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MacBook Migration

My laptop at Sun was a nice little Mac­Book; lighter than the Mac­Book Pro but power­ful enough for my needs. So when I left, I decided I’d buy myself a new Mac­Book, being the path of least res­ist­ance. In the­ory, Apple makes it easy to migrate your inform­a­tion from one Mac­Book to another. So I stripped the Sun inform­a­tion off the old one, bought my new one, added a couple of gig of RAM, and came home full of anticipation.

The migra­tion wasn’t quite as easy as all that. I installed the Migra­tion Assist­ant on the old laptop, con­nec­ted the new one with an Eth­er­net cable, typed in the num­ber that appears on the new one into the old one, got the mes­sage “Pre­par­ing inform­a­tion…” and waited. 15 or so minutes later, the new one says it’s lost the net­work con­nec­tion and gives me a new num­ber, while the old one pops up the dia­log to type the new num­ber into. I repeated the pro­cess a couple of times, chan­ging vari­ables (con­nect through DHCP rather than dir­ectly) with no suc­cess. So I made an appoint­ment with the Genius Bar in the local Apple store and went in there.

The Genius bar per­son said that there’s a known issue that’s solved by updat­ing the Migra­tion Assist­ant to the latest ver­sion. She updated the soft­ware, but it didn’t solve the issue; the same prob­lem crops up. She did offer to move everything by hand by pulling out the old disk but I decided I didn’t feel like wait­ing that long in the mall. And I remembered that I had a Time Machine backup at home, which should also work to put the inform­a­tion on the disk.

Back at home I backed up to the Time Machine, then star­ted up the install­a­tion pro­ced­ure on the new laptop and chose to install set­tings and files from the Time Machine. Then I waited. Approx­im­ately six hours later (no exag­ger­a­tion; the con­stant mes­sage was “check­ing Time Machine backup”) there was some error say­ing it wasn’t an OS X disk, or some­thing like that. At this stage I gave up and decided to just rsync my user dir­ect­ory includ­ing my applic­a­tions. That worked just fine and was much quicker (about 15 minutes start to finish).

It turns out that rsync on the Mac is a little con­tro­ver­sial. There’s more in-depth dis­cus­sion in the com­ments to one of Tim’s posts. For my pur­poses, rsync worked well; I did take the ele­ment­ary pre­cau­tion of log­ging out on the tar­get laptop first.

{ 5 } Comments

  1. Boris Mann | Jan 29, 2009 at 2:29 pm | Permalink

    I’ve never done a migra­tion over Eth­er­net, just with FireWire or USB.

    I actu­ally rarely use the Migra­tion Assist­ant. I find it bet­ter / cleaner / faster / more stable to install and con­fig­ure the hand­ful of apps that I use. It also nicely wipes the “Cruft” of apps that I no longer use or need.

  2. John M. | Jan 29, 2009 at 3:10 pm | Permalink

    I’m glad to hear that rsync worked so quickly for you!

    The loss of tar­get disk mode is why so many people are dis­ap­poin­ted by the lack of firewire on the new macbook.

  3. Derek K. Miller | Jan 29, 2009 at 7:44 pm | Permalink

    Ah, this is why I like hav­ing FireWire on all our Macs, and why it’s a shame the new Mac­Book lacks it. I’ve never had an issue migrat­ing accounts over FireWire. Even aside from using Migra­tion Assist­ant, some­thing like rsync or (bet­ter) Car­bon Copy Cloner works great over FireWire. Oh well.

  4. Alexander Kellett | Feb 02, 2009 at 10:52 am | Permalink

    On a pos­it­ive note… Restor­ing via Time Machine over USB 2 works really well.

  5. Tony | Apr 27, 2009 at 4:08 pm | Permalink

    Firewire.…why not just get a Firewrie-USB adapter?

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