Usually it's easiest to restore a single item from your backup by simply dragging it from the backup volume to your original source volume. Sometimes, though, it's not that easy. Suppose, for example, that you have inadvertently deleted all of your Safari bookmarks. The Safari Bookmarks file is stored in a hidden folder within your home directory, and the fact that this folder, and the folder on the backup volume are both hidden makes accessing that file in the Finder quite difficult. The steps below demonstrate how to restore this item from your Carbon Copy Cloner backup volume.
Última actualización por 10 October 2014
Hay muchos motivos para realizar un clon exacto de su disco duro. Imagine que su portátil está estropeado y que debe enviarlo al servicio técnico. Mientras tanto, no solo tiene que pedir prestado otro ordenador mientras dure la reparación, sino que tampoco dispone de sus datos, sus aplicaciones y su entorno de trabajo tal y como estaban en su ordenador. Esta falta de organización puede resultar muy frustrante y perjudicial para su productividad.
Última actualización por 28 October 2016
Time Capsule y otros dispositivos de almacenamiento en red se están haciendo muy populares para disponer de almacenamiento en una «nube personal». Como es natural, este tipo de almacenamiento es muy interesante para guardar copias de seguridad. La idea de guardar una copia de seguridad de todas sus cosas sin tener que conectar un solo cable resulta muy atractiva.
Última actualización por 28 October 2016
Create a new task
Click on the New Task button in the toolbar to create a new task, then type in a name for the new task.
Select a source volume
Click on the Source selector button, then choose the volume that you want to copy files from.
Última actualización por 20 August 2014
Backing up multiple volumes or multiple Macs to a single hard drive can be a messy proposition. If you back up each source volume to the same destination volume without some pre-planning, data from each source volume will be merged in a heap on the backup volume. Additionally, your tasks will archive or delete each other's backed up content. Carbon Copy Cloner can solve this problem! We lay out a few different scenarios and solutions below.
Última actualización por 22 March 2017
Generally, yes. Performance will be affected during the backup task (especially the first one) as CCC reads the entire source volume and writes to the destination volume. If your work is "disk bound" — that is your applications are reading or writing to either the source or destination, then you'll notice a performance hit. If you're just reading email or writing a document, then you probably won't notice the performance hit.
Última actualización por 6 March 2017
CCC always examines the files on the destination to determine if they already match those on the source. If you have a volume that is virtually identical to your source, CCC will copy only the items that are different between the two volumes.
Última actualización por 6 March 2017
No, CCC will exclude the Backups.backupdb folder during a backup task because Time Machine backup folders contains Apple-proprietary filesystem devices. Apple's recommended procedure for copying a Time Machine volume is documented in this Apple Kbase article.
Última actualización por 6 March 2017