New
#550
Hi guys,
Firstly, thanks brink for the great work in creating this tutorial.
I have used the windows 7 to create a 'System Image' a few days ago on my desktop PC so I was somewhat already familiar with the process, and unfortunately or fortunately, depending how you look at it, i have had to use it once already [BSOD, driver conflict by the look of it] so i can tell you from experience how valuable they can be.
Then it got me thinking that I have a Dell laptop that I do the bulk of my important stuff on, and on have regular backups of the registry and System Restore points, but have not yet created a 'System Image'.
So before I go ahead and create one, I have one rather simple question, that I somehow may have missed that has already been asked within the 56 pages on this topic.
My laptop has a 500 GB drive that is one big partition [C:\] only taking up a total of 170GB, however, my personal folder takes up about 110GB of the total space and I don't really want it in the System Image, as it contains stuff that (1) is already backed up else where, and (2) other stuff that I want to keep for now but not too concerned if I lost. I feel worse case, I can at least somehow get most of it back if i had a severe crash.
Anyway my question is, I don't think Windows 7 System Image creator allows you to select or omit what goes in/stays off the image, is that correct??? If so, is there another such System Image creator that will allow for something like this? I want everything in the System Image except my personal folder that holds the 110 GB mentioned above.
Thanks in advance to all.
Hello Maco,
By default, all system drives/partitions are included in system image and cannot be unselected since they are required for Windows 7 to run.
Your user folders are also part of the system. To get around that, you could do this below with having the files in another folder, and include the folder in a library. This way the folders will not be included in a system image. After you restore the system image, you would only need to include the folders in the different libraries again.
- Create a new folder at any location you want other than on the Windows drive.
- Move any files you want into the new folder.
- Include the new folder into a library of your choice.
- If you like, you can also set the new folder to be the default "save" to location for the library as well.
- If you like, repeat to create another folder for other files to use another library.
hey Brink,
Sorry maybe you misunderstood. I was not actually talking about the C:\Users folder. That one is fine. What I meant was i have a personal folder I created within the directory eg/ [ C:\Maco] and have my stuff there. So basically in the case of a system image restore, this folder would not be necessary for the system to be restore properly.
I was just after a way I could make a 'System Image' minus this one folder.
I guess if I wanted to use Windows 7 to create a system image minus this folder in question,then i would have to "move" it to an external drive, do the image and move it back right???
Other than that I am just wondering is there a 3rd party program that might let me do a system image with the options to not include some folders [eg. a personally created folder with various stuff in it]
Cheers
Ah, in that case, yes you would need to move the C:\Maco folder to another drive than the Windows drive to not have it included in the system image by default.
3rd party image programs will let you select what drives or partitions to be included, but not folders. If you go that route, you would have to be sure to include all of your system drives/partitions.
Yeah, I figure maybe moving that particular folder temporarily will be the go.
I will use Windows 7 Image creator to make the image as I find it quite easy and straight forward, and best of all its already there.
One thing that may have already been mentioned, but I'll mention it again.. DO NOT change anything once the image has been created. Best to leave it exactly as is.
All i did was just add a date to the main folder and when I went to restore, windows could not find the image. I deleted the date part I added and bingo, it found it and restored beautifully.
Cheers and thanks again.
You're welcome. :)
Yeah, Windows will not find the image unless you rename the folder back to the default name first.
Can you create and store back up images of two different win 7 os's on the same external back up drive?