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#1
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Software to backup the operating system on drive C
I need to replace a faulty drive and are looking for a program that
will write an image to DVD's so I can backup my operating system on drive C then restore the system when I put the new drive into my computer, I'm considering "Drive Image" but I don't know if you can restore the operating system from DVD's when booting up in DOS (as I won't have an operating system to use). Hoping for a reply Regards Brian |
#2
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"Brian" wrote:
I need to replace a faulty drive and are looking for a program that will write an image to DVD's so I can backup my operating system on drive C then restore the system when I put the new drive into my computer, I'm considering "Drive Image" but I don't know if you can restore the operating system from DVD's when booting up in DOS (as I won't have an operating system to use). Is your machine a desktop or laptop or handheld or what? *TimDaniels* |
#3
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"Brian" wrote in message
I need to replace a faulty drive and are looking for a program that will write an image to DVD's so I can backup my operating system on drive C then restore the system when I put the new drive into my computer, I'm considering "Drive Image" but I don't know if you can restore the ope- rating system from DVD's when booting up in DOS (as I won't have an operating system to use). What would the point of making backups be if there is no way of restoring them? Hoping for a reply Regards Brian |
#4
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"Brian" wrote in message ... I need to replace a faulty drive and are looking for a program that will write an image to DVD's so I can backup my operating system on drive C then restore the system when I put the new drive into my computer, I'm considering "Drive Image" but I don't know if you can restore the operating system from DVD's when booting up in DOS (as I won't have an operating system to use). The help system for DI7 says that if you can't boot to windows (eg because your HD is blank) you use the PowerQuest Recovery Environment (PQRE) instead.. Quote: "Restore the entire drive using the System Restore Wizard from the PowerQuest Recovery Environment (PQRE) on the bootable PowerQuest CD" There is a whole section with step by step notes but the formatting is lost when I paste it below. Send me an email (Remove BOX to get my real address) and I'll send you the instructions with formatting. Whatever you decide to do - Always remove the old drive that contains your data before you attempts the restore - It's too easy to overwrite it or reformat it by mistake if you leave it in the system. Also WinXP can get well confused if it's booted with two identical drives installed. Colin Restoring a Single Drive Using the PQRE ============================ If you cannot restore a file or folder while the machine is online (because you cannot boot into the operating system or because of a lack of free hard drive space), you can use the System Restore wizard from the PowerQuest Recovery Environment (PQRE) to return a drive on the machine to full functionality. You can also use the PQRE to perform a bare metal recovery of a machine if you have suffered a catastrophic hard drive failure. Under the PQRE, you can restore a single drive, multiple drives, or multiple drives using a system index file (.sV2i). IMPORTANT! The PQRE requires a minimum of 256 MB of RAM to run. Insert the PowerQuest CD into the media drive of the machine. Immediately reboot the machine. You may need to modify your system to make it bootable from the CD. See I can't boot from the CD.. (Optional) If necessary, you can install special RAID or SCSI drivers for the machine's hard disk subsystem by pressing F6 when prompted during the boot into PQRE. See I can't access the local drive where my backups are saved. Watch the computer screen. When the prompt "Press any key to boot from CD" appears, you have approximately five seconds to press a key to begin booting into the PQRE from the CD. (Optional) From the Time Zone drop-down list of the PQRE main window, select the time zone location you are in relative to the location of the backup image store. (Optional) Select the language in which you want the System Restore wizard and Backup Image Browser to display. Click System Restore. IMPORTANT! Drive letters under the PQRE may not match those in the Windows environment. Click Restore drives, then click Next. Click Single drive, then click Next. Specify the location of the backup image file to restore, or click Browse and navigate to the backup image file you want. If you click Browse and cannot see or browse the network from the Open dialog, type the name of the machine and share that holds your backup images, in the File name text box (example: \\machine_name\share_name\), then press Enter. Select a backup image file, then click Open to add it to the text field. If you are still unable to see your network after typing the machine name and share name, you may need to map a drive to see and browse the network. See Network Connectivity During a Restore from the PQRE for more information. If the backup image was assigned a password, you must enter it now. Click Next. Select the drive where you want to restore the backup image file. Note that some of the drives listed may be invalid selections because there is not enough free space for the restored backup image file or because you do not have rights to the drive. (Optional) To free disk space, select a drive, then click Delete