Algunas aplicaciones no funcionarán al transferirlas a otro disco o al ejecutarlas en otro Mac. Esto no tiene nada que ver con que CCC realice una copia de seguridad de sus datos, o de qué modo la realiza, sino con los requisitos de serialización impuestos por el fabricante del software (esto es, su estrategia antipiratería).
Última actualización por 10 March 2023
El uso del disco en su disco de arranque no refleja el volumen de datos objeto de la copia de seguridad. El uso del disco en el destino debe ser inferior al uso del disco en el origen después de realizar una copia inicial de su disco de arranque. Los dispositivos con sistemas de archivos especiales (por ejemplo, instantáneas de sistemas de archivos) y algunos datos de servicio de macOS no pueden o no deben copiarse en otro volumen. CCC excluye automáticamente estos elementos para evitar problemas al arrancar desde la copia de seguridad y evitar un uso del disco innecesario.
Última actualización por 6 December 2022
Configuration files for privileged helper tools are placed in the /Library/LaunchDaemons folder on your startup disk. CCC never touches this folder directly, rather it uses the macOS "Service Management" service to install and load its helper tool configuration. If the permissions or ownership of this folder are incorrect, however, the Service Management daemon (smd) will fail to install the helper tool configuration, and this service offers no recourse. Often the helper tool installation will fail with a nondescript error, e.g. "CFErrorDomainLaunchd error 2".
Última actualización por 10 August 2022
If you boot your Mac from a backup volume, CCC will be started upon login to ask whether you'd like help restoring from that backup volume. Sometimes, though, this offer is made when you're booted from a production volume, not a backup. CCC makes this assessment based on your currently-defined backup tasks. If you used CCC to migrate from one drive to another, then the task that you used to perform that backup will still be present on your new startup disk.
Última actualización por 27 April 2021
CCC offers hourly, daily, weekly, and monthly scheduling options, which suits the needs of most users. Some usage scenarios, however, demand higher frequency backups. For example, photographers might prefer to have their SD cards offloaded to a tethered computer every 5-15 minutes during a photo shoot. When the shoot is complete, though, the backup task should not run at all. Special cases like these demand more flexible execution options, which can be achieved by leveraging CCC's built-in command-line utility.
Última actualización por 27 April 2021
CCC can run backup tasks while the system is running on battery power, but will not (by default) start automated tasks when your laptop is running on battery power. Backup tasks generate a lot of disk read and write activity, and that can run your battery down. Additionally, macOS tends to aggressively put the system to sleep when it's on battery power, causing task completion to be deferred until the system is awoken.
Última actualización por 27 April 2021
According to ObDev developers, it is crucial for Little Snitch to avoid unnoticed ruleset changes. Little Snitch therefore has numerous mechanisms to detect whether it is using the exact same ruleset file, as in, on the same volume and at the same physical address on that disk. This sort of mechanism makes it impossible for Little Snitch to use the ruleset on the booted backup volume without physical intervention from a user at the system (thus the dialog asking if it's OK to use the current version of rules or to use a default ruleset).
Última actualización por 27 April 2021
Note: The topics in this article are not relevant to APFS-formatted destination volumes that have CCC snapshot support enabled. For those volumes, CCC leverages snapshots to implement the SafetyNet functionality, and the snapshots aren't affected by any of the shortcomings described here.
Última actualización por 17 March 2023
No. Copying a Time Machine backup volume with anything other than the Finder is not supported (by us, nor Apple); CCC specifically disallows copying anything to or from a Time Machine backup volume. Apple does not document a procedure for making copies of Time Machine volumes.
Última actualización por 11 August 2021