Onedrive Sync Mac Photo Library

OneDrive is a good place to backup photos, videos and important documents online. It allows you to sync and backup your photos from iPhoto library to OneDrive. If you want to sync iPhoto library with OneDrive, then you need to download and install 'OneDrive application' on your Mac. When you install the OneDrive app for Mac, it will create a folder (OneDrive folder) on your Mac to backup photos, videos and files. This OneDrive folder is kept in sync with OneDrive. If you add, change or delete anything like photo, video or file in this OneDrive folder, then the file is added, changed or deleted on the OneDrive website and vice versa.

On top of the 15GB, you also get a chance to earn more free storage space if you refer OeDrive to other users. Also, making OneDrive the main photos backup utility gives you extra storage space as well. Easy Organisation and Sync. With OneDrive for Mac you can easily store photos, videos, apps, documents, and pretty much any type of content.

Choose 'Quit iPhoto' from iPhoto Library and make sure that photo is not running. Copy iPhoto library file into your OneDrive Folder. Launch iPhoto by double clicking the iPhoto library icon copied into the OneDrive folder that will automatically sync to OneDrive folder. Move Pictures Using the Photos App. One of the most convenient ways of exporting photo. If you're not an IT administrator, read Get started with the new OneDrive sync app on Mac OS X. 2020-3-23 6 Top Reasons to Visit your Library (Folder). There are multiple Library folders in OS X. There’s one in at the root level (/Library) and another inside the System folder (/System/Library. Save disk space with OneDrive Files On-Demand for Mac When you move the picture to OneDrive folder, you need to click Free up space. If you upload the picture to OneDrive web, then it sync to your computer, you needn’t to select Free up space.

Here are the steps to Sync iPhoto Library with OneDrive:

  1. Go to https://onedrive.live.com & sign in to your account. If you don't have an account, then create one.
  2. Download 'OneDrive Application' on your Mac from the Apple App store & launch it.
  3. Locate the file for the existing iPhoto library in your Picture folder.
  4. Go to iPhoto Library and choose 'Quit iPhoto' to make sure that iPhoto is not running.
  5. Copy your 'iPhoto Library' file into your OneDrive folder.
  6. Launch iPhoto. To launch iPhoto Library, simply double-click the iPhoto Library icon which you copied in OneDrive folder. It will automatically sync to your OneDrive folder.
  7. Open the file in iPhoto by holding down the Option key.
  8. Select the iPhoto Library option that's not the default. Now, iPhoto Library stored inside your OneDrive folder by default.
  9. Now, when you add new photos to iPhoto Library, make any changes to existing photos or organize them, then it will automatically backed up to OneDrive.
  10. You have another option to sync iPhoto Library i.e 'Drag-and-drop'. Here you can simply drag your iPhoto Library from the Picture folder directly from your Mac to OneDrive folder.

Quick Tip to ensure your videos never go missing
Videos are precious memories and all of us never want to ever lose them to hard disk crashes or missing drives. PicBackMan is the easiest and simplest way to keep your videos safely backed up in one or more online accounts. Simply download PicBackMan (it's free!), register your account, connect to your online store and tell PicBackMan where your videos are - PicBackMan does the rest, automatically. It bulk uploads all videos and keeps looking for new ones and uploads those too. You don't have to ever touch it.

You can install PicBackMan's SkyDrive uploader for Mac from the website and start backing up photos and videos.

It’s easy from the perch of writing the Mac 911 column to appear as if I have all the answer. Dear readers, I do not. I am always delighted to research on your behalf, but sometimes problems fall into my lap that I know will help you all, because I’m unable to find a ready solution and nobody in any forum or on any blog has found an answer, sometimes across many years.

Photos for macOS is a bugbear for many of you, one of the most regular sources of questions. But I encountered a sync problem that no one has written in about, yet I can find a history of frustrated people across the Internet trying to solve it. I did find a solution—but you might not like it!

My problem emerged a few weeks ago, when I noticed that Photos for macOS on my office computer, an iMac running Mojave, was out of date. I checked my laptop Mac, my iPhone, and iCloud.com: photos were synced and up to date in each of those locations.

Sync to onedrive automatically

This has happened before, and I go through a series of escalating troubleshooting steps:

  1. Quit Photos and re-launch it.
  2. Using the Terminal to “kill” certain Photos-related background agents and jobs. (This is a little tweaky and can cause problems, so I hesitate to recommend it. In any case, it didn’t help.)
  3. Restart my Mac.
  4. Rebuild the Photos database by holding down Command-Option while launching the app and following prompts.
  5. Disabling iCloud Photos and re-enabling it in Photos > Preferences > iCloud. This can force a re-sync, though often it’s relatively fast as Photos and iCloud seem to bypass pictures that are in both places.

Sync Onedrive Folders Windows 10

None of this worked. After reading years’ worth of posts of people trying to overcome the problem, I tried one suggestion: deleting a deeply nested folder in the Photos library that tracks iCloud synchronization.

Warning! Apple doesn’t advise making these kinds of low-level changes. I strongly recommend making a full backup of your Photos library, if not a fresh full clone of your drive or forcing a Time Machine update, before proceeding.

Find your Photos library and Control-click it, and then select Show Package Contents. Now traverse down to:

private/com.apple.cloudphotosd/CloudSync.noindex

Onedrive Sync Mac Photo Library

With Photos not running, I deleted the contents of this folder, which required entering an administrative password. I then-relaunched Photos.

Photos and iCloud apparently had a behind-the-scenes confab and decided my copy of Photos had never synced with iCloud at all. This led Photos on my Mac to re-upload about 45,000 images and videos, even though they were identical in my library at iCloud.com.

Fortunately, I have gigabit Internet service with no cap on usage and no overage fee. (The local legacy wired telephone company has rolled out fiber like mad and charges a relatively low amount for it—even less than slower service via a cable ISP.)

Onedrive Sync Mac Photo Library Free

If you have more normal broadband service, even in the 50Mbps to 100Mbps range, or get throttled, blocked, or charged overage fees above a certain amount of monthly data, this won’t seem like a good solution to you at all. (Although during the pandemic, a number of ISPs with home broadband service have removed caps and overage charges, including AT&T and Comcast.)

Sync

Onedrive Sync Mac Photo Library Reviews

The resync took about two days and showed steady progress. At the end, all my media remained in exactly the same state, but my Mac’s Photos library was finally up to date with other devices in its iCloud account set.

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How To Sync Onedrive

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Glenn Fleishman is the author of dozens of books. His most recent include Take Control of Your M-Series Mac, Take Control of Securing Your Mac, Take Control of Zoom, and Six Centuries of Type and Printing. In his spare time, he makes Tiny Type Museums. He’s a senior contributor to Macworld, where he writes Mac 911.