Mark Gerber wrote:I'm pretty sure that my rolling merge from years ago maxed out at 2 or three years. So I think what probably happened was I must have activated the schedule without realizing it and a merge of some sort was performed after yesterday's capture.
You think correctly. The rolling merge has combined all of the history of Disk 1, Disk 2, and Disk 3 into a single layer, keeping only the last captured items in each volume.
However, these are not duplicates. The single layer contains all three volumes. The contents of those volume are separate from one another, and you'd have to look at the capture date of the volume (or any item in the volume) to tell how far back it goes.
I'm interpreting this new state as there is only one layer duplicated three times.
There is a single layer that contains three separate volumes.
A quick look in one of those disks' ~/Documents folder shows I have some files going back to The Early Days so I guess everything is flattened but safe. I imagine it's what I would have done anyway but would have preferred agonizing over the choice for a few days.
Correct and correct.
Given all this, should I delete Disks 1 and 2 as duplicates of Disk 3 and move forward with just Disks 3 and 4?
Given that your rolling merge only maintains about three years of history, there's no point in trying to combine Disk 1, 2, or 3 with anything. As soon as you combine these volumes with Disk 4, the next merge will delete them (because they're too old).
I suggest you simply select Disk 1, Disk 2, and Disk 3 and delete them (Archive >Delete Items). It will be a
lot faster than combining them, only to have the next merge discard them.
I should clarify that all four disks I'm referring to are listed under one owner/volume. I can only select one at at time and the Archive>Combine Items? menu is grayed out.
An archive contains owners. Owners contain volumes (disks). Volumes contain files and folders. If you open an owner in the browser and are looking at a list of volumes, you should absolutely be able to select more than one using Shift+click or Command+Click. Try a different view (list view, for example) if you're having problems.
I suggest switching to list view, select Disk 1, then while holding the Command key, click-select Disk 2 and Disk 3. Now you can select Archive > Delete Items to remove all three at once.
And then, as you wrote, my next compact will drastically reduce the size of the archive and reduce the time spent during capture/merge actions. Hope I have that right.
Absolutely correct, with the possible exception of excluding the word "drastically".
QRecall's data de-duplication means that the same file captured in Disk 4, Disk 3, Disk 2, and Disk 1 is only stored once, and deleting three of those references doesn't remove that data. It does reduce the meta data for the other three references, but metadata records are typically only about 1%-2% of an archive. Capture won't go much faster because capture is only comparing new files with the volume being recaptured (Disk 4). The contents of Disk 3, 2, and 1 are irrelevant and are not consulted during the recapture.
The actions that will be substantially faster are merge, compact, and verify, since you will have removed hundreds of millions of file and folder records that no longer need to be considered.