Will Time Machine Still Back Up if Macbook Pro is Closed?

I'm wondering if time machine wil still back up my files if I close the lid of my Macbook Pro? I've thought about getting a program called "Caffine", which keeps the screen running indefinitely in order to keep process running. I could just run that, and then dim the screen to conserve power. However, I'd like to avoid this if possible, as I'm sure in the long run it might be taxing on the backlight. So I want to know if I close the lid, will time machine still run? Or do processes stop when you close it?
I should mention I'm not backing up to an actual Time Machine, but rather to a 1 TB external HD.

Power Nap? 
Yes. Power Nap did not exist two years ago, in early 2012, when this topic was last active. Now, hardware compatible with Power Nap will back up, among other things, while sleeping. See:
http://support.apple.com/kb/ht5394

Similar Messages

  • If I move my iTunes media folder to an external hard drive, will Time Machine still back up that externally-located iTunes library?

    To be precise, I've moved my iTunes Media Library to the same external hard drive where my TM backups are stored, although there's plenty of free space on that drive for both.
    As I write that, however, it strikes me that if that external drive fails, I've lost my entire iTunes media directory AND my TM backup. So I suppose I should use a separate external HD for each, right?
    But my main question is whether or not TM will still back up that iTunes media folder even if it's no longer located on the same boot drive as my main machine, which is a Mac Mini.
    The whole reason I'm doing this is because my MM has a 250GB solid-state drive that is rapidly filling up because my iTunes library is 150+GB.

    mende1 says:
    I recommend you to store the library on another partition on the external disk and keep the first volume only for Time Machine backups.
    and you say:
    As I write that, however, it strikes me that if that external drive fails, I've lost my entire iTunes media directory AND my TM backup. So I suppose I should use a separate external HD for each, right?
    From what people report here I'd say more people lose collections through whole drives failing and not just individual volumes becoming corrupt.  A drive failing will take out all volumes on that drive.
    Whatever the scenario, you will need multiple external drives.  For convenience you could do as mende1 suggests and partition the TM drive.  Keep TM on one part and your library on the other.  This would be convenient because then you would only have one external connected to your Mac most of the time.  However, then you should do as you observe and back up the partition used for iTunes to another external drive as often as you deem necessary.  Basically you always want two copies of everything on two different drives, but they don't all have to be on the same two drives.  Your TM drive acts as the backup for your computer and the primary for iTunes.  Your computer acts as the primary for what's on TM and the second external acts as the backup for iTunes.

  • Will Time machine automatically back up an external hard drive connected to my iMac?

    I have a Lacie external firewire hard disc connected to my iMac, containing Aperture library. Will Time Machine automatically back up both the external disc and the iMac HD?
    Adrian

    Will Time Machine automatically back up both the external disc and the iMac HD
    Open System Preferences (gear icon on the dock) and open Time Machine
    Click on Options
    Do you see the name of your Lacie drive in the "Exclusions List"?  If yes, the Lacie drive is currently not set to backup with your Mac.
    Click on your Lacie drive to highlght it, then click the - (minus) button at the bottom of the list to remove the drive from the "Exclusions" list.
    Now, Time Machine will backup both your Mac and the Lacie drive on the next pass. Allow plenty of time for this backup, avoiding wireless if possible, and connecting the Mac directly to one of the Ethernet ports on the Time Capsule. Ethernet will go 3-5 faster than wireless, on average.

  • How can I get my time machine to allow me to recover files again? After upgrading to OS X, the time machine still backs up the files; but, I'm not able to navigate within the time machine or select any folders or files for restore.

    How can I get my time machine to allow me to recover files again?
    After upgrading MBA to OS X, the time machine still backs up the files; but, I'm not able to navigate within the time machine or select any folders or files for restore.
    I've searched and can not find a solution to the problem that's being encountered.

    Yeap that all makes sense now.
    Do you only have the current backup showing in the TM display?? Won't it fill in the rest?
    Over wireless are you waiting for the indexing to finish.. ??
    Previous backup may not show for a couple of hours.
    Long short of it.. Mavericks version of TM is a pain.
    Sometimes it is easier to completely ignore the TM backup and do the restore manually.
    I have posted the details here. See if this helps.
    Can't access old files on time capsule

  • Time Machine STILL backs up while in sleep

    Time Machine STILL backs up my drive to an external drive while in sleep, despite many Apple KB articles to the contrary and 2 conversations with Geniuses saying it shouldn't either. Why?
    I have turned of "wake for network access" under energy settings as recommended, but that didn't help either.
    But if I open the external drive's backup folder there's a new folder for every hour in the last 24 hours, even if the computer had been asleep the whole time.
    IMac is now on Mountain Lion, but it did the same under Lion as well.
    Any help or suggestions would be appreciated, thanks.

