

And for the price it can't be beat.īelated thanks for your further advice. It maybe less sophisticated NAS but probably good enough for most people and has feature most people will not even use. I don't believe that any consumer or SMB-market NAS is capable of this as nearly all of them seem to use Linux file systems on their internal disk volumes. Lastly, it's my understanding that full system recovery (OS restore) of OS X requires that your backups are kept on an HFS+ formatted disk to keep certain extended file attributes in tact. While I believe Macs do have PXE boot capabilities, I do not believe you can boot a complete functioning OS disk volume over a network. In addition to Time Machine, popular Mac backup utilities like Carbon Copy Cloner are able to keep a locally attached backup drive as a fully bootable disk volume. With a locally attached TM drive, you boot to the recovery console, point it at the TM drive, and walk away.
#WD BACKUP FOR MAC INSTALL#
Therefore you could not preform a complete system recovery from a NAS based TM backup without first obtaining and preparing bootable OS X install media and reinstalling the OS. To the best of my knowledge, the Mac recovery console cannot access a Time Machine source on a network file share. You don't think the OP might be better served taking up Mac related discussion of this topic in the Mac Talk forum here? PC Talk means Personal Computer so it includes any PC.

First of all it is not PC forum the way you describe it.
