CCC always examines the files on the destination to determine if they already match those on the source. If you have a volume that is virtually identical to your source, CCC will copy only the items that are different between the two volumes.
Dernière mise à jour par 13 July 2021
Create a new task
Click the New Task button in the toolbar to create a new task, then type in a name for the new task.
Select a source volume
Click on the Source selector, then choose the volume that you want to copy files from.
Dernière mise à jour par 12 May 2021
When you select a volume as the source and destination, CCC copies the entire contents of that volume (minus anything you exclude) to the destination volume, preserving the full hierarchy of folders on the source. If you don't want to preserve that hierarchy, you can back up a specific folder from the source to a specific folder on the destination. In this configuration, CCC will copy the contents of the selected folder to the selected destination folder, without the hierarchy up to that source folder.
Dernière mise à jour par 27 April 2021
Generally, yes. Performance will be affected during the backup task (especially the first one) as CCC reads the entire source volume and writes to the destination volume. If your work is "disk bound" — that is your applications are reading or writing to either the source or destination, then you'll notice a performance hit. If you're just reading email or writing a document, then you probably won't notice the performance hit.
Dernière mise à jour par 27 April 2021
Watch a video of this tutorial on YouTube
We often see backup tasks configured with the whole startup disk selected as the source, and then everything excluded from the backup except for a single folder. This kind of configuration is suboptimal for several reasons:
Dernière mise à jour par 27 December 2019
Backing up Trash content
CCC will not back up the contents of Finder's Trash by default, but CCC 5 offers an option to back up the Finder's Trash in the Task Filter window. Choose Copy Some Files from the popup menu underneath the Source selector to reveal CCC's Task Filter window.
Dernière mise à jour par 22 March 2019
Souvent, la réponse est probablement oui. Cependant, il y a quelques mises en garde.
Dernière mise à jour par 22 December 2020
CCC peut sauvegarder le contenu de la partition Boot Camp, mais ne peut pas cloner la partition démarrage. Si votre but est de sauvegarder vos données utilisateur sur la partition Boot Camp, CCC vous conviendra. Si vous voulez migrer votre partition Boot Camp vers un nouveau disque, vous devriez considérer une solution alternative telle que WinClone, ou une des solutions commerciales de virtualisation qui offrent la possibilité de migrer à partir de Boot Camp.
Dernière mise à jour par 20 December 2018
This article is primarily written for users running macOS Yosemite or El Capitan.
Dernière mise à jour par 23 October 2019
When you select a volume as the source and destination, CCC copies the entire contents of that volume (minus anything you exclude) to the destination volume, preserving the full hierarchy of folders on the source. If you don't want to preserve that hierarchy, you can back up a specific folder from the source to a specific folder on the destination. In this configuration, CCC will copy the contents of the selected folder to the selected destination folder, without the hierarchy up to that source folder.
Dernière mise à jour par 31 August 2017