each update, just incase one needs to quickly fall back to a working release.
    Well I decided to test my cloned drive, and to make a long story short, be sure that you boot from a different drive than the one you want to clone. A clone made from the current/active startup drive does NOT boot (well mine would not boot).
    So, boot from a backup drive/partition, one that is Panther works best as you do not have to worry about spotlight, or dashboard, or any of the other "cool" Tiger auto running programs getting in the way, then go into Disk Utility, and Restore, and clone your main startup drive. It creates a drive that will actually boot.
    Maybe this was obvious to everyone, but I had been making my backup clone drive for the past year right from my main active startup drive. I never received an error that indicated there would be any problem with the cloned drive. Thank goodness that I NEVER had to use the backup.
    Now I sleep peacefully at night, knowing I have a bootable replacement startup drive ready to go at a moments notice.
    bob

    CCC has worked fine with 10.3.x but I have been having some issues getting the backup of 10.4 to be recognized.
    I don't know if it is the disk (it's on a partition of a sloooow lacie) or the nature of the clone. In either case, it takes a couple of tries before the drive is found as a boot drive and it is a pain....
    After a hugely painful and very, very expensive experience with failed backups (we lost the entire office's electronic records going back for 3 years), I have gotten in the habit of booting off the backups once every few weeks to verify they work.
    In the immortal words of journalist and fiction writer Damon Runyon, "Trust, but verify."
    Cheers,
    x
    Do your part in supporting your fellow users. If a response has been Helpful to you or Solved your question, please mark it as such as an aid to other lost souls on the forum.
    Also, don't forget to mark the thread Answered when you get enough information to close the thread.

  • Problems transferring Backups to new External HD using Disk Utility restore

    I'm having issues using Disk Utility to transfer my backups to a new disk.
    I am transferring data from a 250GB external harddrive to a new completely zero'ed 1TB Iomega external harddrive. Both Harddrives are connected via USB. On my old 250GB HD i have a few folders containing about 100GB of data (raw video footage) that are not in the "Backups.backupdb" folder.
    I follow the tutorial in item 18 of the FAQS on this forum exactly (except i didnt check erase destination) but i get an error message each time after about 3 minutes:
    "Could not restore - Operation not permitted"
    This is what my log says:
    2009-12-27 17:12:32 +0000: Restore Disk
    2009-12-27 17:12:32 +0000: Source: “Darkers HD”
    2009-12-27 17:12:32 +0000: Destination: “Untitled”
    2009-12-27 17:12:32 +0000: Erase Destination: No
    2009-12-27 17:12:32 +0000:
    2009-12-27 17:12:32 +0000: Starting Restore…
    2009-12-27 17:12:32 +0000: Validating target...
    2009-12-27 17:12:32 +0000: done
    2009-12-27 17:12:32 +0000: Validating source...
    2009-12-27 17:12:32 +0000: done
    2009-12-27 17:12:32 +0000: Validating sizes...
    2009-12-27 17:12:32 +0000: done
    2009-12-27 17:12:32 +0000: Copying
    2009-12-27 17:14:01 +0000: could not copy /Volumes/Untitled/Backups.backupdb/Mac/2009-04-15-054708/Macintosh HD/Applications/Adobe Acrobat 7.0 Professional/Acrobat Distiller 7.0.app/Contents/Frameworks/AdobeACE.framework/AdobeACE; Operation not permitted
    2009-12-27 17:14:01 +0000: Bom copy exited with error 1
    2009-12-27 17:14:01 +0000:
    2009-12-27 17:14:01 +0000: Could not restore - Operation not permitted
    2009-12-27 17:14:02 +0000: Could not restore - Operation not permitted
    2009-12-27 17:14:02 +0000:
    I can see from this that it is having issues with a file in the destination:
    /Volumes/Untitled/Backups.backupdb/Mac/2009-04-15-054708/Macintosh HD/Applications/Adobe Acrobat 7.0 Professional/Acrobat Distiller 7.0.app/Contents/Frameworks/AdobeACE.framework/AdobeACE
    This file is in the first Backup i ever made and all subsequent backups. So i went and looked at this backup through the time machine application and deleted this file from the backup and all subsequent backups. However when i then did the restore again i got the same error message and when i looked at the log it was identical except it had issues with a different "AdobeACE.framework" file from another Adobe CS3 program. I dont want to go through and delete all these types of CS3 files from my backups for obvious reasons, i would much rather understand what the issue is and know whether there is a way round it.
    It may well be simply because i have not checked the "erase destination" box before restoring but somehow i doubt this is the issue as the new 1TB HD has already been "zero'ed" as explained earlier.
    Any help would be appreciated guys.

    check the box to erase destination. the fact that you zeroed it out makes no difference. this is a known issue and checking that box was recommended for a reason.

