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Time Machine repeatedly "must create new back up"

I am using Yosemite 10.10.3 and have my Time Machine backups on an Apple Time Capsule connected to my computer wirelessly. Time Machine is repeatedly doing new backups. As soon as one is finished another "must" be created.


Each time, the process is slow and interferes with the speed of other wireless functions.


Each time, I lose all my history of backups.


I saw this exact question that was posted in this forum in 2012 but never answered by anyone. Please, someone, find and answer this one.


Thanks.

MacBook Pro (Retina, 13-inch, Mid 2014), OS X Yosemite (10.10.3)

Posted on Apr 23, 2015 9:30 AM

Reply
5 replies

Apr 23, 2015 11:35 AM in response to b10doc

Please look over this support document for information about this perplexing issue. The article is a bit out of date, but the general information is good.


Unfortunately, the usual root cause is a defective hard drive on the Time Capsule.


Sometimes, erasing the hard drive and starting over will help. If you continue to experience the same issue after erasing the Time Capsule drive, the Time Capsule hard drive is physically damaged, and the Time Capsule will need to be replaced.


http://pondini.org/TM/C13.html

Apr 23, 2015 1:31 PM in response to b10doc

The reliability of Time Machine in Yosemite is such that I strongly recommend to people to have a fall back position.. eg Carbon Copy Cloner.


Yosemite has big networking issues.. and that adds extra confusion to the backup when it is done to network drive.. if you want TM to make better backups it can also be worthwhile using USB local disk.. TM is simply better behaved when it gets out of the network area.

Apr 23, 2015 3:18 PM in response to LaPastenague

You're probably right about local USB. But the very reason I bought the Time Capsule was that I had been backing up every computer to local drives (multiple copies with off-site storage), and Apple advertised that they could be backed up wirelessly, much easier and less costly than with my old ways. Since all three of my computers are MacBook Pros, it seemed like what I should do -- take the advice of Apple.

Apr 23, 2015 4:07 PM in response to b10doc

Since all three of my computers are MacBook Pros, it seemed like what I should do -- take the advice of Apple.

In a perfect world.. Apple would make an OS without bugs..


Since they do make OS with big bugs.. and getting bigger.. hence an imperfect world.. you are usually better following your gut, than Apple's advice.


Carbon Copy Cloner.. which I push because I use it without any renumeration.. (I pay the license fee even).. but doubtless others are also good, can do bootable clone to a USB local drive (but only one per disk).. let me suggest that is excellent and the fastest way out of trouble.. however it is super flexible and can do back to TC on the network.. even in a sparsebundle.. It is based on rsync which has a long linux pedigree and works very well.


The issue you then have is keeping the TC available on a Yosemite computer.. here is my starting list of what is involved in doing that.


Start from a factory reset. No files are lost on the hard disk doing this.

Factory reset universal

Power off the TC.. ie pull the power cord or power off at the wall.. wait 10sec.. hold in the reset button.. be gentle.. power on again still holding in reset.. and keep holding it in for another 10sec. You may need some help as it is hard to both hold in reset and apply power. It will show success by rapidly blinking the front led. Release the reset.. and wait a couple of min for the TC to reset and come back with factory settings. If the front LED doesn’t blink rapidly you missed it and simply try again. The reset is fairly fragile in these.. press it so you feel it just click and no more.. I have seen people bend the lever or even break it. I use a toothpick as tool.

N.B. None of your files on the hard disk of the TC are deleted.. this simply clears out the router settings of the TC.


Setup the TC again.


Then redo the setup from the computer with Yosemite.

1. Use very short names.. NOT APPLE RECOMMENDED names. No spaces and pure alphanumerics.

eg TCgen5 for basestation and and TCwifi wireless name.



If the issue is wireless use TC24ghz and TC5ghz with fixed channels as this also seems to help stop the nonsense. But this can be tried in the second round. ie plan on a first and second round of changes to fix this.. hopefully.. I will point out other steps that can be round2.


2. Use all passwords that also comply with 1. but can be a bit longer. ie 8-20 characters mixed case and numbers.. no non-alphanumerics.


3. If the TC is main router you can skip this point. This is only an issue when the TC is bridged.

Ensure the TC always takes the same IP address.. you will need to do this on the main router using dhcp reservation.. or a bit more complex setup using static IP in the TC. But this is important.. having IP drift all over the place when Yosemite cannot remember its own name for 5 min after a reboot makes for poor networking.


4. Check your share name on the computer is not changing.. make sure it also complies with the above.. short no spaces and pure alphanumeric.. but this change will mess up your TM backup.. so be prepared to do a new full backup. Sorry.. keep this one for second round if you want to avoid a new backup.


5. Mount the TC disk in the computer manually.


In Finder, Go, Connect to server from the top menu,

Type in SMB://192.168.0.254 (or whatever the TC ip is which you have now made static. As a router by default it is 10.0.1.1 and I encourage people to stick with that unless you know what you are doing).


You can use name.. SMB://TCgen5.local where you replace TCgen5 with your TC name.. local is the default domain of the TC and doesn't change.

However names are not so easy as IP address.. nor as reliable. At least not in Yosemite they aren't. The domain can also be an issue if you are not plugged or wireless directly to the TC.


6. Make sure IPv6 is set to link-local only in the computer. For example wireless open the network preferences, wireless and advanced / TCP/IP.. and fix the IPv6. to link-local only. Do the same for ethernet if you use it.

User uploaded file





There is a lot more jiggery pokery you can try but the above is a good start.. if you find it still unreliable.. don't be surprised.

You might need to do some more work on the computer itself. eg Reset the PRAM.. has helped some people. Clean install of the OS is also helpful if you upgrade installed.


Tell us how you go.



Someone posted a solution.. See this thread.


Macbook can't find Time Capsule anymore


Start from the bottom and work up.. I have a list of good network practice changes but I have avoided Yosemites bug heaven.



Yosemite has serious DNS bug in the networking application.. here is the lets say more arcane method of fixing it by doing a network transplant from mavericks.


http://arstechnica.com/apple/2015/01/why-dns-in-os-x-10-10-is-broken-and-what-yo u-can-do-to-fix-it/

Time Machine repeatedly "must create new back up"

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