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McCarron 03-22-2006 04:23 PM

Problems on MacBook Pro
 
I have been having some issues with SuperDuper! on my MacBook Pro. I tried to do a backup of just my user files, twice actually, with no success. And I was using the latest binary which it said was Universal, but never checked myself after downloading.

The first time it just sat there at the "Preparing to copy files" stage for over 15-20 minutes doing nothing. The logs showed no errors and nothing that had been holding the backup from beginning to copy files. I quit it and moved the disc image, which was empty, into the trash.

The second time the same thing happened, so I quit the program in frustration. I moved the image to the Trash and went back to work on my Windows workstation at work. I was going to come out there to post about my problems later this evening but then the oddest thing happened. I was given a message on the Mac saying the boot drive is running out of space, on inspection I found 0kb free. I previously had 40gb free out of 90gb. So I tried to empty my trash and it told me that the disc image was in use. It appears that somehow SuperDuper just kept writing data to the dmg and I had no way to tell anything since the program was no longer running.

My user folder (12gb) is all that was being backed up, so no way this should have caused me to run out of space. Any ideas?

dnanian 03-22-2006 04:30 PM

I don't know where your image was stored, but it certainly sounds like the transport for the image was failing (or an AntiVirus program was writing to your drive). I can't see how we could be writing to an image when we weren't running, though.

Then, restart your Mac. Make sure no other drive are attached, use the "Go To Folder" command in Finder to navigate to /Volumes. In there, check to see if there are any folders with the name of drives other than your startup volume. If so, delete them, then empty your trash.

Hopefully that'll take care of it.

As far as taking extra space, it's possible that something was writing very actively to a file on your drive. Please see the Troubleshooting section of the User's Guide for an explanation of how this can happen.

(Are you using FileVault?)

McCarron 03-22-2006 04:40 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by dnanian
As far as taking extra space, it's possible that something was writing very actively to a file on your drive. Please see the Troubleshooting section of the User's Guide for an explanation of how this can happen.

(Are you using FileVault?)

Yes I am using FileVault, is that an issue? I just tried to turn it off, thinking it may not backup files correctly if left on, but didn't have enough room to do so. (It told me it needed 1k more, after deleting a few files of a few 100 mb it still needed 1k more).

It's right now running trying to recover lost disk space due to FileVault. I'll check for extra Volumes on it's completion.

dnanian 03-22-2006 04:55 PM

That's definitely an issue. First, it means that your whole FileVault volume will be copied any time you make user files changes. Also, as indicated in the User's Guide, you need to log out of your FileVault volume, and into a non-FV volume to do the backup. This ensures the special FileVault image is put away properly... and isn't active while you're backing up.

Hope that helps.


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