On my Mac, I’ve got a 1 TB external USB drive to hold my Time Machine backups, and I’ve got a 360 GB drive to hold my media files. Unfortunately, I’ve ripped too many of my DVDs, and now my media drive is full. This past weekend, I saw that Best Buy had a 2.5 TB USB drive for $99! (Not like this post will look dated in a year or so! 🙂 ) So, needing more drive space, I decided to pick one up.
OK, now I was faced with a difficult choice: do I use my new drive to hold my media and choose not to back up those files, or do I move my backups to the new drive, move my media files to the 1 TB drive, and take my 360 GB drive off-line? Well, I’d really be uncomfortable not having backups of my songs and videos, so I decided on the latter. I’ve got a Garibaldi board just dying to use that small drive for a new installation of MIPS Debian Linux, so my plan was set.
I wasn’t quite sure how to set up a new drive for Time Machine and maintain all my existing backups (you never know when I’ll need a file from 2008 — now you know why my basement is as full of “archives” as it is!), so I did a quick google search and found the answer on Apple’s support site. Unfortunately, it didn’t quite work for me, but I was able to find other information to help me to resolve my problem, so I thought I’d document it in a blog post in case anyone else runs into this problem.
The Apple knowledge base article, “Mac 101: Time Machine”, had the information I was looking for. About three-quarters of the way down the page is a section entitled “Mac OS X v10.6: How to transfer your backups from your current hard drive to a new hard drive”. That sounds exactly what I wanted, and it almost worked for me, but just not quite.
Here’s what the page had to say:
If you upgrade to a new hard drive with a larger capacity, you may want to transfer your existing Time Machine backups to it before using it for regular backups. To keep your existing backups on your new, larger backup hard drive, follow these steps:
- Connect your new hard drive.
- In Disk Utility, make sure it has a GUID partition and is formatted as Mac OS Extended (Journaled). If needed, reformat the drive as Mac OS Extended with a GUID partition. If you do not know how, see the steps in this article. Note: Back up any data on the hard drive before you format it.
- Select the new drive’s icon on the desktop and choose Get Info from the File menu.
- Make sure “Ignore ownership on this volume” is not enabled.
- Open Time Machine preferences in System Preferences.
- Slide the Time Machine switch to Off.
- In Finder, double-click the current backup hard drive to open its Finder window.
- Drag the folder “Backups.backupd” to the new hard drive.
- Enter an administrator user name and password, then click OK to start the copying process. This may take some time to complete because all your backups will be copied.
- In Time Machine System Preferences click “Select Disk…”
- Select your new hard drive, then click “Use for Backup.”
Now, on your new hard drive, you will have all of your existing backups from the previous backup hard drive plus have more room for more new backups.
As I worked through the steps, my first problem came at step number 9. Because my original backup disk was formatted as “Mac OS Extended (Case-sensitive, Journaled)”, and because step 2 instructed me to create a non-case-sensitive partition, I got an error. That was easy to fix — just go back to step 2 and create a case-sensitive partition.
My next problem also occurred in Step 9. After dragging “Backups.backupd” from the old drive to the new one, it proceeded to start copying. It took a long, long time — 1 TB takes a long time to transfer! I left it overnight, and when I checked on it the next morning, the Mac Finder reported an error with error code -8003, and copied some but not all of the files. I googled for that error code, but wasn’t able to find anything. I was (temporarily) stumped. Back to Google! I needed to find some way to copy that directory from the old to the new disk.
After some searching, I found this page: Apple Tips: Using Disk Utility 7. Copying a Volume via the Restore tab. This is a really good page, and tells how to copy an entire volume from one disk to another. This is EXACTLY what I needed. I’ll leave the details to that page (screenshots and all!), but basically, it describes how to use OS X’s Disk Utility’s Restore function to copy the contents of one drive to another.
Following those instructions, I was able to copy my old backups over to my new disk, turn off my old backup drive, and start using my new drive, with no problems! If you’re going to do something similar, just replace Steps 7 to 9 on Apple’s page with the instructions on the Apple Tips page. For the curious, it took about 25 hours (!) to copy over that terabyte of data.
Next, of course, I’ll be moving my media files from my 360 GB drive over to my 1 TB drive (the old backup drive). Again, this will be easily accomplished using the Disk Utility. Thanks, James Pond, for your Apple Tip!