F5F Stay Refreshed Software Operating Systems The time machine feels incredibly sluggish.

The time machine feels incredibly sluggish.

The time machine feels incredibly sluggish.

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MVLHM
Member
67
11-20-2016, 05:01 PM
#1
Time machine is struggling to save data at a slow pace on my Mac. It took all night to back up 60GB of 1.1TB. I’m transferring over a gigabit network to a NAS that can handle gigabit speeds, but my Mac only manages around 5MB/sec, sparingly every few seconds. I’ve turned the backup priority down and even rebooted into safe mode without improvement. What could be causing this?
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MVLHM
11-20-2016, 05:01 PM #1

Time machine is struggling to save data at a slow pace on my Mac. It took all night to back up 60GB of 1.1TB. I’m transferring over a gigabit network to a NAS that can handle gigabit speeds, but my Mac only manages around 5MB/sec, sparingly every few seconds. I’ve turned the backup priority down and even rebooted into safe mode without improvement. What could be causing this?

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SimplySkittles
Junior Member
17
11-21-2016, 02:51 AM
#2
Did you perform a check on the Mac storage? Many times it turned out the drive was bad. Extracting files manually was quicker than relying on Time Machine. Would you recommend using a particular NAS with certain drives?
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SimplySkittles
11-21-2016, 02:51 AM #2

Did you perform a check on the Mac storage? Many times it turned out the drive was bad. Extracting files manually was quicker than relying on Time Machine. Would you recommend using a particular NAS with certain drives?

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Toodaloo_246
Senior Member
439
11-21-2016, 05:54 AM
#3
Running diagnostics through disk utility worked without issues. The report showed everything normal, and the system is now backing up at about 100KB/s. Your NAS uses 7200RPM SATA hard drives, and it’s brand new—built on Wednesday with almost no files on it.
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Toodaloo_246
11-21-2016, 05:54 AM #3

Running diagnostics through disk utility worked without issues. The report showed everything normal, and the system is now backing up at about 100KB/s. Your NAS uses 7200RPM SATA hard drives, and it’s brand new—built on Wednesday with almost no files on it.

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ryder873
Member
66
11-21-2016, 07:45 AM
#4
The tool uses the bike in MRI mode. It’s been a while, but I believe you press Command + Shift + R when starting up. It could be D instead of R, though it’s quite similar. The Apple site mentions it’s only for technicians, but anyone with three fingers can use it.
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ryder873
11-21-2016, 07:45 AM #4

The tool uses the bike in MRI mode. It’s been a while, but I believe you press Command + Shift + R when starting up. It could be D instead of R, though it’s quite similar. The Apple site mentions it’s only for technicians, but anyone with three fingers can use it.

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mcfarter
Member
178
11-22-2016, 02:17 PM
#5
Fascinating. I'll attempt it.
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mcfarter
11-22-2016, 02:17 PM #5

Fascinating. I'll attempt it.

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SoulRawr
Member
191
11-22-2016, 03:24 PM
#6
TimeMachine over networked storage has consistently lagged behind internal/external drives that connect directly to your device. It’s also optimized for minimal system impact, so it rarely leverages the full capacity of your drive for backups. When backing up a drive for the first time, TimeMachine spends a long time indexing the data. The system performs best during updates or changes to existing files rather than bulk transfers. Unfortunately, I don’t have any ways to accelerate the initial backup process.
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SoulRawr
11-22-2016, 03:24 PM #6

TimeMachine over networked storage has consistently lagged behind internal/external drives that connect directly to your device. It’s also optimized for minimal system impact, so it rarely leverages the full capacity of your drive for backups. When backing up a drive for the first time, TimeMachine spends a long time indexing the data. The system performs best during updates or changes to existing files rather than bulk transfers. Unfortunately, I don’t have any ways to accelerate the initial backup process.

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redstonersven
Member
210
11-24-2016, 07:14 AM
#7
It functioned properly with the full time capsule on the network. I believed disabling the feature by setting sysctl values resolved the issue. Since the drive was backed up to that capsule, it shouldn’t require separate actions per backup.
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redstonersven
11-24-2016, 07:14 AM #7

It functioned properly with the full time capsule on the network. I believed disabling the feature by setting sysctl values resolved the issue. Since the drive was backed up to that capsule, it shouldn’t require separate actions per backup.