In the backup for both of them iMazing has taken up 152GB in the backup folders on the external drive as reported by running du -h in that folder. Now I don't know exactly what is being backed up, but my iPhone says it has 143.4GB used and my iPad has 113.6GB used. For a better example than Mail, if you have, like I do, 9000 images in Photos and take one picture to add to it, that entire database is now copied as a new backup, duplicated in the next TM Snapshot and if it syncs to another iDevice (like my iPad, where I do also sync), then you end up with FOUR copies of the photos database. Even if Mail is not backed up, there are things they show on that page as definitely being backed up that change frequently (Reminders, Calendar, Messages, Notes, Applications and Photos). It is a good product, but I recommend you don't leave it running all the time because the price (in storage) is too high.įrom my work on it, I think it can be a real data hog if you leave it running. I've recovered over 300GB of space just by forcing iMazing to use an external drive and by not letting it run constantly. You might want to check your own systems for similar things. All of that is to say that yesterday before I started the process my 1TB SSD had 150GB free, today it is showing 459GB free. And that trigged another recovery of space. So today when TM ran at noon, the snapshot it made did not have the backup information that had previously been on my internal drive. Nothing else has changed, so I'm attributing that cessation of activity to not having iMazing running. I've noticed a drop in disk activity in Activity Monitor and the activity lights on my external drive where the backups are being put are showing no activity instead of the random but frequent activity that was the situation before. So it only runs when I turn it on to make a backup. I changed my setup to NOT have iMazing Mini launch at boot and have taken iMazing out of the Login items for my account. Disk space is being consumed at a pretty rapid clip. And if you have two devices like I do and the mail arrives on both, you end up with four copies. All of a sudden you now have twice the space taken up for that database. Now add in TM snapshots and that same data will now be included in the snapshot. Just like TM, this process is continuing on some regular basis. But the downside is that if you receive Mail on your devices and a mail message arrives, the database for Mail changes, so a copy gets put into that location waiting for you to make a backup. All of that is, I suppose, a sort of good thing. From what I could see, whenever iMazing or iMazing Mini is running and your iDevice is available to be seen by iMazing, it is checking for things that have changed on the iDevice and putting those things into a folder in iMazing.backups located at >iMazing.backups/iMazing Versions/>/. There are plenty of smaller improvements too, like a new preferences tab for Devices, with options to prevent iTunes from performing automatic backups or launching after connecting a device.Click to expand. Although like iTunes, you won’t be able to downgrade to older iOS versions once Apple has stopped signing them. You can also do the same with a complete reinstall, even during a restore. Since devices are always connected to the utility over Wi-Fi, iMazing detects when the current version is out of date and offers to update with a click. (Signing in to install App Store updates is still required, however.) Similar conveniences extend to updating or reinstalling iOS itself. You’ll endure fewer annoying iOS Setup Assistant screens during a restore, since the software automatically takes care of many account login prompts for you. Restoring backups to a new device just got way easier thanks to iMazing’s one-click transfer wizard. Rather than having to connect a new device via Wi-Fi to activate and update to the latest version of iOS, iMazing seamlessly handles these tasks as part of its restore wizard. IMazing 2.2 makes other welcome improvements to the traditionally front-loaded restore process. It’s a more streamlined process that puts Apple’s cumbersome method to shame. Rather than restore from iTunes or a lengthy iCloud backup, you simply connect both devices, start the transfer, and sit back while the software does its thing. One of iMazing’s coolest features is the ability to copy content between devices, quite handy for upgrading to a new iPhone or iPad. IMazing can also access and export text messages, but only from an existing device backup.
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