Drive. This will free space if a single drive space on the hard drive is not adequate. IMPORTANT! When you click Delete Drive, the drive is only virtually deleted at that point; the actual deletion of the drive takes place after you click Finish in the wizard. If you change your mind before clicking Finish, go back to the Restore Destination dialog and click Undo Delete to "restore" the drive. Click Next. Select or deselect the restore options you want. The options available will depend on the restore location you selected in the previous step. Restore options Description Verify backup image before restore This option is useful if you want to determine whether a backup image file is valid or corrupt prior to the start of a restoration. The backup image is checked to see that the internal data structures in the backup image file match the data that is available, and the backup image file can be uncompressed (if you selected a compression level at the time of creation) and create the expected amount of data. If the backup image is invalid, the restoration will not continue. This option is selected by default. Check for file system errors after restore Enable error checking. The hard drive is checked for errors after the backup image file has been restored. Resize drive to fill unallocated space Expand the drive that is being restored to occupy the destination drive's remaining free space. Advanced Restore Options Description Set drive active (for booting OS) Use Set drive active to make the restored drive the active partition (the drive the machine boots from). Only one drive can be active at a time. To boot the machine, it must be on the first drive, and it must contain an operating system. When the machine boots, it reads the partition table of the first drive to find out which drive is active and boots from that location. If the drive is not bootable or you are not certain that it is, have a boot disk ready. Set drive active is valid for basic disks only (not dynamic disks). Partition type Click Primary partition to restore as a primary partition. Click Logical partition to restore as a logical partition inside an extended partition. (This option is not applicable for dynamic disks.) Restore original disk signature Restores the original physical disk signature of the hard drive. Disk signatures are included in Windows Server 2003, Windows 2000 Advanced Server, and Windows NT Server 4.0 Enterprise Edition (SP3 and later) and are necessary before the hard drive can be used. This option is recommended for advanced users. Restore MBR Restore the master boot record. The master boot record is contained in the first sector of the first physical hard drive. The MBR consists of a master boot program and a partition table that describes the disk partitions. The master boot program looks at the partition table to see which primary partition is active. It then starts the boot program from the boot sector of the active partition. This option is recommended for advanced users. Click Next. (Optional) Select Reboot after finish if you want the machine to reboot automatically after the backup images are restored. Click Finish Yes to restore the backup image. |
#5
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On Mon, 18 Oct 2004 15:01:54 +1300, Brian wrote:
I need to replace a faulty drive and are looking for a program that will write an image to DVD's so I can backup my operating system on drive C then restore the system when I put the new drive into my computer, I'm considering "Drive Image" but I don't know if you can restore the operating system from DVD's when booting up in DOS (as I won't have an operating system to use). True Image 8 (www.acronis.com) has a Linux-based bootable rescue disc (floppy or CD) that supports a pretty wide range of hardware, but you'd want to test it with your system. You'd also want to do an integrity test after the backup but before attempting the restore. It will write to DVDs - check the faq at their site. If you can buy or borrow an external HD, this is much faster than CD or DVD. Personally, I make 2 separate backups before wiping out my main drive; one on HD, and one on DVD, but some consider me overly cautious. -- Neil Maxwell - I don't speak for my employer |
#6
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"CWatters" wrote:
[....................] WinXP can get well confused if it's booted with two identical drives installed. That only happens when the drive with the newly copied WinXP is booted for the 1st time. If the old WinXP is visible then, the new WinXP will point back to some files in the original WinXP. By having the old WinXP invisible during that 1st boot up, the confusion is avoided. Thereafter, the new WinXP can see the old WinXP at boot time, and it won't "get confused". Curiously, the new WinXP can see *other* WinXPs besides the copied one during its 1st boot up, and it won't be confused by *them*. There seems to be some feature within itself that it looks for in recognizing its "identical twin" that gets changed after the 1st boot up. *TimDaniels* |
#7
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"CWatters" wrote in message