  • ITunes won't Restore after I allready have restored (using Disk Utility)

    To anyone who may help, or who may have similar problem,
    Having trouble with my iPod (5th gen 30GB).
    Bought iPod 1 month ago. First time i plugged it in, it showed up as a Windows-formatted iPod on my Mac (using iTunes 7.1).
    I couldn't restore the iPod from iTunes as the Restore (and Update) function was greyed-out in the Device Summary "Version" section.
    Called up Apple Canada and they told me to restore using disk utility, which I did by using the Erase function.
    Then plugged iPod back in. iTunes recognised it - as a Macintosh formatted iPod - and automatically reloaded all music onto iPod. Once upload complete though, iPod wouldn't play and instead now shows a "use iTunes to Restore iPod" screen.
    Restore functions still unavailable in iTunes (Version section still greyed out) - though now says that "Your iPod software is up to date. iTunes will check..."
    Tried holding down menu+centre button and centre button+play but no help.
    Anyone any ideas?
    Thanks
    -Gael
    5th Generation 30GB iPod Mac OS X (10.3.9) 12" Powerbook G4

    Error 14 usually means that your antivirus or firewall is blocking the update. Try disabling your firewall.
    Also, make sure you are connecting to a USB 2.0 (not 1.1)port directly on the back of the computer (not the front), and you are not using a USB hub or a USB port on the keyboard if there is one. This is worth checking but is not usually the cause of error 14.
    When updating choose "download only" the first time. This separates the download process and the update process, so you can better diagnose where the problem resides.

  • Moving backups to new drive -- without using disk utility restore

    Hello,
    I have done some research on this already but I don't believe I've found the solution. I just bought a new media / backup hard drive, and I've moved my itunes library (over 100 GBs) to this drive. Now I have researched how to move the time machine backups to this drive, and know you can't just copy the files.
    The instructions I've received tell me to use the disk utility to restore the old time machine backup drive to the new drive, however if I do that won't I lose the iTunes stuff currently on that drive?
    Is there an easier way to move that data without me transferring the iTunes back to my laptop, and then restoring through disk utility, and then re-transferring the iTunes again?
    thanks,
    James

    jimumbra wrote:
    Hello,
    I have done some research on this already but I don't believe I've found the solution. I just bought a new media / backup hard drive, and I've moved my itunes library (over 100 GBs) to this drive. Now I have researched how to move the time machine backups to this drive, and know you can't just copy the files.
    The instructions I've received tell me to use the disk utility to restore the old time machine backup drive to the new drive, however if I do that won't I lose the iTunes stuff currently on that drive?
    yes, you will. but it is also a VERY bad idea to keep other data on the same partition as the TM backup. first, this data will not be backed up by TM. if you value your itunes data you should have it backed up. also, TM is very buggy and there are too many situations when you need to delete existing TM backups and start from scratch. this should be done by erasing the entire TM partition. you should never delete any TM backups from finder. also, TM will eventually fill up the entire partition with TM backup. it will start bumping up against other data on the partition and you won't be able to put anything else on it.
    the upshot is that you should make a separate partition just for TM. don't keep any other data on that partition. you can add a partition to the drive without disturbing your itunes data. type "create new volumes" in disk utility help to see how. however, that's not a good idea IMO as you'll have both the itunes data and the TM backups on the same physical drive. when the drive fails (and it will eventually) you'll loose everything.
    Is there an easier way to move that data without me transferring the iTunes back to my laptop, and then restoring through disk utility, and then re-transferring the iTunes again?
    thanks,
    James

  • Backup / Restore using Disk Utility

    Hello,
    I have a G4 Quicksilver 2002 with two internal hard rives:  one cofigured for Mac OS X 10.4 and the other (my main) configured for Mac OS X 10.5.
    I've created a backup image of the 10.4 HD using Disk Utility which is stored on an external USB drive.
    My question is this - if I need to restore the 10.4 HD from the backup image, will it be bootable?  The directory for the 10.4 HD appears to be corrupted, and I'll likely need to reformat the drive and attempt a restore from the archived image.
    I would like to avoid the hassle of rebuilding the 10.4.11 system from scratch.
    --Bill

    Hi Bill,
    In theory that should work.

Maybe you are looking for