Wednesday, January 24, 2024

Recovering Data From An Old Encrypted Time Machine Backup

Recovering data from a backup should be an easy thing to do. At least this is what you expect. Yesterday I had a problem which should have been easy to solve, but it was not. I hope this blog post can help others who face the same problem.


The problem

1. I had an encrypted Time Machine backup which was not used for months
2. This backup was not on an official Apple Time Capsule or on a USB HDD, but on a WD MyCloud NAS
3. I needed files from this backup
4. After running out of time I only had SSH access to the macOS, no GUI

The struggle

By default, Time Machine is one of the best and easiest backup solution I have seen. As long as you stick to the default use case, where you have one active backup disk, life is pink and happy. But this was not my case.

As always, I started to Google what shall I do. One of the first options recommended that I add the backup disk to Time Machine, and it will automagically show the backup snapshots from the old backup. Instead of this, it did not show the old snapshots but started to create a new backup. Panic button has been pressed, backup canceled, back to Google.


Other tutorials recommend to click on the Time Machine icon and pressing alt (Option) key, where I can choose "Browse other backup disks". But this did not list the old Time Machine backup. It did list the backup when selecting disks in Time Machine preferences, but I already tried and failed that way.


YAT (yet another tutorial) recommended to SSH into the NAS, and browse the backup disk, as it is just a simple directory where I can see all the files. But all the files inside where just a bunch of nonsense, no real directory structure.

YAT (yet another tutorial) recommended that I can just easily browse the content of the backup from the Finder by double-clicking on the sparse bundle file. After clicking on it, I can see the disk image on the left part of the Finder, attached as a new disk.
Well, this is true, but because of some bug, when you connect to the Time Capsule, you don't see the sparse bundle file. And I got inconsistent results, for the WD NAS, double-clicking on the sparse bundle did nothing. For the Time Capsule, it did work.
At this point, I had to leave the location where the backup was present, and I only had remote SSH access. You know, if you can't solve a problem, let's complicate things by restrict yourself in solutions.

Finally, I tried to check out some data forensics blogs, and besides some expensive tools, I could find the solution.

The solution

Finally, a blog post provided the real solution - hdiutil.
The best part of hdiutil is that you can provide the read-only flag to it. This can be very awesome when it comes to forensics acquisition.


To mount any NAS via SMB:
mount_smbfs afp://<username>@<NAS_IP>/<Share_for_backup> /<mountpoint>

To mount a Time Capsule share via AFP:
mount_afp afp://any_username:password@<Time_Capsule_IP>/<Share_for_backup> /<mountpoint>

And finally this command should do the job:
hdiutil attach test.sparsebundle -readonly

It is nice that you can provide read-only parameter.

If the backup was encrypted and you don't want to provide the password in a password prompt, use the following:
printf '%s' 'CorrectHorseBatteryStaple' | hdiutil attach test.sparsebundle -stdinpass -readonly

Note: if you receive the error "resource temporarily unavailable", probably another machine is backing up to the device

And now, you can find your backup disk under /Volumes. Happy restoring!

Probably it would have been quicker to either enable the remote GUI, or to physically travel to the system and login locally, but that would spoil the fun.

Related word


  1. Pentest Tools Download
  2. Pentest Tools For Windows
  3. Hacking Tools Free Download
  4. Free Pentest Tools For Windows
  5. Pentest Reporting Tools
  6. Pentest Tools Website Vulnerability
  7. Hacker Techniques Tools And Incident Handling
  8. Hack Tools Download
  9. What Is Hacking Tools
  10. Hacker Tools Linux
  11. Pentest Tools Linux
  12. Hack Rom Tools
  13. Hacker Tools Mac
  14. Pentest Tools Bluekeep
  15. Hack Tools For Mac
  16. Hack Tools For Windows
  17. Hacking Tools
  18. Ethical Hacker Tools
  19. Hack Tools Mac
  20. Pentest Tools
  21. Usb Pentest Tools
  22. Hack Tools Download
  23. Hacking Tools Hardware
  24. Hacker Tools 2019
  25. Hack Website Online Tool
  26. Hacker Tools Apk
  27. Hacking Tools For Windows 7
  28. Hacker Tools Software
  29. Hack Tools Pc
  30. Hacker Hardware Tools
  31. Pentest Tools Website
  32. Hacking Tools Usb
  33. Hacker Security Tools
  34. Pentest Tools For Ubuntu
  35. Hacker Tools Windows
  36. Hack Tools Github
  37. Termux Hacking Tools 2019
  38. Hacker Tools Free
  39. Best Pentesting Tools 2018
  40. Install Pentest Tools Ubuntu
  41. Ethical Hacker Tools
  42. Hacker Tool Kit
  43. Pentest Tools Download
  44. Beginner Hacker Tools
  45. Pentest Recon Tools
  46. Hack Tools For Ubuntu
  47. Hacker Tool Kit
  48. Hacking Apps
  49. How To Install Pentest Tools In Ubuntu
  50. What Is Hacking Tools
  51. Hacking Tools For Mac
  52. Hacker Tools Windows
  53. Hack Tools For Pc
  54. Pentest Reporting Tools
  55. Hacker Tools For Windows
  56. Free Pentest Tools For Windows
  57. Hacker Tools Apk
  58. Beginner Hacker Tools
  59. Hack Tools Pc
  60. Pentest Tools Alternative
  61. What Is Hacking Tools
  62. Hacker Tools For Windows
  63. Hack Tools
  64. Pentest Tools Website
  65. Hacker Tools For Mac
  66. Nsa Hack Tools
  67. Hacker Search Tools
  68. Hacker Tools Apk Download
  69. Blackhat Hacker Tools
  70. Hacking Tools Software
  71. Hack Tools Online
  72. Pentest Tools Windows
  73. Hacking Tools Usb
  74. Hacks And Tools
  75. Hack App

No comments:

Post a Comment