    Yeap that all makes sense now.
    Do you only have the current backup showing in the TM display?? Won't it fill in the rest?
    Over wireless are you waiting for the indexing to finish.. ??
    Previous backup may not show for a couple of hours.
    Long short of it.. Mavericks version of TM is a pain.
    Sometimes it is easier to completely ignore the TM backup and do the restore manually.
    I have posted the details here. See if this helps.
    Can't access old files on time capsule

  • IMovie Time Machine backup of my old Macbook Pro

    Hi, I have a Time Machine backup of my old Macbook Pro. I need to edit one of the iMovie movies from the back up. How can I import all the data from my old iMovie to my new macbook Pro so I can edit it?

    What version of iMovie were you using on you old machine?
    What versions of iMovie do you have on your new machine?
    Do you still have access to your old machine?
    Assuming you were using iMovie 9 you need to copy over two folders called "iMovie Projects" and "iMovie Events" and put them at the root level of an external hard disk or in <user name> / Movies.  However you need to open these in iMovie 9. 
    Geoff.

  • Boot from time machine to start up my macbook Pro?

    Can I boot up from my time machine to start up my macbook pro with 10.7.5? I have not been able to start up from my diskWarrior 4.4 disk in order to rebuild my hard drive, and I did not get a 10.7 system disk when I bought my computer. Also, if I can, how do I do it?

    If the time machine backup was made from your Mac with 10.7.x install on it yes toy can boot from it. Connect the backup drive to the Mac and power it on. Hold down the Option key and a boot menu screen willl come up. Select the backup drive, it might be label Recovery HD or Whatever you called the drive when you formatted it.
    Once that loads, which is a copy of the built ion Recovery HD files you can use disk utility to do maintance and do all the other things you can do with disk utility and then you can restore your system from that backup.

  • Will Time Machine also back up an attached drive?

    I have a MacBook Pro and an external FireWire drive (dedicated to recording audio).
    If I attach a second drive (USB if that matters) to be my backup, and then I launch Time Machine, will it back up the data from both my laptop drive and my audio drive? Or will it just back up my laptop drive and I'll have to manually copy the files from my audio drive?
    Thanks for any help in understanding.

    Yes, Time Machine can back it up, if it's formatted HFS+ (any flavor of +Mac OS Extended.)+
    If by chance it doesn't, check the exclusion box in TM Preferences. If the drive is listed there, select it and click the minus sign at the bottom.

  • I'm looking to but the iMac 27"  with 2TB Serial ATA Drive   256GB Solid State Drive .  Will time machine automatically back up both the hard drive and the solid-state drive?  Ae there any catches or things to be aware of?

    Will time machine on Lion, Mac OS 10.7, automatically back up both the internal hard drive and the internal solid-state drive both inside a 27" iMac?

    Also, you may find this of interest
    TM 101
    http://support.apple.com/kb/HT1427

  • If I move my iPhoto library to iDrive will Time Capsule still back it up?

    My disk space is getting tight and I'm considering moving my iPhoto library to an external drive.  I've been happily using Time Capsule for years for backup.  If I move iPhoto library to my external drive (not the one in Time Capsule) will Time Capsule stop backing it up?
    OS X 10.10.1
    TC Version 7.6.4

    Thanks, Linc, you are the greatest!
    So I moved my iTunes library to my external disk.  When I checked Time Machine's Excluded list it was not there.  Then I entered TM and saw that the library had been backed up from the external disk.  So all is well and apparently the OS guys stopped adding external drives to the Excluded list.

  • HT201250 Time Machine migrate to a new Macbook Pro and keeping Logic plugins

    So, I'm getting a new macbook pro (the latest 15" with the highest spec) and I'm looking to transfer everything using Time Machine, so that it's as if I'm still using the same machine. I use Logic 9 and I have hundreds of expensive plugins and I want to be sure that they will transfer across and I won't need to buy any of them again. I appreciate that some may have compatabiity issues, but that aside, will everything transfer as if I'm using the same machine and it will all be exactly the same?

