Sparse image explained

Sparse Disk Image
Extension:.sparseimage
Uniform Type:com.apple.disk-image-sparse
Conforms To:com.apple.disk-image
Owner:Apple Inc.
Genre:disk image
Container For:file system objects

A sparse image is a type of disk image file used on macOS that grows in size as the user adds data to the image, taking up only as much disk space as stored in it. Encrypted sparse image files are used to secure a user's home directory by the FileVault feature in Mac OS X Snow Leopard and earlier. Sparse images can be created using Disk Utility.

Unlike a full image file, which takes up as much actual space as the real disk it represents (regardless of the amount of unused space), a sparse image file takes up only as much actual disk space as the data contained within, up to a maximum of the capacity assigned during creation.

Limitations

Two limitations are therefore worth noting regarding the use of this image file format:

  1. A customized ".sparseimage" image file can be assigned a larger total capacity than the physical volume (or HD partition) on which it originally resides. While the virtual volume will seem to make that capacity available, attempting to exceed the physical capacity of the underlying volume will result in a disk error: "ran out of space". The file must first be moved to a larger physical disk or partition.
  2. As noted above, while mounted image files automatically expand to their preassigned limit when data is added, they cannot be arbitrarily resized without the use of Disk Utility,, or other such software.[1] [2]

Sparse bundle disk images

Mac OS X Leopard introduced the concept of the sparse bundle.[3] Instead of a single big file, a sparse bundle is a bundle (directory) containing a number of files called bands, each on 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 MiB each. When the content of the image changes, one or more band files is changed, created, or deleted. This allows easier shrinking of the amount of space used on the underlying filesystem when a large amount of data is deleted inside the disk image, as long as the code supporting the filesystem inside the image notifies the kernel of the "releasing" of blocks, as happens in filesystems that support SSD "trim" operations to be triggered automatically for de-allocated filesystem blocks.

Sparse bundle advantages over non-diskimage backup for Time Machine:

External links

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Create a disk image using Disk Utility on Mac . Apple . August 13, 2020.
  2. Web site: hdiutil(1) OS X Manual Page . Apple . Mac Developer Library . January 21, 2013.
  3. Web site: Live FileVault and Sparse Bundle Backups in Leopard . macosx.com . November 5, 2007 . January 21, 2013 . ScottW . dead . https://web.archive.org/web/20131029200702/http://macosx.com/forums/articles/296196-live-filevault-sparse-bundle-backups-leopard.html . October 29, 2013 .
  4. Web site: Backing up Sparse Bundle Images Over SSH . LBackup . January 21, 2013.