Show Library Folder Mac Time Machine Backup

07.04.2020by
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2020-4-4  Time Machine is a great, convenient backup tool, but it doesn't always work perfectly. Fortunately, the most common problems have relatively straight-forward solutions. Here are some fixes for common problems with macOS Time Machine. Time Machine is a built-in backup solution for macOS, and comes standard on every Mac. It automatically makes backups of your Mac onto an external drive.

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Photos User Guide

If you back up your Mac with Time Machine, you can easily restore a photo library to its state when the last backup was performed.

Note: If you use iCloud Photos and you restore the System Photo Library from a Time Machine backup, any photos you’ve deleted since the last Time Machine backup are restored to your Mac and uploaded to iCloud again. If you chose to optimize Mac storage, Time Machine may not have a backup of your originals. However, the originals are stored in iCloud.

  1. If the Photos app on your Mac is open, choose Photos > Quit Photos.

  2. Click the Time Machine icon in the menu bar and choose Enter Time Machine, or choose the Apple menu > System Preferences, then click Time Machine.

    Time Machine opens and shows your available backups.

  3. Click the date of your last backup, navigate to the backup of your photo library, then click to select it. Delete outlook message attachments mac library folder.

  4. Click Restore.

    Depending on the size of your library, it may take some time for your library to be restored. When you next open Photos, you should be able to use your Photos library as it was when last backed up.

See alsoCreate additional photo libraries in Photos on MacBack up the library in Photos on MacRepair your library in Photos on MacChange where your files are stored in Photos on Mac

If you got a new Mac and decided to start over from scratch instead of using a Time Machine backup, you may have come across a moment when you realize that there are a few files or applications sitting in your old Mac (or in an old Mac Time Machine backup) that you need. You can get those files onto your new Mac without having to restore the entire backup. Here's how.

First thing's first: Back up your Mac.. both of them

If you still have your old Mac, go ahead and do a fresh backup with Time Machine before recovering files on your new Mac. It might seem redundant, but the file you need may not have been backed up before you switched over. A fresh backup never hurt anyone.

You should also run a quick backup on your new Mac for safety sake. There's no need to worry about making changes. If something goes wrong, you can always recover from a backup.

If you don't have your old Mac, just use the latest backup on file on with Time Machine on your external hard drive.

How to recover specific files from your old Mac on your new Mac

Here's the easy part. Just connect the external hard drive that you were storing your old Mac's Time Machine backups on. If you were using the same external hard drive for you old and new Mac, you've already completed the first step!

In another Finder window, find your library. Drag your library to its new location on the external drive. The default location is Users username Pictures, and it's named Photos Library. If you see an error, select your external drive's icon in the Finder, then choose File Get Info. Switch photos library mac.

  1. Double-click on the Time Machine external hard drive you connected that was used to back up your old Mac.
  2. Double-click on the Backups.backupdb folder.
  3. Double-click on your old Mac folder.

  4. Double-click on Latest. It should be the last file on the list.
  5. Double-click on Macintosh HD.

  6. Select the folder that stores the files you want to recover, like Applications, Library, System, or Users.
  7. Drag the file to your desktop to make a copy of it.
  8. Enter your User account password if prompted.

    The new file will now be on your new Mac and you can use it as if it had always been there.

How to recover files from another Mac when you're using a NAS

If you're on a network attached storage (NAS) hard drive to save and store backups, you may have noticed that you're having a difficult time accessing files from your old Mac on the hard drive. I don't personally use a NAS, and so have not been able to test this method, but StackExchange user bofolsen noted that you can access restricted NAS file on your new computer after you create a new User with the same login credentials as the one you used with your old Mac.

  1. Create a new user account on your Mac. This new user account should have the same name and password as your old Mac.
  2. Log in to the new user account.
  3. Open your Time Machine folder using Finder.
  4. Double-click on the Backups.backupdb folder.
  5. Double-click on your old Mac folder.

  6. Double-click on Latest. It should be the last file on the list.
  7. Double-click on Macintosh HD.

  8. Select the folder that stores the files you want to recover, like Applications, Library, System, or Users.
  9. Drag the file to your desktop to make a copy of it.
  10. Enter your user account password. Remember, this should be the same user account information that you used with your old Mac.

I haven't personally verified these steps since I don't use a NAS for my backup solution but if you try it, let me know how it works.

Any questions?

Do you have any questions about how to recover specific files from your old Mac on your new one using Time Machine? Put them in the comments and we'll help you out.

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