TimePreserver
TimePreserver 2.0 for Mac can be downloaded from our website for free. This Mac application is a product of Dalamser. TimePreserver for Mac lies within System Tools, more precisely Backup & Restore. This application is developed for Mac OS X 10.6.6 or later. This Mac download was checked by our built-in antivirus and was rated as clean. There is one on the AppStore called TimePreserver to manually back up your backups, but it cannot be run as a scheduled service. You could potentially write a maintenance script to run periodically that would open the Time Machine server and copy off the hourly backups for safe keeping elsewhere. Cuando lo ponemos en marcha TimePreserver escanea la red en busca de nuestro TimeCapsule y nos ofrece una lista de localizaciones alternativas donde guardar nuestras copias de seguridad, es decir, muestra los discos ya sean Firewire, USB o internos que formateados en -HSF+- HFS+ sean capaces de albergar las copias de seguridad de nuestro disco de Time Machine.
- 0 次评分 1671 次查看 64 次下载
- 分类:工具游戏商业游戏未知未知
- 标签:
- 时间:2019年09月28日 更新 文件大小: 1.05 MB
- 开发商:Dalamser
- 支持类型: Mac Mac OS X10.9或更高版本
- 支持语言:英文等
来自Mac App Store官方介绍
TimePreserver Lite is designed to do one complex task easily: making archives of your Time Machine backups stored on a Time Capsule. In keeping with Time Machine there is no complicated setup, no myriad of options. It just works.
Keeping data safe is an ever more important job for home, student and SOHO users as more precious data – from photos to term reports – is stored on computer. TimePreserver Lite complements Time Machine/Time Capsule by creating an archive of the contents of a Time Capsule on a local hard disk. This hard disk can then be moved “offsite” to provide even greater protection.
TimePreserver Lite archives can be used directly by the Mac OS Installer to restore a Mac should a disaster strike. They can also be used to restore individual files using Time Machine, or to restore a complete Time Capsule.
As with the Time Capsule’s own archive function the Time Capsule cannot be used by Time Machine during a TimePreserver Lite operation; and each time it is run everything on the Time Capsule is copied. TimePreserver Lite differs from the Time Capsule’s archive function by using a Mac-attached or network-attached disk as the destination.
Want faster archiving? Less interruption to Time Machine backups?
TimePreserver, a sibling application to TimePreserver Lite, produces archives by copying only those items which have changed since it was last run - this is typically dramatically faster. Furthermore with TimePreserver the Time Capsule remains usable during the archive, only individual Macs are blocked from making Time Machine updates while their own backup is archived, thereby providing better protection to your Macs.
Time Preserve
…更多…
v2.0版本新功能
• SMB mounting of Time Machine Servers (TMS) is now supported for TMS complying with Apple specifications. Keeping with TimePreserver Lite’s goal of simplicity this support is configured automatically on a per-TMS basis.
• Other internal improvements keeping with the latest operating system changes.
Time Perseverance
…更多…
相关截图 图片数: 5 张(点击图片查看大图)
- 上一条:ShortenMe
- 下一条:MSG Informer
下载列表 文件数: 1文件大小: 1.05 MB举报
文件名 | 版本 | 下载次数 | 上传时间 | 上传者 | 下载类型 | 操作 | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
1. | Mac App Store官方下载免费下载 | v2.0 | 64 | 2019-09-28 | Dalamser Limited | Mac | 商店下载 |
苹果软件园为积极推动苹果电脑在国内的发展,倡导资源共享,软件汉化。所有下载链接均来自网友分享试用,请24小时内删除!希望大家有条件的积极支持正版. 如果你的网盘有这个App的资源,欢迎共享下载地址哦,只需要几秒钟哦有网盘资源的点击感谢分享下载地址 | |||||||
↑ 如果您觉得从我们的分享中得到了帮助,并且希望我们持续发展下去,求打赏(ღ♡‿♡ღ)~谢谢您的鼓励。 |
At a glance
Cons
Our Verdict
Look under the end table in my living room, and you’ll find one facet of my Mac backup strategy: a 1 TB Time Capsule. My Mac mini, Mac Pro, and MacBook all happily back themselves up, via the magic of Time Machine, to this hidden Time Capsule—I don’t even need to think about it.