    Hello there, micchaelfrombarnes.
    As per the article you were referred to us from, Time Machine should be able to restore your new MacBook  to be just like your current one:
    Mac Basics: Time Machine backs up your Mac
    http://support.apple.com/kb/HT1427
    Time Machine automatically backs up your entire Mac, including system files, applications, accounts, preferences, email messages, music, photos, movies, and documents.
    Additionally:
    Migrating a Time Machine backup to a new Mac
    When you get a new Mac, you can transfer all of your applications, files, settings, and other information from a Time Machine backup you've already made. When you start up your new Mac for the first time, the Setup Assistant asks you if you would like to restore from backup. If you've already set up your new Mac, you can use theMigration Assistant (located in Applications/Utilities) to do the same thing.
    After Migration Assistant completes the transfer and you select your existing Time Machine backup drive, you will be prompted with "Inherit Backup History". Once selected you will be able to continue to use your existing Time Machine backup on your new Mac.
    For a more detailed instruction on how to migrate the data from your Time Machine backup, refer to this article:
    OS X: How to migrate data from another Mac using Mavericks
    http://support.apple.com/kb/HT5872
    Thanks for reaching out to Apple Support Communities.
    Cheers,
    Pedro.

  • How to restore from time machine after HDD upgrade on macbook pro?

    Hi,
    I have recently bought a WD 2.5 inch SATA 750GB 7200RPM 16GB HDD and plan to use it on my macbook pro 13 inch 2.4ghz early 2011. I will leave the pysical installation part to Apple Service. I have my Time Machine backup on an external hard disk. So, once I get the upgraded macbook, what are the steps I should follow for a complete Time Machine restore? (Including the formatting on the new HDD).
    One more question; when I transfer my applications to the new HDD will Time Machine "remember" their activation codes and license information ?
    Thanks a lot.

    http://web.me.com/pondini/Time_Machine/14.html
    This has all the instructions for a complete restore, including how to format the disk. Pondini's site probably has anything else you want to know too.
    Good luck!

  • Time machine cannot backup my 4GB Macbook Pro to 500GB external drive

    I have used Time Machine to back up my MBP (4 GB 1333 MHz DDR3) for over a year. I back it up to a 500GB LaCie external drive that currently has ~272 GB of available space. I am no longer able to back up to this drive via TM due to insufficient space, per TM. I recently upgraded my OS to Yosemite OS X 10.10, but I'm not sure the backup problem coincides with my upgrade. I launch TM, the back up begins but times out due to unavailable space on my LaCie, which seems incorrect. I'd appreciate input/ideas on how to resolve this.

    See if the problem is answered here:
    http://pondini.org/TM/Troubleshooting.html
    Ciao.

  • Time Machine on Lacie to new Macbook Pro (Lion)

    My 6 year old Macbook Pro, running Snow Loepard died and I replaced it with a new model, running Lion.  I have the Time Machine backup from the old Macbook on a Lacie external hard drive.  The questions are; can the Time Machine files from the Lacie drive be put on the new Macbook?  Are the needed drivers installed in the new Macbook?  Are there any tricks?  Are there special cables needed?

    Have a read here How do I set up a new Mac from an old one, its backups, or a PC?
    As for the cables, since both MacBook Pros (the old and the new) have the same ports avaiable for connecting external harddisks -> USB and FireWire
    At worst you need a FireWire400-to-FireWire800 cable.
    Stefan

  • Time machine still backing up 4 days later...

    My wife found that while working at home Time Machine was causing pauses which were hindering her productivity. So she disabled it, desciding to manually do backups every week (she dosn't need hourly backups, heck, who does?). Some time passed and she skipped a backup, so two weeks later she sets the backup to go and it's moving painfully slow.
    After 48 hours 128megs of 64 gigs was copied. I checked Activity Monitor and the network traffic is moving at 30-50kb/sec output. We don't know whats going on, it's only been 2 weeks and she hasn't changed that much. She has no virus programs running, both the HD and Time Capsule are formatted Journled, Spotlight dosn't index the Time Machine (I've been reading through forum posts looking for answers) but none of these things have affected the backup speed.
    At this rate it'll be backing up for a month or more. 4 Days in she's just several hundred megs backed up. Help!

    * Set computer not to sleep for the initial backup and turn Spaces off while doing the initial full backup. Best to do this at the end of the day when you aren't using your computer and it's not competing for CPU.
    * If you have antivirus software, turn off during initial backup and check it's setting for regular backups. Initially every file was being scanned by virus software before allowing Time Machine to copy making for extremely long times to backup. Some have updated for Leopard to exclude it on Time Machine.
    * A corrupt file can cause Time Machine to fail. You have to exclude folders to find the culprit. Using Migrate can help identify the problem. Some reported even one .JPG corrupt file stopped Time Machine from completing.
    * if it's an Intel based machine, the partition needs to be GUID
    * Exclude VMWare Virtual Machines

Maybe you are looking for