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On 1 Nov 2005 at 8:25, Paul Creelman wrote:
I would like to use an external, partitioned 250 GB HD to image 3 separate XP computers
each 30
GB in size. How do I do this so that if any one of the 3 computers´ HD died, I could
immediately
copy the image for that computer back to a new HD from the corresponding partition of the
external HD so I wouldn´t have to go through the laborious setup process of installing
several of
programs.
As I understand it Acronis and Norton Ghost will not allow copying an image to a
partitioned
external drive - they demand using only one partition on the external drive - thus 1
backup max
per external HD.
You might want to check out g4l or g4u. Both can do local hard drive
images, but are mainly designed to create images to an ftp server.
The both use dd to copy the drive or partition, and then can use
compression to reduce the size of the info, and upload it to an ftp
server. In a local configuration, you could copy a drive or partition to
another drive. If the external drive is recognized by the boot cd, it
would need to be setup as a partition that could be written to by the
cd image. G4L uses linux, G4U uses netbsd.
I make images of my computer labs to an ftp server running Fedora
Core 3 with a 250GB drive. An 80GB drive with 98, XP and Fedora
Core 3 makes a single 14GB image file in about 50 minutes, and
takes about the same time to restore using lzop compression. Takes
more time, doing multiple machines, but generally do one machine,
and then use udpcast to image all the others from that system.
Udpcast can be used to directly transfer the image to the other
machines from the server, but presents a problem for me, since our
MIS department has 4 class C networks running on single physical
network, so only the machines on the same class C as the server
connect. I use udpcast diskette to boot the machines, and assign
10.0.0.x numbers to get it to work.
I haven't done what you looking at, but this is what I think would
work. With G4L, you could create a linux partition, and format it on
the external drive. Boot from the cd, and then use the local copy
options to create images to that drive with different names.
I'd probable just setup a linux machine, and use the ftp options,
since that is simpler, and with the front end option of g4l, you could
even setup a system to allow the users to be able to update and
restore on there own, but it would take diskspace and bandwidth.
At least something that might work. (This would also work with a
Windows FTP server, but you need to make sure the server
supports files larger than 2GB or 4GB, some do not.
Thanks
Paul Creelman
+----------------------------------------------------------+
Michael D. Setzer II - Computer Science Instructor
Guam Community College Computer Center
mailto:mikes@kuentos.guam.net
mailto:msetzerii@gmail.com
http://www.guam.net/home/mikes
Guam - Where America's Day Begins
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