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Beginner
Comments: 2
I've used True Image v10 on my PC no problem. Now I am trying to use it on my Vista Install in my Windows Partition on my Mac. True Image runs, but when I try make an image of my C drive I get a message about 'Windows Dynamic Drives' are unsupported and it must think my C drive is a dynamic drive. As far as I know, my windows partition is a regular windows partition, but I might be mistaken about that. When I'm running MacOSX, there are two partitions, my Mac Hard drive and my Windows partition.
Is there a way to resolve this using True Image? If not, any suggestions for another method to back up Vista? On my Mac I have tried WinClone with undesirable results.
Thanks!
Forum Star
Comments: 3047
I don't think ATI works on Macs; never designed to do so. Otoh, doesn't the dis imgae backup program built in the MAC OS include all partitions when you use it to back up?
Beginner
Comments: 2
I'm getting a message that all TI sees is Windows Dynamic Drives. This includes my C drive. I don't know enough to know why. On a Mac when you install Windows, you are creating a Windows partition, a real Windows space and you are installing Windows from a real Windows install disk, in my case Vista. The end result is that you are running Windows natively on an intel machine. But something about it, TI does not like.
Unfortunately Time Machine, the Mac Utility only works on your Mac partition. It does not backup your Windows partition. I recently tried Winclone which is a Mac program, and it seemed to work (but I have not tested the backup it made). However, the next time I tried to boot into Windows, Windows would not boot, until I used the Windows install disk to repair my VistaOS. This makes me unlikely to rely on Winclone.
Forum Star
Comments: 3047
My guess is that ATI cannot handle MAC on the hdisk even though it isn't the only partiton.. YOu can contact Caht but I've never heard Acronis say that ATI can work on a MAC or on a disk with an Apple OS.
Be part of the discussion; Post your objective product views on Amazon and other sites. Reading works. Get the User Guide at http://www.acronis.com/en-us/support/documentation/
Forum Star
Comments: 1342
Hello David and Scott,
David, currently Acronis products neither support Apple Mac OS X nor run under Windows OS installed on Apple (under BootCamp).
There are at least two reasons for this:
- Apple Mac machines use the EFI bootstrap firmware instead of the BIOS firmware;
- Apple Mac machines use different partitioning principles.
However, Acronis products will work in virtual environment such as VMWare, Parallels, etc.
Thank you.
Beginner
Comments: 11
Its getting tiring seeing these replies from users who have obviously not tried this. As long as the plus pack is installed true home image backs up bootcamp partitions on a mac just fine. It sees all the partitions, including the Mac partitions, though I only backup the windows 7 partition. I have restored to this same partitions lots of times and it works just fine. I have not tried a 'Boot CD' restore yet, but there would be nothing stopping you restoring the main partition from a windows virtual image under MacOS.
Nic Wilson
Acronis True Image 2013 Key
Beginner
Comments: 17
Its getting tiring seeing these replies from users who have obviously not tried this. As long as the plus pack is installed true home image backs up bootcamp partitions on a mac just fine. It sees all the partitions, including the Mac partitions, though I only backup the windows 7 partition. I have restored to this same partitions lots of times and it works just fine. I have not tried a 'Boot CD' restore yet, but there would be nothing stopping you restoring the main partition from a windows virtual image under MacOS.
Nic Wilson
I believe you are talking about the latest version of True Image Home with the Plus Pack? That supports GPT, the partitioning scheme used on Intel Macs.
Older versions of True Image do not support GPT, which is why the original poster is unable to use his True Image Home 10 on Macs.
Beginner
Acronis For Mac Os X
Comments: 1
Acronis Mac Os
I am running 2011 and bought Plus pack (grrrr...! since it is now free...feel cheated), both latest build. Bought beautiful 27' iMac early January and set up bootcamp/ Win7. Did a disk image after getting all software loaded, then started daily c: backups. Managed to corrupt bootcamp partition, but no sweat, I had backups, right? no--not a single disk image or backup would restore. So, I think, maybe I should just use bootcamp assistant and reload win7 to its pristine state, then restore. Action Failed (with no explanation). Nope again. Dead in the water. So, I try live chat. Don't bother. All I got in the end was a copy of Ilya Rasovsky's much copied disclaimer (above). It took many minutes between replies, and after I carefully stated I had bought Plus for Apple iMac, bootcamp, win 7, etc, he wanted to know if I had an apple! He didn't seem to even know about the Plus Pack, just repeating that Acronis doesn't work on Apples. Truly disappointed in Acronis. Is there any other way to backup / restore bootcamp partition on an external hd? It's kinda scary hanging out here without a net. Or, maybe I don't know what I am doing. I chose Disk and Partition Backup,then BootCamp (C:) for the partition to backup. Correct?
Thanks for any help!
Beginner
Comments: 11
Hi,
Afer having the same experience as you with Acronis and also their support, I found another product, its much better it does both bootcamp, and OSx partition as a 'drive' in one go, or separately and can also resize the bootcamp partition for you too and more, its called Paragon Hard disk Manager 2011 and its fabulous.
Nic Wilson
Mac Os Image For Acronis Desktop
Acronis True Image is a cloud-based backup solution. Acronis True Image is available athttps://www.acronis.com/en-us/support/trueimage/2018mac/. To install, download it and then open the zip.
