Copy link to clipboard
Copied
Hi Im using LRC on a m2 mac and i recently had a hard drive fail and nearly lost thousands of images thankfull an app managed to copy the drive and all is well.
I I have always backed up my LR CAT however what does it actually back up? is it just the edits or is it everything? im looking for a solution or a better Understanding of what LRC is actually doing when backing up.
I now have all my raw files on two seperate HD external drives I wlos am in the process of sending them all to Icloud so three copies of everything
Should the new drive fail, and it is unrecoverable how would i go about restoreing evertything?
What is the process?
or is there a betterway to avoid the near hert attack i had this week lol
Copy link to clipboard
Copied
Lightroom will only backup the catalog file (catalogname.lrcat) and the file that contains masks and AI remove (catalogname.lrcat-data), nothing else. You should use a separate backup utility to backup images and anything else you don't want to lose if your drive crashes.
Copy link to clipboard
Copied
It backs up the entire catalog file (.lrcat), which contains edits, edit history, ratings, collections, stacks, keywords and so on.
It also backs up the .lrcat-data folder, which I believe contains all the masking you have done.
It does NOT back up your photos.
Backups are zipped, and to restore a backup, unzip it to a new folder, then double-click the catalog file to launch LrC.
For safety reasons you should back up to a different drive – not the drive where you keep your working catalog.
You choose the location in the backup dialog. (click the Choose button)
Copy link to clipboard
Copied
I now have all my raw files on two seperate HD external drives…Should the new drive fail, and it is unrecoverable how would i go about restoreing evertything?
What is the process?
By @craig.lonie
If you connect a replacement/backup drive that has all of the same raw files on it, in exactly the same folder hierarchy as the original, then it can be a few simple steps.
1. Uncompress the .zip backup of the catalog to restore that catalog’s folder, then put it where you want it to be on your Mac (such as the Pictures folder).
2. In Lightroom Classic, in the Library module expand the Folders panel and look for the topmost parent folder for those images; it probably is showing a question mark next to it.
3. Right-click* that folder and choose Find Missing Folder. Select the folder of the same name on the replacement volume. Lightroom Classic should re-link that folder and all images in all of its subfolders, so all of the question mark icons should go away.
4. If there is more top-level parent folder on that volume, repeat step 3 for each.
*If right-click isn’t enabled on your Mac, Control-click instead.
Get ready! An upgraded Adobe Community experience is coming in January.
Learn more