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Time Machine completed a verification of your backups. To improve reliability, Time Machine must create a new backup for you.

This is the error I am receiving.


Time Machine completed a verification of your backups. To improve reliability, Time Machine must create a new backup for you.


Click Start New Backup to create a new backup. This will remove your existing backup history. This could take several hours.

Click Back Up Later to be reminded tomorrow. Time Machine won’t perform backups during this time.



Can anyone tell me why? The last back up was July24th. I am afraid to start a new back up if I have to erase everything first.

My Mac OS X version is 10.7.4


Need help with this, as I am very confused why it stopped working.

Time Capsule 802.11n (4th Gen), Mac OS X (10.7.4)

Posted on Aug 14, 2012 6:41 AM

Reply
351 replies

Jun 30, 2016 6:40 AM in response to coocooforcocoapuffs

Just say yes and let TM do it's thing. If you are lucky, the backup will be restored with all previous backups in place. If you are unlucky, TM will just start over. That is just the way it is with TM


Worst advice ever. Seriously. No doubt that was offered with a hefty degree of sarcasm. If so, kudos.


If just saying yes was the answer there would not be 12 pages+ of comments on this issue. People like having history. The whole point of Time Machine is history.


Starting over afresh (and the default message everyone is getting from TM on this thread states that it wipes everything and starts over) is the least successful outcome possible. This is a glitch. An error. A bug and a gremlin. And it has been around for years.


There has to be a reason. And therefore a solution.

Jul 11, 2016 6:05 AM in response to July7Kiss1995

Add my name to the list.


Running Airport Extreme sw 7.7.7 and OS X 10.11.5


"Time Machine completed a verification of your backups. To improve reliability, Time Machine must create a new backup for you"


Happens about every month or two. Very frustrating. If it's a failing hard disk, just tell me and I will get it replaced.


APPLE - What is causing this error????

Jul 17, 2016 5:06 PM in response to bullfrogII

Doubt it's a failing hard disc..... I completed (overnight) my first TM backup on my brand new Synology and was greeted by this error when I got up this morning.


Very frustrating because I went for a NAS to allow the whole family to back up their devices in a central location that was self-protected. I didn't go for Drobo (my first choice) because I liked the idea of a "personal cloud".


I'm beginning to think I've wasted my money 😢

Jul 17, 2016 5:37 PM in response to Csound1

This is just not correct. You might want to check the facts in this Apple Support document.


Backup disks you can use with Time Machine - Apple Support

You can use Time Machine with a drive connected to your Mac, a drive built into or connected to a Time Capsule, or a supported network volume.

Time Machine can back up the data on your Mac to these backup disks:

  • An external USB, Thunderbolt, or FireWire drive connected to your Mac
  • An AirPort Time Capsule's built-in drive (any model)
  • An external USB drive connected to an AirPort Time Capsule (any model) or AirPort Extreme (802.11ac model only)
  • Network volumes connected using Apple File Protocol (AFP)


In other words, if the NAS connects using AFP, Time Machine backups are supported.

Jul 17, 2016 5:41 PM in response to Csound1

NAS is not supported by Time Machine (unless it is a TC by Apple).

TM supports network backup to any suitable device. That includes a NAS that has AFP and suitable extensions. The cheapie NAS do have issues.. eg My Cloud.. But any of the better NAS support Time Machine..


I am running synology and it has been stable since Nov 2014 when I started it.. (better than most TC I have owned) and I have backed up my main computer continually over that time plus a few others on ad hoc basis. Not a moments trouble.


Very frustrating because I went for a NAS to allow the whole family to back up their devices in a central location that was self-protected. I didn't go for Drobo (my first choice) because I liked the idea of a "personal cloud".


I'm beginning to think I've wasted my money

It does depend on what you bought of course. But remember Time Machine is not the only show in town. It has always had issues with network drives.. and that includes Time Capsules.. TM is much better suited to a local disk.


But you can buy a single license for Carbon Copy Cloner and it is allowed to be used on all the computers in your household. It has a lot better fault tolerance than TM and is more reliable in my experience. Chronosync is a also well recommended although I haven't tried it.

I find running both CCC to a local drive so I have a bootable clone.. allowing instant fix for a computer with a bad drive .. plus TM on some network location works really well.