"Brian" wrote in message ... I need to replace a faulty drive and are looking for a program that will write an image to DVD's so I can backup my operating system on drive C then restore the system when I put the new drive into my computer, I'm considering "Drive Image" but I don't know if you can restore the operating system from DVD's when booting up in DOS (as I won't have an operating system to use). The help system for DI7 says that if you can't boot to windows (eg because your HD is blank) you use the PowerQuest Recovery Environment (PQRE) instead.. Quote: "Restore the entire drive using the System Restore Wizard from the PowerQuest Recovery Environment (PQRE) on the bootable PowerQuest CD" There is a whole section with step by step notes but the formatting is lost when I paste it below. Send me an email (Remove BOX to get my real address) and I'll send you the instructions with formatting. Whatever you decide to do - Always remove the old drive that contains your data before you attempts the restore - It's too easy to overwrite it or reformat it by mistake if you leave it in the system. Also WinXP can get well confused if it's booted with two identical drives installed. Not only WinXP. Colin Restoring a Single Drive Using the PQRE ============================ If you cannot restore a file or folder while the machine is online (because you cannot boot into the operating system or because of a lack of free hard drive space), you can use the System Restore wizard from the PowerQuest Recovery Environment (PQRE) to return a drive on the machine to full functionality. You can also use the PQRE to perform a bare metal recovery of a machine if you have suffered a catastrophic hard drive failure. Under the PQRE, you can restore a single drive, multiple drives, or multiple drives using a system index file (.sV2i). IMPORTANT! The PQRE requires a minimum of 256 MB of RAM to run. Bloody hell! Does it show that on the box before they sell it? Does it say that before you break the seal and agree with their terms for giving it back? Does the software warn before you make a backup that you may not be able to restore when your memory is less than 256MB? Geez, speaking of bloatware. [snip] |
#8
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"Timothy Daniels" wrote:
"Brian" wrote: I need to replace a faulty drive and are looking for a program that will write an image to DVD's so I can backup my operating system on drive C then restore the system when I put the new drive into my computer, I'm considering "Drive Image" but I don't know if you can restore the operating system from DVD's when booting up in DOS (as I won't have an operating system to use). Is your machine a desktop or laptop or handheld or what? *TimDaniels* It's a desktop computer Regards Brian |
#9
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Brian wrote:
I need to replace a faulty drive and are looking for a program that will write an image to DVD's so I can backup my operating system on drive C then restore the system when I put the new drive into my computer, I'm considering "Drive Image" but I don't know if you can restore the operating system from DVD's when booting up in DOS (as I won't have an operating system to use). Hoping for a reply Regards Brian Thanks for your replies. I'm told that I should be able to use a imaging program like Drive Image and plug in my new hard drive as a second hard drive then copy from the old hard drive to the new hard drive using drive image and this will create the partitions etc on the new drive. Will this work? Do I need to partition the new drive first as one partition? The old drive is partitioned in to 6 parts. I'm using a desktop computer Regards Brian |
#10
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"Brian" wrote:
I'm told that I should be able to use a imaging program like Drive Image and plug in my new hard drive as a second hard drive then copy from the old hard drive to the new hard drive using drive image and this will create the partitions etc on the new drive. Will this work? Do I need to partition the new drive first as one partition? The old drive is partitioned in to 6 parts. I'm using a desktop computer Great. Desktops are easy, and cloning a HD onto another HD is standard fare for Drive Image. I use Drive Image 7.01 (which now forms the bulk of Symantec's Ghost 9.0 due to the buyout of Power Quest), and it will copy - file formatting and all - everything in one partition to another HD without having to create the partition yourself on the destination HD. I'm not an expert on the Master Boot Record, but I would recommend that you tell Drive Image to copy over the MBR when you copy the 1st partition. You can use WinXP's Disk Management to keep track of the disk space on the 2nd HD (rt-click My Computer, select Manage, then select Disk Management.). If the original HD is jumpered as Master (or at the end position on a dual IDE cable if you're using Cable Select), jumper the 2nd HD as Slave (or put it in the cable's mid position for Cable Select). This is only so that you don't have to readjust the BIOS' boot sequence. (Drive Image doesn't care or even know if you're copying Master-to-Slave or Slave-to- Master.) The only caution that should be added is that you have the 2nd HD isolated from the 1st HD when booting up the 2nd HD for the 1st time. (That was 1st mentioned in this forum by Rod Speed/ Folkert Rienstra/etc.) You can just disconnect the 1st HD's IDE cable to do that. Thereafter, you can have both HDs visible to each other during boot-up, and the booted system will just see the other HD as a file structure. Again, you can see the layout of the partitions and how they are named by using Disk Management. If you're comfortable with using the BIOS to set parameters, you can select which HD boots by just adjusting the boot sequence in the BIOS. Otherwise, you can adjust the boot.ini file at C:\boot.ini on each HD so you use WinXP's boot manager to select which partition on which HD to load the OS from if both HDs are running at the same time. If you run just one HD at a time, you're in the vanilla of vanilla worlds, and you should have no trouble. *TimDaniels* |
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