Hi, Robert. Windows images are called WIM files (*.wim). I don't know
off the top of my head if the TSM image file is the same thing, but it
seems reasonable that they could be.
You might take a look at
http://technet.microsoft.com/en-us/library/cc766067%28v=ws.10%29.aspx.
It tells about how to mount a wim file. Alternatively, you can google
"wim file" to do some research.
As a fall-back option, I would speculate booting off of a live Linux CD
would allow you to mount that image file as an NTFS volume and copy
files out of it.
Please let us know what ends up working for you.
Thanks,
Alex
On 6/12/2012 11:22 PM, Robert Ouzen wrote:
Hello
I tried the imagebackup feature to backup a Windows server with a lot of files
(disk f:): backup image F: (around 360GB backup)
I did a restore with the option –imagetofile as: restore image F:
O:\diskF.img –imagetofile .
Run successfully and got an image file diskF.img of 360GB
Try to open it with an image program as PowerISO , configure on the program the
temporary output to a huge disk 1Tera, but still cannot open the file.
Just for knowledge did is a limitation of opening an image file or anybody
know how can it be done ?
We will use the regular restore image as partition anyway but ….
Regards
Robert Ouzen