

- #CARBON COPY CLONER REVIEWS HOW TO#
- #CARBON COPY CLONER REVIEWS UPDATE#
- #CARBON COPY CLONER REVIEWS FULL#
- #CARBON COPY CLONER REVIEWS MAC#
#CARBON COPY CLONER REVIEWS FULL#
We have also added answers to some frequently asked questions about full disk encryption to our documentation. If full disk encryption is not supported on a particular volume, CCC indicates exactly why not. Enabling encryption on an OS X backup volume, for example, involves several steps that must be executed in the correct order.
#CARBON COPY CLONER REVIEWS HOW TO#
CCC now offers volume-specific advice about how to enable full disk encryption.
#CARBON COPY CLONER REVIEWS UPDATE#
This update is fully qualified on OS X 10.6 Snow Leopard, OS X 10.7 Lion, OS X 10.8 Mountain Lion, and now OS X 10.9 Mavericks. Fixed an issue related to Google's recent changes to its Gmail SMTP service that introduced a problem with sending email notifications to multiple recipients.

This version of CCC works around this problem by preferring the "PLAIN" authentication mechanism instead. Fixed the "LOGIN" SMTP authentication mechanism for Apple's iCloud SMTP service which recently started to return invalid challenge responses to SMTP clients, causing some CCC email notifications to fail (for users that use iCloud SMTP accounts with CCC).

The task will instead run on its normal schedule. Fixed the option to "Silently skip if the source or destination is missing", CCC will no longer proceed with that backup task if the missing volume reappears before the next scheduled run time. Fixed an issue in which the OS rarely, but occasionally, does not send a distributed notification that a task has finished, resulting in the task appearing to hang at the end despite the fact that it had actually finished. Fixed an issue in which the OS rarely, but occasionally, does not send an "application finished launching" notification to the scheduled task helper tool, causing task initialization to fail. Fixed an OS X 10.9 Mavericks-specific display anomaly in the list of items to be copied. Drobo's proprietary data moving techniques do not play well with dynamic partition changes, and Drobo specifically does not support the modification of partitioning outside of the Drobo Dashboard. Changed to explicitly refuse to create a Recovery HD partition if it can positively identify the selected volume as a Drobo device. This update catches this edge case and reports it in a more meaningful way. Rather than reporting that the Drobo device is unable to accommodate the extended attribute, these devices report that the destination volume is full, even when there is adequate space available. Changed to accommodate some Drobo devices having a problem storing extended attributes larger than 1KB. Fixed an issue in which a scheduled task could load in a hung state if the task configuration file was corrupted. Fixed an issue in which CCC may refuse to allow the user to schedule a backup task to a disk image that resides on a FUSE volume. This update addresses that issue, CCC will now immediately evaluate the filesystem URL of the network volume that is returned in reponse to its mount request and update its own internal reference to the user account as appropriate. Previously, this difference would cause CCC to believe that the network volume was mounted with other credentials altogether, and CCC would refuse to use the network volume under the assumption that permissions issues would ensue. Fixed an odd edge case in OS X in which you can mount a network volume using a short user name, such as "johnny", but the remote host will place the long name in the filesystem URL that is returned, e.g. ConclusionĬarbon Copy Cloner is a very good program to clone and backup your drive.
#CARBON COPY CLONER REVIEWS MAC#
I've found that you'll have to make sure a local disk is connected to your Mac so the program can start up though. The application features a simple interface, from where you select the drive or folders to backup and the target drive to save to. Simple to useĬarbon Copy Cloner (CCC) is an app that creates clones of your disks, so you can worry less about losing your data. More knowledgeable users will also like being able to run pre and post-flight shell scripts, checking the list of items removed after a clone, and creating a disk image.