Jul 17, 2016 6:48 PM in response to Duchy777

Duchy777 wrote:


Thanks for the advice LP. I might just use Cloud Station (that comes with the Synology) ..... but not sure if that keeps copies of accidentally deleted files. I'll look at the others you mentioned.

Even Time Machine does not keep copies of deleted files.. accidentally or otherwise.


Once a file is deleted from the Mac hard disk it will be deleted from the backup.. what you don't know is when.


People often assume TM works as a archive store.. but in actual fact it is far more complicated than that.


Even though Pondini KB is rather out of date it is still relevant.


http://pondini.org/TM/Home.html


The how TM works is still good for people to understand..


And his discussion of what happens when you delete files in FAQ .. See Q12, Q20

http://pondini.org/TM/FAQ.html


CCC can in fact archive deleted files on the source that are on the destination.


See https://bombich.com/kb/ccc3/advanced-settings


Of course you need to understand how it works to get the settings right. But most things work well if you read the warnings and messages.. (like as if??)

Jul 17, 2016 6:56 PM in response to Csound1

I did read this (from Pondini) which seems to disagree.


The Local and Network Drives mentioned above are essentially "dumb receivers" -- they use the File System and other features of OSX on your Mac, at the direction of your Mac.

But a NAS drive (Network Attached Storage, also called a network drive) has its own proprietary operating system (it's actually a small special-purpose computer), and is not under the direct control of your Mac.

You can't format or partition it via Disk Utility on your Mac, and you might not be able to repair your backups that way, either. You must use whatever utilities are provided by the maker of the NAS. And, of course, they're different for each maker, and sometimes for different hardware or software from the same maker. That's why there are no setup instructions for them here; those are specific to the NAS.

These are great for the purposes they were designed for, but that rarely includes working with Time Machine -- it has unique, complex requirements; working with it seems to be an "add-on" feature that some makers may not get quite right. Most NASs use the SMB communications protocol to talk to Windows and Macs. But Time Machine requires a different protocol, AFP file sharing.

Time Machine can back up to some NAS drives, but only those that meet the criteria specified in this Apple article: Disks that can be used with Time Machine. The technical details of one part are documented in Time Machine Network Interface Specification. Especially if the error detection, correction, and notification in those specifications aren't handled exactly right by the NAS, it may work, or seem to work, for a while, but eventually fail or corrupt the backups.

Be very careful here: just because a 3rd-party vendor claims to support Time Machine doesn't necessarily mean that Apple supports that configuration, or that it will work reliably in all circumstances (many won't).Before buying one of these, carefully investigate the following:

  1. If you’re planning to use the NAS for other data, in addition to your Time Machine backups, be sure you can partition it (or set up separate "shares" or "accounts" via the NAS, since you can’t with Apple’s Disk Utility), or somehow limit the amount of space the backups can use. Otherwise the backups will, eventually, use all the available empty space, possibly leading to conflicts. See question #3 for details.
  2. Look at the setup instructions. If there’s any mention of a Terminal command involving "unsupported devices," or installation of drivers or kernel extensions to fool Time Machine into thinking it’s a locally-connected drive, use caution. These may prevent you from doing a full system restore to a new or replaced internal hard drive. This is because OSX doesn’t do a full system restore; it’s done by booting up from your Recovery HD (Lion and later) or OSX Install disc (Snow Leopard or Leopard) and using the the Installer utility on it. That utility won’t have those additions, and you can't add them to it; thus it may not be able to connect to your backups when you need them the most. (See question #14 for details on doing a full restore.)
  3. Consider whether the maker is reputable and likely to continue supporting the NAS for as long as you'll be using it. If Apple changes requirements, will the maker update the NAS so it will work with the new version of OSX? Many that worked on Snow Leopard didn't work on Lion without such updates. A few weren't updated for quite a while, and some never were.


Each NAS maker has its own requirements, limitations, and/or setup procedures. Some require special drivers, passwords, etc. All these things can make recovery, especially a full restore after your Mac's startup drive fails, very difficult. Adding complexity is rarely a good thing.


And when there's trouble, is it your Mac or the NAS? It may be hard to tell, and the support folks will tend to point the finger at each other. Apple can't help much, as they don't have the 3rd-party hardware, or training, or experience, with them. Unless you're technically-proficient, think long and hard about how you'll recover if there's a problem.

Time Machine completed a verification of your backups. To improve reliability, Time Machine must create a new backup for you.

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