Lesson 17: Manage Time Machine Flashcards
• Describe Time Machine. • Configure Time Machine to back up data. • Restore files from a Time Machine backup • Restore an entire Mac from a Time Machine backup.
What can you back up with Time Machine?
Time Machine lets you back up your entire Mac, including system files, apps, music, photos, emails, and documents.
Which types of files are omitted from Time Machine backups?
Time Machine saves space by ignoring files that don’t need to be backed up — ones that can be re-created after a restoration.
Generally speaking, Time Machine ignores temporary files, Spotlight indexes, items in the Trash, and anything that can be considered a cache.
Software developers can also instruct Time Machine to ignore specific app data that doesn’t need to be backed up.
Why is Time Machine inefficient at backing up large databases?
Time Machine is inefficient at backing up large databases because it must back up the entire database file every time any change, no matter how small, is made to the database.
What happens when you try to select an APFS volume as a Time Machine backup?
If you select a backup disk that’s formatted as APFS, FAT32, or any other file system besides HFS Plus, Time Machine offers to reformat it to the supported format of HFS Plus.
Which feature helps Time Machine restore data when your Time Machine backup disk is unavailable?
Time Machine creates local snapshots on your built-in startup disk to help when your backup disk is unavailable.
What four ways can you restore data from a Time Machine backup?
Methods for restoring from a Time Machine backup include the following:
- Restore specific items from a Time Machine backup
- Restore with Migration Assistant
- Restore an entire system with macOS Recovery
- Manually restore with the Finder