Image your system with free Macrium

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  1. Posts : 161
    Windows 7 Ultimate x64
       #211

    mjf said:
    stonebear said:

    Yea, I could just restore the C and then use the recovery CD or OS CD to "repair" and create a new MBR etc.

    whs said:
    But if you have the SSD in a desktop or if you can stick it into an external enclosure, the Paragon Migration tool is the easiest. It does everything for you. But you stll need the system running on the HDD.
    The system is on the SSD.

    Thanks. :)
    What you could try if you are starting with a clean SSD. Make a ~200MB primary partition and the rest another primary partition called C: say. Restore your old C: to the new C: and do NOT mark it active. Mark the empty 200MB partition active and run the system repair x3. This should build the MBR and the required boot files on the 200MB partition (bootmgr and [Boot] containing the BCD]. With 200MB you should never experience the problem of running out of shadow storage space.
    Alternatively dispense with the system reserved if you have little use for bit locker and/or the F8 function.
    Yea, that is how I decided to do it - if I need to. With or without the system reserved I could just do the system repair 3x thing to get it to boot :)
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  2. Posts : 161
    Windows 7 Ultimate x64
       #212

    "if you have little use for bit locker and/or the F8 function."

    I use F8 to use safe mode when needed, I wouldn't loase that ability would I?
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  3. whs
    Posts : 26,210
    Vista, Windows7, Mint Mate, Zorin, Windows 8
    Thread Starter
       #213

    JDH1, The reason I suggest to make the 4 folders is because then you can tell the images easily apart. And since you normally never restore the 100MB partition or the recovery partition, that is handy. It is also convenient for managing the restore points.

    Over time you will accumulate a certain number of images for C and D of which you may want to delete some of the older versions. If all images are in the same folder, you do not know which is which.

    Into each folder (via the XML) you can place as many images as you want. They are easy to distinguish by date.

    With free Macrium you always get full images - which I prefer because they are easy to manage. With free Paragon you can also make differentials or incrementals. To manage those (e.g. delete older versions) is a lot more tricky.
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  4. mjf
    Posts : 5,969
    Windows 7x64 Home Premium SP1
       #214

    stonebear said:
    "if you have little use for bit locker and/or the F8 function."

    I use F8 to use safe mode when needed, I wouldn't loase that ability would I?
    I'm pretty sure you loose the F8 function when you dispense with system reserved. However, a system repair disk will give you the same capability.
      My Computer


  5. Posts : 161
    Windows 7 Ultimate x64
       #215

    mjf said:
    stonebear said:
    "if you have little use for bit locker and/or the F8 function."

    I use F8 to use safe mode when needed, I wouldn't loase that ability would I?
    I'm pretty sure you loose the F8 function when you dispense with system reserved. However, a system repair disk will give you the same capability.

    OK, thanks. I can lose that, seems a shame though. I will be doing a fresh install with no system reserved soon so I will find out for sure. :)
      My Computer


  6. Posts : 5,056
    Windows 7 x64 pro/ Windows 7 x86 Pro/ XP SP3 x86
       #216

    mjf said:
    stonebear said:
    "if you have little use for bit locker and/or the F8 function."

    I use F8 to use safe mode when needed, I wouldn't loase that ability would I?
    I'm pretty sure you loose the F8 function when you dispense with system reserved. However, a system repair disk will give you the same capability.
    F8 function "Repair your computer" requires only 2 things to function- the RE files (these are automatically installed on the computer when win7 is installed on the computer) and some bcd entries. It is not dependent on the Sysres partition.

    All you need to do after making whatever changes you are making is- first check whether "Repair your computer" is present or not. If not the 2 simplest ways of creating it are by using reagentc or with easybcd (easybcd doesnt create the F8 thing but it can be used to create a bootmenu entry for the recovery options which is as good).
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  7. Posts : 161
    Windows 7 Ultimate x64
       #217

    Bill2 said:
    F8 function "Repair your computer" requires only 2 things to function- the RE files (these are automatically installed on the computer when win7 is installed on the computer) and some bcd entries. It is not dependent on the Sysres partition.

    All you need to do after making whatever changes you are making is- first check whether "Repair your computer" is present or not. If not the 2 simplest ways of creating it are by using reagentc or with easybcd (easybcd doesnt create the F8 thing but it can be used to create a bootmenu entry for the recovery options which is as good).

    That's good, thanks Bill. :)
      My Computer


  8. Posts : 36
    Windows 7 Home x64
       #218

    kado897 said:
    JDH1 said:
    whs said:
    Here is what I recommend:

    1. Use Macrium because it is the easiest, fastest and very reliable. Here is a tutorial on how it works: Imaging with free Macrium

    2. Make 4 folders on your backup drive.

    -- 100MB partition
    -- Recovery partition
    -- C partition
    -- D partition

    3. In Macrium, make a definition and image of each of those partitions to their respective folders on the backup drive. The 100MB partition and the Recovery partition you need to image only once for the case that your physical disk breaks. The C and D partitions you should image as often as major changes have been made there. E.g updates or new program installs on C or new data on D.

