How to Test the Backup of Your Mac Before Restoring
How to Test the Backup of Your Mac Before Restoring
If you have a Mac, you need to do a backup. However, backing up isnt enough toprotect your data. You also need to test your backups to make sure theyre working and protecting the right stuff. Dont worry, its pretty easy and takes just a few minutes.
When its too late to test, its too late to restore | Shutterstock
What Could Go Wrong?
In an ideal world, backups should be set it and forget it. They just work. When something goes wrong, you go to the backup and restore stuff. If everything worked just the way it should, then you probably wouldnt even need the backup. Thats one of the reasons you need to test it.
A sign of trouble! | Flickr
A very common problem users have with backups is theyre backing up the wrong stuff. It isnt until they go to restore the data, they find out it isnt there! Other times the backup drive was disconnected from the Mac. For online backups, the account might have expired or theyre locked out of the account. All these scenarios are avoidable by proper testing.
How to Test a Time Machine Backup
The first place to check your Time Machine backup is the Time Machine Control Panel. Look for the Oldest backup and Latest backup. If your Time Machine is always connected to your Mac, your backup shouldnt be more than a few hours old. By default, your Mac backs up every hour. In this picture, the first backup never completed. In other cases, the external hard drive wasnt connected or failed. Fornetwork drives, like Time Capsules, your Mac may not have connected to the network for a while. Fortunately, by checking, you can catch this problem in time.
A Time Machine backup that never completed
Dont have a Time Machine backup? Heres our guide to setting one up.
To fix this problem, reconnect the drive or select a different one. Then go the Time Machine icon in the menu bar and pick Back Up Now. Wait a few hours and check to see if the backup completes.
If your backup is recent, its time to test it. Testing the integrity of every file of your backup isnt workable. The full restore would take days and need a huge hard drive. Instead, youll need to pick a few random files to test. I suggest the following files, but feel free to pick your own:
Your most critical files. Thats the files you absolutely cant live without. It might be your financial database, current projects, or schoolwork.
A few emails, contacts, and photos.
A few completely random data files.
Time machine Restore | Apple
Try to restore each of these files on random dates in the past year. Create a folder on your desktop called Tested Files and put those restored files in that folder. If youre using Apples bundled programs, the emails, contacts and photos will restore directly into those programs. Youll need to enter Time Machine when youre in those programs to do a test restore.
How to Test Other Backup Systems
If youre not using Time Machine, youre probably using a cloud-based service likeBackblaze, Carbonite, Mozy, or Crashplan. The restore procedure is different for each program. In this example, Im using Backblaze.
Amazon as an option: Amazons Cloud Drive is another backup option for you.
To decide what files to restore, use the same criteria as suggested with Time Machine. Pick a few random files on a few random dates along with your most critical files. For emails, contacts, and photos, only Apples Time Machine makes it easy to restore those. If you use a third-party program, youll need to restore the entire database in most cases. Thats one reason to use Time Machine along with an online backup service.
What About iCloud?
iCloud is great for backing up your iPhone and iPad. It also backs up your contacts, calendars and other stuff that iCloud syncs. It wont back up your computer. You could put some stuff in your iCloud drive. That syncs just those files. If your Mac dies, the stuff will still be in iCloud. The stuff on your hard drive wont be protected, though.
Accidentally delete iCloud stuff? You can still get back your files, contacts, and calendars.
How Often Should You Test?
The short answer: how much can you afford to lose? That isnt an answer but a question. Testing every day or week is probably overkill. You might test every month or some other regular interval. At the very least, test twice a year. If youre a student, try testing every semester or quarter.