-----BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE----- Hash: SHA1 I come from the Linux world. If one of my computers were to simply evaporate into nothingness or have complete storage failure then once the hardware problem is dealt with I would network boot SystemRescueCD then restore my backups that I made with rsync.
I understand that things are more complicated in Windows but if say my laptop (it is the only computer I have that both boots and stores Windows) were similarly destroyed or blanked I would still network boot SystemRescueCD and restore my backups that I made with ntfsclone. My hesitation with backing up a Windows system with rsync is that I have absolutely no idea to go from "I have a blank computer and a copy of all my files" to "I have a working computer with all my stuff". I might be asking for something as simple as "Install Windows, install Acrosync, restore everything including the Windows configuration from backups" or maybe some kind of rescue disc or maybe some kind of custom WinPE disc. I don't know. I know just enough about Windows to figure out how to use what I know from Linux to make things sorta work. On 04/11/2014 07:39 PM, L. A. Walsh wrote: > Donald Pearson wrote: >> ..backing up a complete Windows system and doing a bare metal >> restore.. >> >> That would really be something. > Depends on what you mean bare-metal restore... if you have 'bare > metal', then that would seem to mean no OS. If you have no OS, > what are you running the restore on? > > Or are you talking about taking the image from 1 disk and copying > it to another and booting from that disk? > > I did that when I upgraded my RAID-SSD. For my Win workstation, I > use RAID-0 w/4 SSD's, which uses up 4/5 of my drive slots. So no > room to dupto a similar config. > > I put a 2TB drive in the 5th slot and used cygwin's dd to copy to > the 2TB drive. > > Then booted a linux rescue disk and used that to 'dd' the image on > the 2TB drive to the new RAID-0. Had to have some third-party > licenses reissued, but other than that, went fairly smoothly. > Windows itself auto-activated via the an OEM check (Dell system). > > It's not exactly convenient, but for what was needed, it worked. > > Or are you talking doing the transfer w/no OS... um... yeah, that > would be something... > > (Cygwin can be pretty useful sometimes). - -- ~*-,._.,-*~'`^`'~*-,._.,-*~'`^`'~*-,._.,-*~'`^`'~*-,._.,-*~'`^`'~*-,._.,-*~ Kevin Korb Phone: (407) 252-6853 Systems Administrator Internet: FutureQuest, Inc. ke...@futurequest.net (work) Orlando, Florida k...@sanitarium.net (personal) Web page: http://www.sanitarium.net/ PGP public key available on web site. ~*-,._.,-*~'`^`'~*-,._.,-*~'`^`'~*-,._.,-*~'`^`'~*-,._.,-*~'`^`'~*-,._.,-*~ -----BEGIN PGP SIGNATURE----- Version: GnuPG v2.0.22 (GNU/Linux) Comment: Using GnuPG with Thunderbird - http://www.enigmail.net/ iEYEARECAAYFAlNIgYcACgkQVKC1jlbQAQda0gCeIt1DFdVfWL4Lz5rL1yLBRlSZ HOwAnRyxVUBTUcbUQ9me0J/ewR4L+yXC =HUqR -----END PGP SIGNATURE----- -- Please use reply-all for most replies to avoid omitting the mailing list. To unsubscribe or change options: https://lists.samba.org/mailman/listinfo/rsync Before posting, read: http://www.catb.org/~esr/faqs/smart-questions.html