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Time Machine

 
Wikipedia: Time Machine (Apple software)
Time Machine
Time Machine.png
Timemachine gallery windowsquicklook20070611.jpg
Time Machine's retrieval interface.
Developer(s) Apple Inc.
Stable release 1.1 / August 28, 2009
Operating system Mac OS X Leopard & Mac OS X Snow Leopard
Type Backup software
License Proprietary
Website Time Machine

Time Machine is a backup utility developed by Apple. It is included with Mac OS X and was introduced with the 10.5 "Leopard" release of Mac OS X. The software is designed to work with the Time Capsule as well as a number of external USB hard drives.

Contents

Overview

Time Machine, like many backup utilities, creates incremental backups of files that can be restored at a later date.[1] It allows the user to restore the whole system, multiple files, or even a single file. It works within iWork, iLife, and several other compatible programs, making it possible to restore individual objects (e.g.: photos, contacts, calendar events) without leaving the application. According to Apple support personnel[who?]: "Time Machine is a backup utility, not an archival utility, it is not intended as offline storage. Time Machine captures the most recent state of your data on your disk. As snapshots age, they are prioritized progressively lower compared to your more recent ones."[citation needed]

For backups to a network drive, Time Machine allows the user to back up Apple Macintosh computers through Apple's AirPort networking, and supports backing up to normal network attached storage devices or servers such as the NETGEAR ReadyNAS without the use of hand-tuned configuration options, accessed through the Terminal. Apple's Time Capsule acts as a network storage device specifically for Time Machine backups, allowing both wired and wireless backups to the Time Capsule's internal 1TB or 2TB hard disk.

Time Machine saves the hourly backups for the past 24 hours, daily backups for the past month, and weekly backups for everything older than a month.

User interface

Time Machine's user interface when retrieving a file uses Apple's Core Animation API. Upon its launch, Time Machine "floats" the active Finder or application window from the user's desktop to a backdrop depicting a galaxy and star field. Behind the current active window are stacked windows, with each window representing a snapshot of how that folder or application looked on the given date and time in the past. When toggling through the previous snapshots, the stacked windows extend backwards, giving the impression of flying through a "time tunnel." While paging through these "windows from the past," a previous version of the data (or presently deleted data) may be retrieved.

How it works

Time Machine creates a folder on the external drive whose name contains the current date and time. It then copies the entire primary hard drive[1] (except for files and directories that it has specifically been told not to copy) to the folder. Every hour thereafter, it creates a new folder on the remote drive using the same naming scheme, but instead of making another complete copy of the primary hard drive, Time Machine instead only backs up files that changed and creates hard links to files that already exist on the remote drive, much as has traditionally been done using the Unix utility rsync. A user can browse these "versions" of the primary drive and see each file as if it were right where it was left.

Some other backup utilities save "deltas" for file changes, much like version control systems. Such an approach permits more frequent backups of minor changes but can often complicate the interaction with the backup volume. By contrast, it is possible to manually browse a Time Machine backup volume without using the Time Machine interface; the software's use of hard links makes each backup session appear to the user like a full backup, rather than an incremental or "delta" backup.

Time Machine has a graphical interface which allows the user to look at a single directory, and "take it back in time." Files appear and disappear, corresponding to moments when the user created, moved, or removed them in real life. When the file the user is looking for appears, the user can select it and press a "restore" button, which copies that version of the file to the primary hard drive. Time Machine also links to other Apple programs such as iPhoto, so photo albums can also "time travel," which is advantageous for users looking for missing pictures.

Apple system events record when each directory is modified on the hard drive. This means that instead of examining every file's modification date when it is activated, Time Machine only needs to scan the directories that changed for files to copy (the remainder being hard-linked). This differs from the approach taken by similar backup utilities rsync and FlyBack, which examine modification dates of all files during backup.

Time-Machine-aware applications

Some Mac OS X applications work with Time Machine, such as Finder, Mail, Address Book, iPhoto '08 or newer and GarageBand '08 or newer.

Requirements

Time Machine requires a non-booting hard-drive or partition to be connected to the computer or to a computer on the network, or to a network router such as an Apple AirPort Extreme, connected via a USB port and then configured to be shared with the computer running Time Machine (optional password protection may be used).[2] It can back up to internal hard-drives or partitions,[3] but it is recommended that you back up to an external hard drive connected by USB or FireWire the first time that you back up your Mac, for the speed of the backup will be much more steady and may be considerably faster than over a wireless connection that may have interference from other radio waves.[citation needed] According to Apple, it can only be backed up to network drives if they are being hosted by another computer running Leopard (including Leopard Server).[citation needed] Further, the volume needs to be formatted with the HFS Plus file system, with journaling enabled. If the hard drive uses a different file system type it will need to be reformatted before use, which will erase any existing data on the disk. It is possible, however, to back up to any file server supporting the Apple Filing Protocol by employing a HFS+ disk image on top of some other native filesystem (e.g. a Linux desktop server [4] or smaller NAS [5]).

See also

References

External links


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Wikipedia. This article is licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share-Alike License. It uses material from the Wikipedia article "Time Machine (Apple software)" Read more