AMITIAE - Friday 7 September 2012
System Preferences in OS X 10.8, Mountain Lion: Time Machine |
|
By Graham K. Rogers
System Preferences has seen a fair number of changes with the update to OS X 10.8, Mountain Lion. Some of these are less evident than others. The Time Machine preferences panel has received a number of changes, but these are mainly under the surface and there are differences in the way the feature now operates.
Setting Up (1)When Time Machine is first opened on a new installation there are two parts to the panel displayed: Off/On to the left below a large Time Machine icon; and the main information display area. Initially, the larger part of the panel will have a Time Machine disk icon above a button marked Select Backup Disk.
Changing Off to On (or using the Select button) brings down a panel in which a user may highlight a suitable disk for backups to use. Initially this also has an icon for Time Capsule -- Apple's hard disk and Wi-Fi combination. Any hard disk attached will also become visible.
While Time Capsule is ready to run, a hard disk purchased from a store may need to be partitioned. This may be done beforehand in Disk Utility (in Applications > Utilities) and choosing the Partition tab. Once the size of the partition (or partitions) is decided, press the Options button and choose Apple Partition Map or GUID. However, when experimenting with a new disk (see below) that had a partition in the FAT 32 format, Time Machine set this up for me without the need for my intervention. The system recognizes any disk made available and the main part of the panel changes. The disk icon is moved to the left and details of the disk used are displayed: Name, Available (disk space), Oldest Backup, Latest Backup and Next backup. If backing up, a progress bar is displayed.
Setting Up (2)The main panel also has two buttons which open further panels: Select Disk and Options (see below). The Select Disk panel can be used to add a second disk and is almost identical to the original "Select Disk" panel when Time Machine is first set up.
[This was a warning that the 500 GB disk is too small and I priced a 1 TB disk the next afternoon.]
Backing UpThe Oldest Backup will change as the disk is filled and weekly backups will be deleted. The Latest is the last time the disk was backed up. "Next" displays the time when the next backup is scheduled. If a disk is not connected, the panel shows that the next backup will occur when a disk is available.The first backup takes a long time. If there is more than one partition on the external disk, the transfer may be slowed if Spotlight indexes the others. Spotlight preferences can be used to drag the partition icon to the "Privacy" panel. Indexing will stop.
When the disk is available, the information ("When disk is connected") changes to a progress bar during a backup. Sometimes there will be a striped bar showing, "Preparing backup." This may be for a long time if there has been a problem or a gap in backing up: patience is the key here. To force a backup, we can use the Backup Now item in the Dock or the menu bar icon menu. If a backup fails, information appears in red, with the letter i in a red circle alongside. The "i" can be clicked to reveal more information about the problem. Trying again (or perhaps a restart if this is persistent) will usually clear the problem.
Pressing + opens a Finder window (by default mine opened in Applications). There are two options here: Cancel and Exclude (default). At the bottom of that window is a checkbox marked, "Show invisible items". Two checkboxes at the bottom of the "Exclude" panel are marked Back up while on battery power (not on desktop computers); and Notify after old backups are deleted. As the disk becomes filled, so the earliest backup will be removed to make room for the current ones. This may also be considered a warning that it is time to obtain a new disk.
RestoringTo return to a previous version of a file or folder, we access Time Machine via the Dock (or the menubar) icon. This brings up the "Infinity" window and we may select a Finder location from the panel and a time: either by using the control to the right, or by clicking on the receding panels. When a file is located we may click on Restore and the file will be moved to its earlier location. If a file of the same name is already there, we are given the option to rename the file to be restored, or to save it elsewhere.This feature works best when a disk is attached, but it will function up to a point without. In testing (7 September) I was able to return to 31 August with no Time Machine disk attached. Even this can be a lifesaver, for example with a version of a file, or an item that was accidentally put in the Trash,
This may also be done on a computer that already has the system. Time Machine will replace all data, including settings and accounts. There are several warnings before this takes place. A warning appears to inform us that taking this step will replace all the contents of the selected volume. Note: this does mean that everything previously on the disk will be lost during the replacement process. Pressing Continue brings up a panel that shows any suitable disks available. To effect the backup, if not already in use, the disk that contains the Time Machine backup can be attached at this time. When the disk is recognized and highlighted, pressing Continue gives a list of available backups. A full restore is likely to take a considerable time. Attaching a power supply is strongly suggested. When the process is complete the computer will restart with the restored system.
NotesDespite the availability of Time Machine and a number of other backup solutions, I am often reminded that people do not regard this as a necessary part of everyday computing. I have had a burglary, two disk failures (different computers and 3 years apart) and in all but the first, I was able to recover. In the first disk failure, Time Machine helped me switch from a 15" to a 13" MacBook Pro and then when the repair was effected, back to the 15" -- I hardly missed a beat and lost no data.Others have been less fortunate and there are frequent tales of stolen or lost computers (same thing really), broken machines, files over-written, accidental deletions and other causes of lost data. A backup plan is essential.
Graham K. Rogers teaches at the Faculty of Engineering, Mahidol University in Thailand. He wrote in the Bangkok Post, Database supplement on IT subjects. For the last seven years of Database he wrote a column on Apple and Macs. |
|
For further information, e-mail to