Looks like no one’s replied in a while. To start the conversation again, simply ask a new question.

Time machine backups very, very slow

I've upgraded to El Capitan a few days ago. Launched Time Machine to do a 16 GB backup on Friday at 4pm and its STILL backing up. Only 7 GB backed up. Its been 26 hours. ***!!! This is ridiculous! I'm using a D-Link Sharecenter as a NAS drive for my backups. Firmware is up to date. Using a WiFi connection. Ethernet is just as slow. I've noticed slower backups since Yosemite OSX. Has anybody else had issues? Should I stop the backup, restart my iMac? Any suggestions would be great.

iMac (21.5-inch Mid 2011), OS X El Capitan (10.11)

Posted on Oct 10, 2015 3:27 PM

Reply
83 replies

Jun 19, 2016 7:03 PM in response to andrewlikesthesun

I've been a Mac user for 30 years. I used to trust Time Capsule backups until Mavericks, Yosemite and now El Capitan is just not doing it's job properly. I have done many installs, backups and restores from Time machine prior to these but somehow when Mavericks came along, that feature is now not working for me. I've tried the advice on this thread and many threads. I have 2 time capsules and 2 buffalo NAS units which should give an idea of how highly i treat backing up. My 2010 MBP has a 2 terabyte HD and a 500gb SSD. And that i believe is what may have broken time machine. Now I use SuperDuper to just clone my drives.


Even now, backups are so abysmally slow on Time capsule, I'm not sure why I bother. My machines are linked via gigabit Ethernet so one would think it should be fast.


Anyway just wanted to get this out.

Aug 3, 2016 2:08 PM in response to LittleBigFox

Thanks for the tip regarding menumeter. I would never have guessed without this hint.

This was also the problem for me:

Backup on USB and on Time Capsule. On USB no big deal. But TC was basically unusable (after three weeks, were I was gone and installed menumeters) It tried to back up 32GB and needed many hours for simply start up and even when it started, it needed hours per 100MB.

After removing menumeters it is reasonably fast (nowhere close to USB, but TC was never really that fast..)

So, I am fine now.

Sep 5, 2016 11:16 PM in response to KlausS1

Same problem here battling for months with both my iMac and macbook pro after upgrade to El Capitan. I'm using Synology as storage. Tried disabling and/or removing MenuMeter and various other solutions found on internet but to no avail.

What cured was:

Part of the issue is that low priority input/output-operations (I/O) now seems to get throttled heavily. You can check it via Terminal (can be found via Spotlight ⌘Space and entering terminal) then entering at the bash prompt:



Code: Select all

fs_usage backupd

and look for the THROTTLED entries. If you see them, the backup is throttled.


So if you have a ton of files, just the time it takes to do the I/O takes forever, even if the files are small (because it performs a bunch more I/O operations around xattrs etc. than it used to).


Go to a Terminal and enter:


Code: Select all

sudo sysctl debug.lowpri_throttle_enabled=0



For me, this sped up TimeMachine backup from "calculating estimated time after already backing up 2,6 GB after 6 hours (!!) to doing a complete backup of my Mac Pro drive (489GB) in useful 13 hours.


It's also a good idea to re-enable the throttling after your backup finished successfully with the following command



Code: Select all

sudo sysctl debug.lowpri_throttle_enabled=1

Sep 19, 2016 1:26 PM in response to shawnfr

I am also running 10.11.6 on an iMac. Setting throttling =0 seems to have helped with backup time. I am going to run a much larger backup on my MacBook Pro next to confirm.


It was suggested that I re-enable throttling after the backup is complete. My concern is - I don't want to have to turn it off and on for every backup. This doesn't seem like a workable permanent solution.


Any suggestions on a more permanent solution? Thank you.

Sep 20, 2016 11:11 AM in response to steve.mccormick2

steve.mccormick2 wrote:


John, So the answer is buy a Time Capsule?


Not necessarily. Read the replies from the more experienced participants of this site (of which there are exactly two). There is no need to add to anything already written, especially since they wrote it repeatedly.


"More experienced participants" tend to lose interest in a Discussion when they realize they're wasting their time. The more experienced they are, the faster they come to that realization.


Writing an effective Apple Support Communities question

Sep 21, 2016 7:39 PM in response to John Galt

John,


I did go back and read Linc's message a couple times.


If you want network backup, use as the destination either an Apple Time Capsule or an external storage device connected to another Mac or to an 802.11ac AirPort base station. Only the 802.11ac base stations support Time Machine, not any older model.

So I buy a Time Capsule, or another Mac, or an AirPort base station. To replace something that has worked flawlessly for several years.

Sorry to waste your time. I thought the purpose of this forum was for less experienced users to reach out to more experienced folks for help.

Time machine backups very, very slow

Welcome to Apple Support Community
A forum where Apple customers help each other with their products. Get started with your Apple ID.