Error 25 Creating Backup Disk Image
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enter a title. You can not post a blank message. Please type your message and try again. Kevin Crane Level 1 (5 points) Q: Time Machine - The backup
Backup Disk Image Could Not Be Created Error Null
disk image.. .could not be created (error 60) Using an external 2 the backup disk image could not be created error 1 TB disk for Time Machine for iMac and MacBook Pro, both running 10.8.2. One month ago, upgraded MacBook from the backup disk image could not be created error 22 10.5 to 10.8. Three weeks later, Macbook backups started failing. Ran TechTool on backup disk, found much corruption, reformatted it. iMac has always backed up to this disk just fine,
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but MacBook backups keep failing. LONG "Preparing to Backup" time, then suddenly "The disk you inserted was not readable by this computer - Initialize, Ignore or Retry" followed immediately by "The backup disk image "Volumes/Backup2TB-1/MacBookPro.sparsebundle" could not be created (error 60). When I check the TMP file on the backup disk, it's gotten to about 17.9 Mb before quitting.What could be getting
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in the way?Thanks. MacBook Pro, OS X Mountain Lion (10.8.2) Posted on Feb 1, 2013 1:35 PM I have this question too Close Q: Time Machine - The backup disk image.. .could not be created (error 60) All replies Helpful answers by Eric Root, Eric Root Feb 1, 2013 2:28 PM in response to Kevin Crane Level 9 (73,011 points) iTunes Feb 1, 2013 2:28 PM in response to Kevin Crane Maybe these will help:Time Machine TroubleshootingTime Machine Problems Helpful (0) Reply options Link to this post by Linc Davis, Linc Davis Feb 1, 2013 4:16 PM in response to Kevin Crane Level 10 (208,005 points) Applications Feb 1, 2013 4:16 PM in response to Kevin Crane Launch the Keychain Access application in any of the following ways:☞ Enter the first few letters of its name into a Spotlight search. Select it in the results (it should be at the top.)☞ In the Finder, select Go ▹ Utilities from the menu bar, or press the key combination shift-command-U. The application is in the folder that opens. ☞ Open LaunchPad. Click Utilities, t
images are not bootable backups. To create a bootable backup, you must back up to a hard drive that is attached directly to your Mac. We recommend that you only use a disk image if you are backing up to a network volume. A disk sparse bundle disk image vs sparse disk image image is a single file residing on your hard drive that contains the entire contents of another
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hard drive (except for the free space). When you want to access the contents of that filesystem, you double-click on the disk image to mount carbon copy cloner restore from sparse image the disk image as if it were an external drive attached to the machine. Carbon Copy Cloner leverages disk images to provide you the flexibility of storing several complete backups on a single shared external hard drive. Disk images also greatly https://discussions.apple.com/thread/4766173?start=0&tstart=0 improve the performance of backing up to network attached storage (NAS) devices, such as the Airport Extreme Base Station and Time Capsule. To back up to a new disk image: Choose your source volume from the Source selector Choose "New disk image..." from the Destination selector Provide a name and choose a location to save your disk image If you plan to back up to this disk image again in the future, set the image format to one of the read/write formats. https://bombich.com/kb/ccc4/backing-up-disk-image If you want a read-only disk image for archival purposes, set the image format to one of the read-only formats. To back up to an existing disk image, select "Choose disk image..." from the Destination selector and locate your disk image. Read/write "sparse" disk images A sparse disk image is a type of read/write disk image that grows as you copy files to it. In general, sparse disk images only consume as much space as the files they contain consume on disk, making this an ideal format for storing backups. Read/write "sparsebundle" disk images A sparse bundle disk image is similar to a sparseimage insofar as it grows as you add data to it, but it retains its data in many smaller files inside of a bundle rather than inside a single file. A sparse bundle may be desirable if the underlying filesystem upon which you save the disk image has a file size limitation (such as FAT32). Running out of space on a sparseimage or sparsebundle disk image CCC reported that the destination is full, but the underlying disk has plenty of free space. CCC initially sets the capacity of your disk image to the amount of free space on the underlying disk. If you have freed up some space on that disk since you created the disk image, you can manually expand the capacity of the destination disk image in Disk Utility. Choose Resize... from the Images menu in Disk Utility, select your destin
Top level of indirection About Me Index Catch CATCH Forum Appearances Login Subscribe level of indirection RSS Twitter « Stackoverflow DevDays London | http://www.levelofindirection.com/journal/2009/10/10/using-a-networked-drive-for-time-machine-backups-on-a-mac.html Main | Code formatting in C++ Part Two » SaturdayOct102009 Using a networked drive for Time Machine backups (on aMac) Saturday, October 10, 2009 at 8:13PM You'll find similar information https://www.cnet.com/news/time-machine-backup-disk-image-could-not-be-created/ to this around the web, but I find it fiddly enough to piece together reliably, and I need it often enough, that I thought I'd blog about it. That way backup disk it at least gives me a single place to look. Maybe it will help others too. Much of the specifcs, especially the hdiutil command line and the ifconfig trick, I sourced from this thread in the ReadyNAS forums. Note that the advice is by no means specific to ReadyNAS drives (I have a Thecus NAS myself). Many thanks to btaroli in backup disk image that thread for the insight. Time Machine Time Machine is Apple's easy-to-use backup system, baked into OS X (as of Leopard). Unfortunately it doesn't allow you to back-up to a networked drive out of the box. Enabling this ability is pretty easy. Early on there were some reliability issues - which were largely due to the fact that Time Machine created a disk image (more specifically, a sparse bundle) on the network drive, and this was prone to corruption if the network connection was disrupted during a backup. I don't know if all the issues here have been entirely resolved now, but it does seem more reliable. Apple's own Time Capsule, which has been specifically designed to work with Time Machine, uses this same method, so it is no longer an entirely unsupported technique. Enabling Time Machine for network drives So how do you enable backing up to network drives? Open a terminal window and paste the following in (then hit return, of course): defaults write com.apple.systempreferences TMShowUnsupportedNetworkVolumes 1 Mounted network drives will then show up in the list
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