You can try mounting that volume and then use the tmutil
command to tell Time Machine where do you want backups to go to. Just make sure that nobody else is using the sparsebundle from the network
Stepwise:
- Mount the
.sparsebundle
disk image
- Open Terminal
In the Terminal command line, type:
sudo tmutil setdestination /Volumes/{mounted-disk-image}
Be sure to replace {mounted-disk-image}
above to the drive's mount point name.
- Open the Time Machine menu and force-start a backup.
Watch the contents of the Backups.backupdb
folder in the disk image as Time Machine runs and ensure that it is creating your new backup set.
Note that you'll need Lion for this. Enter the command man tmutil
in the Terminal for more information.
Time Machine works at a file level, with no facility to perform incremental changes within files. As such, your Sparsebundle may be backed up in it's entirety every time it changes in the slightest, depending on how large it is. Of course, you have to wait up to 1 hour (+the time it take to make the backup, depending on how large the queue is and where your file sits in it) to ensure those changes are included in the backup. Also if your Sparsebundle is in use (mounted...) then it may well skip it until the file lock is freed
This is a terrible system, and one that we might not see change until the underlying filesystem is suitable upgraded (or replaced) to include such useful facilities as incremental block level changes rather than simple file level ones, and/or deduplication etc. One early victim of this scenario were users who used the original Filevault system for encrypting their home folders. Time Machine would not backup their home folders until such time as they logged out because the Sparseimage file was constantly locked by the fact the user had it mounted. And even when the user did log out, it would proceed to make a hugely inefficient backup of the whole thing again and again - on the assumption that they simply logged out and didn't just turn off etc... Not very clever. To try to ameliorate this the Sparseimage spec was ammended to allow for Sparsebundles. Instead of a single big file, a sparse bundle is a bundle (directory) containing a number of files called bands, each in the order of 8 MB in size. This means even though to the end user the sparse bundle appears as a single file, it is composed of smaller files. As of Mac OS X 10.8, the bands are 8.4 MB each. When the content of the image changes, one or more band files is changed, created, or deleted. This allows backup software (such as Time Machine) to operate more efficiently, but it's just a bodge to attempt to mimic block level changes in individual files, which is limited to 8Mb "blocks"...
So to answer your questions directly, 1) it handles them properly, where properly means the same as any other file, it's just that your particular use (leaving it open and mounted) may not result in efficient backups that are taken regularly, especially if you rarely unmount the file, and 2) yes, you will need to pull back the whole file to view it's contents. The TM restore interface is also file specific. It may have quick-look plugins to allow you to view simple files inline like JPGs etc, but not for a complex file like a sparsebundle.
On the bright side, you already have a licensed copy of ChronoSync, which is super useful, and I would continue to use this to perform incremental backups of your sparsebundle whilst it is mounted, you can use the same drive as your TM images too.
Best Answer
Time Machine should automatically mount the
.sparsebundle
if you set the drive that contains it as the backup location.Failing that, you can double click the
.sparsebundle
to mount it, then tell Time Machine to backup to the mounted volume (something like/Volumes/Time Machine Backup
). This might be an acceptable workaround if you only infrequently use it over USB3.If you don't see the mounted
.sparsebundle
as an option in time machine you can set it manually via the terminal like so:Just change the
Time\ Machine\ Backup
part to whatever your drive is called. Include-a
aftersetdestination
to add another backup disk, keep it left out to replace your current backup disks with the new one.