[LUAU] Recovery disc.

Mark Robinson sleeodoc at usa.net
Wed Jan 6 11:58:47 PST 1999


Max
If you can boot to dos from a floppy and then use your cdrom it doesn't care at
all about the contents of the partition it is working on. You still have the
problem of adequate storage space. Basically a fat partition on some drive is
needed.

best mark

David and Max wrote:

> Hi Mark and Michael, thanks for the info.  Unfortunately, I've got a
> standalone Linux box with no other MS-type OSes inside.  Can Drive image
> still "image" the drive? or do I have to take out the drive and hook it up
> to my Wintel box to image it?  I'm trying out GHOST and 'digesting' that
> FAT acrobat manual.  But anyway, really glad to hear from you folks.
>
> -Max
>
> >Max I have both ms and unix oses on my system I use drive image from
> powerquest
> >to make compressed images of partitions for instant repair. At a time when I
> >have an os working perfect I create a compressed partition image. I use 1 gig
> >partitions and the images are about 400 meg. Then when I want to refresh
> the os
> >I blow away the partition, and restore from the image. Creating the image
> for a
> >1 gig partition takes about a half hour. Restoring the partition takes
> about 5
> >minutes. One down side is that data added after you make the image won't be
> >restored so I often need to do a small amount of hand work before I do the
> >refresh. I avoid most of this by keeping the os stuff and system applications
> >on one partition and usr files on another. As I add new system stuff after I
> >really like the way it works I make a new image. For ms type oses the
> variable
> >system stuff is registry and profile files. for unix oses the /etc files get
> >changed with new os software and so hand work is necessary there.  Also some
> >type of media that can hold large image files is needed, like a jazz drive or
> >harddisk space, or as you suggest a cd. If you can make a dos bootable cd
> with
> >the drive image program and the image files you have a self contained rebuild
> >disk. It will all fit. I also use a boot manager which directs the boot
> process
> >into the correct partition for the os desired, so refreshing a partition
> >requires no messing with the boot process.




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