![]() The name of the destination is shown at the left bottom of the Time Machine pane ( Active Time Machine disk). TinkerTool System automatically detects your configuration and always works on the Time Machine destination that is currently defined by macOS to be the “active” one. In addition to disk drives, destination devices can be servers in the network (such as Time Capsule), a Mac running Time Machine file sharing (available in old versions of macOS Server and in standard versions of macOS as of version 10.13), or a NAS with Time Machine support. Time Machine can be configured to work with multiple destination devices at the same time. General Notes when Working with the Time Machine Pane ![]() if a single byte in a file X has changed, the entire file X will be copied during the next Time Machine backup run. Differences are handled at the file level, i.e. Although the entire system can be restored for each point in time for which a backup is available, Time Machine technically only stores the differences between any two given consecutive backup operations (incremental backup). “Nearly” means that Time Machine automatically omits files which are considered unimportant or which can be recreated, like log files, the Trash, caches, the Spotlight search index, etc. Each backup set contains a nearly complete snapshot of the contents of all disks for which Time Machine has been activated. Outdated file sets are automatically removed, keeping hourly backups for the last day, daily backups for the last week, and monthly backups until the destination device is full. Backups are created silently in the background each hour. Time Machine is the name of Apple’s technology which automatically creates backup copies of your computer’s hard drives. ![]() The Pane Time Machine Time Machine Basics ![]()
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