James Bucanek wrote:
I don?t have much in the way of an explanation for why your layers disappeared on you, other than to suggest that you make sure you?re viewing the current owner and volume. If you have the Hide Unrelated Layers view option selected, and you inadvertently select an older owner or volume in the archive, QRecall will ?conveniently? hide all of the layers since that volume was last captured.
That probably was the cause of my disappearing archive. The archive I was left with was from my previous MBP, which I retired in December. I had never noticed that hide command but must have triggered it inadvertently. I'm feeling a little stupid right now for panicking when the archive seemed to disappear, instead of investigating it a bit more carefully.
Reviewing the logs for your iMac, you?re consistently getting capture failures, but they?re rather minor. In fact, going back almost a month, the only consist problem you?ve encountered is capturing the tmSync.plist file in your iPhoto database folder. It would appear that some process is constantly replacing this file. When QRecall goes to capture it, it reads the directory, but by the time it gets around to reading the file, it?s been deleted and replaced. QRecall logs this and continues. It doesn?t, however, have any impact on the integrity of the archive.
(If you find this annoying, I might suggest that you add the tmSync.plist file to either the capture's ?exclude? or ?ignore changes? list.)
I haven't noticed problems with the iMac backups, except for the occasional problem notice in the status window when nothing showed up in the log. The iPhoto Library is a package rather than a folder, and there doesn't seem to be any way to drill into it to exclude the plist file, so I guess I'll just leave that as is.
The MacBook Pro is another story. As you mentioned, it consistently fails (about once or twice a week) with I/O errors while reading or writing to the archive over the network. I/O errors are a deal breaker and terminate the capture, leaving the archive in a state that requires repair. Typically, the auto-repair is sufficient to get it back in service. But you also occasionally experience permission errors. I can?t tell if this is a file server issue, a virus scanner, or genuine permission problem. Permission or other access failures can leave the archive is a state that requires a full-blown repair or reindex to get things back into shape.
Which brings us to the repair actions. On the few occasions that you?ve perform a repair, the repair logged nothing out of the ordinary. This implies that the I/O and permission errors you?re encountering on the MBP are due to transient network transmission errors and are not a result of any damaged data in the archive or issues with the physical media.
If you?re ever concerned that your archive might have been compromised, run the Verify command/action.
The problems MBP have been minor but manageable, and usually resolvable by simply rerunning the backup. The failures in the last couple of weeks have required reindexing, which is new. I've been repairing rather than just reindexing because of past experiences when that was required, but it sounds like reindexing would have taken care of it in these cases. I generally Merge layers and Verify the archive every couple of weeks, when I swap in my off-site backup drive.
One thing I will mention: I see that a Repair action was run from the MPB to an archive that (I assume) was accessed over the network. This is asking for trouble.
Both my MBP and that backup drive have USB 3 while the iMac is USB 2, so I sometimes physically mount that drive to the MBP for long operations like a repair, to take advantage of the higher speed.
Thanks again for the prompt and useful support, which you always provide.
Ralph