Carbon Copy Cloner is an advanced backup and file copying application for macOS. Looking for something better than Time Machine? With just a few clicks you can set up CCC to make hourly or daily backups of your Mac. CCC can build extensive file version history that you can use to restore older versions of files, and files that you might have accidentally deleted. CCC's read-only snapshots also give you excellent protection against malware and ransomware. CCC backups are compatible with Migration Assistant too, so you can use them to migrate data to a new Mac.

Beyond those backup basics, CCC offers extensive auditing and verification. Have you ever wondered what all of that disk activity was? Has some application run amok? The list of files that change in each backup event give you unprecedented insight into what's changing on your Mac each day. Need to copy the entire content of one volume to another? We can do that in just a few clicks. But suppose you're planning to erase the source when you're done migrating data to a new disk? We all trust our hardware, but maybe not that much! CCC can reverify files that were copied, so you can be 100% certain that your files are safely stored on the new destination.


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I just picked up a windows laptop and often use CCC on my OSX machines to create duplicate backups of external hard drives or copy over select files from my RAID array to an external drive. What windows based solutions offer this? I find a lot of "backup disk imaging" solutions aimed at copying an entire boot drive, but I'd prefer more flexibility in selecting which files and folders get backed up.

Chris Coyier is my name and I live in Bend, Oregon with my family. I like to put it down here in the footer so you have an easy place to copy and paste it from when you're writing flattering things about me.

Use Clonezilla and make a 100% bootable copy of your drive! It works and can even handle OSX HFS+ volumes, ext4, NTFS etc. Also, it will handle Grub wery well even if the PC is dual boot (e.g. Windows and Linux).

Just to make sure we're on the same page here: your options are to either backup your Dropbox folder and migrate it to the new device, or use the website? Or do you wish to simply copy over the folder using Carbon Copy Cloner backup?

Hi stephanstricker, when I'm right then you have to CREATE a new volume not only to ADD an existing one. Create a new volume with another name, open it and copy all of your decrypted files in it. After that you may delete the old one.

Don't have a Mac and so I can't give detailed advice. However, people have been using Clonezilla and Mac for many years. It should boot but, as you say, you may have to disable secure boot. There are forums where it is discussed such as: _live/thread/7adf1a14/?limit=25 Opens a new window. You have nothing to loose by trying to boot with Clonezilla on your Mac from a USB stick and if you can do that then you should be able to save the image of the hard drive to an external storage. You can take the Hard Drive out of the Mac and clone it in a cloner if you want.

Issues you may run into is permissions on the newly replicated share since CCC tries to copy over the same permissions and if you're using local accounts on the DPs even with the same name, technically they have different UUIDs thus you may get some permissions errors. You may need to run a script afterwards to reset the permissions on your DP because your read / read-write accounts may technically have different permissions / ACLs. Remember Mike Bombich was thinking of CCC as a backup tool and permissions would be essential to that, I put in a request for him to at least consider putting in a checkbox that says to ignore permissions.

Frankly IMO, although it requires more effort, it is more secure to just copy and paste your files to an external HDD or, better three of them. If you only make one backup then you have one shot at a restore. Then you find that your one backup drive is corrupt! Make two to try to avoid this using drives from two different manufacturers to minimise production batch errors. The third copy is kept offsite or alternatively try cloud backup for that copy even though it does risk some of the above downsides. It doesn't matter how many backups you keep at home they are not proof against fire, flood, or burglary.

I had file names too long problem some times. This is usually because I copy clipboard to Markdown files without giving it a proper file name. As such, the Markdown file will take the first sentence as the file name. This resulted file names too long. This can be easily fixed when I give the Markdown file a proper name.

i prefer to mirror my mac, so... no extra files. if i delete something, it's gone forever. for me, that works, always has. for others, they want older files, older versions of things (i DO archive a lot of work; my brain just can't handle everything being saved ). i use carbon copy cloner for that (and no time machine).

The carbon copies are take are just piece of mind, in truth the only time I'd use them is if I migrated to a new hdd Or had to get a system up and running within the hour. Cause they're outdated the minute you take them vs an incremental system.

If you boot to MacOS recovery ( -gb/HT203981), there is an automated process which will install MacOS fresh AND use your time machine to re-populate/restore data and settings. Which effectively gives you a similar end result to restore a CCC snapshot. A CCC restore is far quicker and 1:1 copy though.

Is there a way that I may use Carbon Copy Cloner (or some other method) to maintain originals of all of these iCloud files on my laptop so my complete copy of files exists there, exists on iCloud, exists on my Carbon Copy Cloner back up, and is available for utilization with my iPhone iPad, and other devices, which do not have large drives so they can grab them as needed?

I just began the process of setting up a new Mac as a Rails development machine, but the thought occurred to me: do I have to do all this again from scratch or can I somehow copy/clone my development environment from my existing machine (also a Mac).

You can use Carbon Copy Cloner ( ) to copy your HD to another, which you can boot from. Also, if you use TimeMachine on another drive/network drive, then you can restore another machine from the backup.

There are a large number of commercial products that are capable of cloning Windows system drives, and they can range from somewhat inexpensive to bank-breaking. A program called Drive SnapShot, however, is relatively cheap (with a generous trial period), very fast, and pretty easy to use. Windows 7 also has a decent built-in backup system that can make a copy of your files on an external hard drive. 2351a5e196

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