Drag the Acronis True Image application to your /Applications directory. Then open Acronis True Image from /Applications. The first time you open it, you’ll be prompted to access the licensing agreement.
Once accepted, you’ll be prompted to create an account with Acronis. Provide your credentials or enter new ones to create a trial account.
At the activation screen, provide a serial or click Start Trial.
At the main screen, you’ll first want to choose the source (by default it’s the drive of the machine) and then click on the panel to the right to choose your destination.
For this example, we’re going to use the Acronis cloud service.
Click on the cog wheel icon at the top of the screen. Here, you can set how and when the backup occurs. Click Schedule.
At the schedule screen, select the time that backups will run. Note that unless you perform file level backups, you can’t set the continual backup option. For that, I’d recommend not doing the whole computer and instead doing directories where you store data. Click on Clean Up.
Here, you’ll define your retention policies. How many backups will you store and for how long. Click Encryption.
Here you’ll set a password to protect the disk image that stores your backups. The disk image can’t be unpacked without it, so don’t forget the password! Click on Exclusions.
Here, use the plus sign icon to add any folders you want skipped in the backups. This could be stuff you don’t need backed up (like /Applications) or things you intentionally don’t want backed up. Click Network.
Here you can throttle the speed of network backups. We’ll skip this for now. Now just click on the Back Up button to get your first backup under way!
If you want to automate certain configuration options, check for the com.acronis.trueimageformac.plist at ~/Libarary/Preferences to see if the app has been launched, as you can see from the defaults domain contents:
Drag the Acronis True Image application to your /Applications directory. Then open Acronis True Image from /Applications. The first time you open it, you’ll be prompted to access the licensing agreement.
Once accepted, you’ll be prompted to create an account with Acronis. Provide your credentials or enter new ones to create a trial account.
At the activation screen, provide a serial or click Start Trial.
At the main screen, you’ll first want to choose the source (by default it’s the drive of the machine) and then click on the panel to the right to choose your destination.
For this example, we’re going to use the Acronis cloud service.
Click on the cog wheel icon at the top of the screen. Here, you can set how and when the backup occurs. Click Schedule.
At the schedule screen, select the time that backups will run. Note that unless you perform file level backups, you can’t set the continual backup option. For that, I’d recommend not doing the whole computer and instead doing directories where you store data. Click on Clean Up.
Here, you’ll define your retention policies. How many backups will you store and for how long. Click Encryption.
Here you’ll set a password to protect the disk image that stores your backups. The disk image can’t be unpacked without it, so don’t forget the password! Click on Exclusions.
Here, use the plus sign icon to add any folders you want skipped in the backups. This could be stuff you don’t need backed up (like /Applications) or things you intentionally don’t want backed up. Click Network.
Here you can throttle the speed of network backups. We’ll skip this for now. Now just click on the Back Up button to get your first backup under way!
If you want to automate certain configuration options, check for the com.acronis.trueimageformac.plist at ~/Libarary/Preferences to see if the app has been launched, as you can see from the defaults domain contents:
{ SUEnableAutomaticChecks = 1;
SUHasLaunchedBefore = 1;
SULastCheckTime = “2018-04-07 21:33:01 +0000”; }
There are also log settings available at /Applications/Acronis True Image.app/Contents/MacOS/acronis_drive.config:
SUHasLaunchedBefore = 1;
SULastCheckTime = “2018-04-07 21:33:01 +0000”; }
There are also log settings available at /Applications/Acronis True Image.app/Contents/MacOS/acronis_drive.config:
<?xml version=”1.0″ encoding=”UTF-8″ standalone=”yes”?>
<config><logging>
<channel id=”ti-rpc-client”level=”info” enabled=”true” type=”logscope” maxfiles=”30″ compress=”old” oneday=”true”/>
<channel id=”http” level=”info” enabled=”true” type=”logscope” maxfiles=”30″ compress=”old” oneday=”true”/>
<channel id=”ti_http_srv_ti_acronis_drive” level=”info” enabled=”true” type=”logscope” maxfiles=”30″ compress=”old” oneday=”true”/>
<channel id=”ti-licensing” level=”info” enabled=”true” type=”logscope” maxfiles=”30″ compress=”old” oneday=”true”/>
<channel id=”acronis_drive” level=”info” type=”logscope” maxfiles=”10″ compress=”old” oneday=”true” /><!–max 10 files, ?MB–></logging>
<config><logging>
<channel id=”ti-rpc-client”level=”info” enabled=”true” type=”logscope” maxfiles=”30″ compress=”old” oneday=”true”/>
<channel id=”http” level=”info” enabled=”true” type=”logscope” maxfiles=”30″ compress=”old” oneday=”true”/>
<channel id=”ti_http_srv_ti_acronis_drive” level=”info” enabled=”true” type=”logscope” maxfiles=”30″ compress=”old” oneday=”true”/>
<channel id=”ti-licensing” level=”info” enabled=”true” type=”logscope” maxfiles=”30″ compress=”old” oneday=”true”/>
<channel id=”acronis_drive” level=”info” type=”logscope” maxfiles=”10″ compress=”old” oneday=”true” /><!–max 10 files, ?MB–></logging>