The only hitch here is that the Time Capsule also does double duty as my networking hub, so my precious backups are stuck with my computers—in an ideal world one should store backups in a remote location. Dalamser’s TimePreserver can help here, as this handy utility copies Time Machine backups from your Time Capsule to an external drive—it makes a backup of your backups, if you will—which you can then store separately from the Time Capsule itself.
On first launch, TimePreserver scans your network for a Time Capsule. Assuming one is found, TimePreserver then lists any drives available for storing the copy (which TimePreserver calls an archive). The destination drive must meet a couple of criteria to make it an eligible archiving target: It must be at least as big as your Time Capsule’s disk, and it must be HSF+ formatted. Drives can be FireWire, USB, or internal.
By default, TimePreserver copies everything on your Time Capsule to the selected archive destination, making an exact copy of your Time Capsule disk. However, you can exclude non-Time Machine-related files with a simple checkbox, so your archive will consist of only Time Machine backups.
Since TimePreserver, like the Time Capsule itself, copies data over your network, the initial archiving time depends on your network speed and the size of your Time Machine backups. (Ethernet will be much faster than Wi-Fi.) I launched TimePreserver on my Mac Pro, which is connected directly to my Time Capsule via Ethernet. The Time Capsule’s Time Machine backups—for all three of my Macs—were copied to the archive disk alphabetically based on the names of the Time Machine backup files. This initial archive process, which copied a hair over 828 GB, took about 17 hours.
TimePreserver locks each Mac’s Time Machine bundle while it’s being copied. If the Mac attempts a backup during this process, an error message explains that the backup failed; Time Machine won’t be able to complete the backup until TimePreserver finishes. However, any other Mac will be able to back up to the Time Capsule normally—until, of course, it’s that Mac’s turn have its backups archived.
Of course, because Time Machine continually backs up your Macs, your TimePreserver archives will soon be out of date. But updating your archives is easy: Just connect your archive disk to your Mac and launch TimePreserver—the program will recognize the archive disk and allow you to update it with the most recent changes to your Time Machine backups. The update process takes much less time than the initial archive, since it copies only the changes to each Time Machine backup. The downside here is that you must launch TimePreserver and start the update manually; it would be great if TimePreserver could perform this task automatically.
Once created, your TimePreserver archive disk appears to Mac OS X as just another Time Machine backup disk. You can restore files from an archive by mounting the appropriate disk image—each Mac’s backup is saved as a disk image with that Mac’s name—and either right-clicking (Control-clicking) the Time Machine icon in your Dock or Option-clicking the Time Machine icon in your menu bar, and then choosing Browse Other Time Machine Disks. Select the mounted archive disk, and the familiar Time Machine interface appears. You can even restore your entire Mac from a TimePreserver archive disk by booting your Mac from the Mac OS X Install disc, selecting Restore System From Backup, and selecting the appropriate backup archive.
TimePreserver provides a couple of advanced preferences. By default, TimePreserver copies Time Machine backups as they appear on the Time Capsule (as disk images); however, the Folder Based Time Capsule Archives option will create, as you might guess, folders containing your backed up data. You can browse these folders as you would any folder on your Mac, giving you direct access to files in the archive without having to mount the Time Machine image; however, you lose the capability to restore data using Time Machine. You can also set TimePreserver to exclude Time Machine backups from archives—in other words, to back up only the other files you’ve saved to your Time Capsule.
TimePreserver does exactly what it promises, creating a fully restorable copy of each Time Machine backup stored on a Time Capsule. I do wish the program allowed you to selectively archive backups in cases where you have multiple Macs backing up to the same Time Capsule. Support for other NAS-based Time Machine backup solutions would also be welcome. Putting aside these minor quibbles, however, TimePreserver is a fantastic addition to any Time Capsule owner’s backup strategy.
Want to stay up to date with the latest Gems? Sign up for the Mac Gems newsletter for a weekly e-mail summary of Gems reviews sent directly to your Inbox. You can also follow Mac Gems on Twitter.