Now I’m wondering why Disk Utility on my 2 terabyte external is hanging on “checking multi-linked files.” This is a working backwards check following hours of trying to fix the following (unfixed) problems.
OSX 10.13.3, Macbook Pro.
External drive backups fine until 3 weeks ago.
Now, Time Machine “preparing backup” takes hours; then tells me it will back up 350 Gig (!) (after 3 weeks?), then, next day checked, froze at 2 Gig anyway. Repeatable under my usual tries.
There was a suggestion one one site, affirmed elsewhere, to unthrottle the backup CPU attention, which I sort of understand, but I’m sure I’m in no postition to even go there.
Any help? Working backwards, I guess, from even trashing the external, which would be fine to live dangerously for a cloning or new backup–but I don’t even know if that is doable now from my startup Time Capsule processes, if they’re corrupted.
Get a new external drive, and start a new TM backup. 4TB drives are under $100.
Keep the old one - it might still be useful if disaster strikes before your BU is completed.
Also, copy all your most critical files to an external store (DropBox, USB drive, etc.) right now.
Thanks for cutting through all the Mr Fix-It crap in my head. FTR, fdsk did complete, finally, with no errors, ostensibly.
Yeah, BU overnight began, finally, but quit at ca. 2 Gig. I read that you could use some tool or other to find the file at which it choked, remove that, and everything will be peaches and cream. But the hell with it.
I don’t have an Apple Macintosh computer, so perhaps I’m not understanding something here. But isn’t Time Machine attempting to backup the Macbook Pro to the external drive that appears to be giving you problems? So why isn’t the solution to simply buy a replacement external drive? Why are you still futzing around with fsck or whatever? As said above, a four-terabyte drive is under a hundred bucks. (Heck, a four-terabyte external WD My Passport 2.5" drive is only just over a hundred bucks. I prefer those drives for backup purposes because they’re small and don’t require external power sources.)