Macworld (USA)

Does a Time Machine drive need to be always on with a Mac?

You can use it intermitte­ntly, but don’t forget to plug it back in!

- BY GLENN FLEISHMAN

Time Machine is designed to back up your selected volumes every hour, writing any changes you’ve made into a new snapshot that captures only the difference­s between the current and previous backup. (Apple software, like Pages and Numbers, and a lot of thirdparty software create a version every time you save, providing backups within apps much more frequently than hourly.)

But some readers wonder what happens if they don’t keep their Time Machine drives powered up all the time. Apple designed Time Machine to be resilient, so it doesn’t skip a beat if one or

more of the destinatio­n volumes you use for backups isn’t always available.

The ideal situation is that any drive you use is always plugged in and thus backups always happen while it’s on. This is particular­ly useful—maybe critical—if your Mac acts as a networked Time Machine destinatio­n for other computers on the network, as they may be backing up at times you’re not using your Mac—if a partner is working late or one of your kids is writing a term paper at 2 a.m.

However, as long as macos lets you unmount the Time Machine drive, it’s safe to not have it connected. Use the Finder to select the drive and choose File → Eject drive name (Command-e), and macos will tell you if it’s in use. Otherwise it will eject the drive. You can also shut down your Mac, and the drive will properly unmount and be absolutely safe to power down or unplug once your Mac finishes shutting down completely.

While your drive (or drives) aren’t connected, macos uses temporary local Time Machine snapshots to store interim versions so you don’t lose changes during that period either. (These can sometimes bloat out of the control for unknown reasons; here’s advice on what to do if you see your startup volume filling up unexpected­ly [fave.co/3cpzrm6].)

Then, within an hour of mounting a drive’s Time Machine volume associated with any Macs (and selected volumes) that have had changes to files, Time Machine on those computers will transfer over the locally cached snapshots and delete them, and then begin regular hourly backups again as long as the drive remains mounted.

As noted in many previous columns, you can also have multiple Time Machine destinatio­ns plugged in at once or selected as destinatio­ns, and then use that to rotate on-site and off-site drives for additional backup security against fire, theft, or accident. ■

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 ??  ?? To find out whether a drive is in use, go to Finder → File. If Eject is grayed out (like here), then the drive is in use.
To find out whether a drive is in use, go to Finder → File. If Eject is grayed out (like here), then the drive is in use.

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