    PS: free Paragon is also a good option. But it is a bit more complex and involved.
    First, thanks for your helpful and rapid reply!

    So both the Macrium and Paragon programs are rock solid as regards Windows 7 64 bit. And evidently they both know how to do restores to the new drive alignment (I believe the data used to start at 63 or 64 sectors from the beginning of the drive, but now it's at an even 1 megabyte). Well this sure is good news, especially considering the problems people say Ghost and True Image are having!

    Your suggested procedures seem very similar to what I would have done using Ghost -- the only obvious difference being the need for a separate folder for each partition's backup (not that this is any big problem). However since I like to keep layered backups, I assume I can put multiple backup files in each folder and keep them separate by simply using different file names (as would be done with Ghost)?

    If you see no benefits offerred by Paragon for all the tasks outlined in my first post, and if Macrium is in some ways simpler, I will most certainly read/look at your tutorial on Macrium as soon as possible!
    You can put all your partitions in the same backup file with Macrium but you have to restore them one at a time.
    I don't know whether one backup file would be more or less confusing than using separate folders and separate files. WHS's recent post (#213) explains his reasoning on this quite well. I want to go over WHS's tutorial materials today -- hopefully things will make more sense to me after that <g>!

    A different but related matter here is using Macrium to go from a HDD to an SSD. Obviously they have dissimilar structures, so maybe this is impossible to do. However if I eventually have three separate image files of the three partitions I now have on one physical HDD, I hope I will somehow be able to transfer all these to one physical SSD.
      My Computer


  9. Posts : 10,455
    Microsoft Windows 7 Home Premium 64-bit Service Pack 1
       #219

    JDH1 said:
    kado897 said:
    JDH1 said:

    First, thanks for your helpful and rapid reply!

    So both the Macrium and Paragon programs are rock solid as regards Windows 7 64 bit. And evidently they both know how to do restores to the new drive alignment (I believe the data used to start at 63 or 64 sectors from the beginning of the drive, but now it's at an even 1 megabyte). Well this sure is good news, especially considering the problems people say Ghost and True Image are having!

    Your suggested procedures seem very similar to what I would have done using Ghost -- the only obvious difference being the need for a separate folder for each partition's backup (not that this is any big problem). However since I like to keep layered backups, I assume I can put multiple backup files in each folder and keep them separate by simply using different file names (as would be done with Ghost)?

    If you see no benefits offerred by Paragon for all the tasks outlined in my first post, and if Macrium is in some ways simpler, I will most certainly read/look at your tutorial on Macrium as soon as possible!
    You can put all your partitions in the same backup file with Macrium but you have to restore them one at a time.
    I don't know whether one backup file would be more or less confusing than using separate folders and separate files. WHS's recent post (#213) explains his reasoning on this quite well. I want to go over WHS's tutorial materials today -- hopefully things will make more sense to me after that <g>!

    A different but related matter here is using Macrium to go from a HDD to an SSD. Obviously they have dissimilar structures, so maybe this is impossible to do. However if I eventually have three separate image files of the three partitions I now have on one physical HDD, I hope I will somehow be able to transfer all these to one physical SSD.
    Yes I see your point. I have 4 partitions on my laptop internal HDD. I backup Recovery and HP tools together because they wont change and do System and C together regularly because they are a "working set". Other disks I do file and folder backups as and when needed (I have the paid version).
      My Computer


  10. Posts : 36
    Windows 7 Home x64
       #220

    whs said:
    JDH1, The reason I suggest to make the 4 folders is because then you can tell the images easily apart. And since you normally never restore the 100MB partition or the recovery partition, that is handy. It is also convenient for managing the restore points.

    Over time you will accumulate a certain number of images for C and D of which you may want to delete some of the older versions. If all images are in the same folder, you do not know which is which.

    Into each folder (via the XML) you can place as many images as you want. They are easy to distinguish by date.

    With free Macrium you always get full images - which I prefer because they are easy to manage. With free Paragon you can also make differentials or incrementals. To manage those (e.g. delete older versions) is a lot more tricky.
    That things were usually done a bit differently with Ghost isn't really important. Your explanation about the separate folders for Macrium makes perfect sense to me. Right, the less confusion, the better <g>.

    On Paragon vs. Macrium, I too have always preferred full images even if my current backup regimen allowed differential or incremental backups. For me, the extra time to do full backups never outweighed what I perceived to be a simpler and more straight forward approach.

    Am I thinking of a different program, or doesn't Paragon use some kind of "capsule", apparently a virtual, hidden or possibly temporary partition. I have read about users having a drive letter D: partition inserted, and this new partition then bumping their existing partition D: to the new letter E:, effectively destroying any drive letter dependent links, shortcuts, etc. Maybe this was with another program and not Paragon, but if Macrium never adds partitions for its own use and never changes my drive letters, I would find that far preferable to any program which did do this.

    Do you see any reason to get the paid version of Macrium? And what about migration from a HDD to an SSD?

    Sorry about all the questions, but please know that you are helping out a lot here -- and it's appreciated!!!
      My Computer


 
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