System Image Recovery

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  1. mjf
    Posts : 5,969
    Windows 7x64 Home Premium SP1
       #150

    Images and file/folder backup sets are totally different from a technical point of view. Like mentioned Images are .vhd files (one per partition imaged) and these are typically very large. File/folder backup sets are stored as one or more .zip files. Each .zip file is generally substantially smaller than the .vhd file.

    If the recovery programs that Brink mentioned can recover the large .vhd file then there is a good chance it can recover the image file folder. In this case you could make a new existing image of your system for safety. The recovered image folder may be able to be reimaged if it is renamed back to [WndowsImageBackup] in a root directory of a partition.
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  2. mjf
    Posts : 5,969
    Windows 7x64 Home Premium SP1
       #151

    One more addition to step 1


    Brink
    Some people like to move their images to folders for keeping multiple Windows images. You may want to add something to step 1 along the lines:

    .....in addition to the renaming stuff....

    If you have moved your image into a folder called say "wstore" you need to will need to move it back to the appropriate root partition/volume. Say the volume has been assigned E: then

    >cd e:\wstore
    >dir {only to check the image is there}
    >16/11/2010 9:00AM <DIR> windowsimagebackup
    >move windowsimagebackup e:\

    This of course can be used with renaming as well if the user chooses a combination of both folder and rename storage.

    I know it's pretty simple but your decision of course.
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  3. Posts : 72,051
    64-bit Windows 11 Pro for Workstations
    Thread Starter
       #152

    Good idea Michael. Added. :)
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  4. mjf
    Posts : 5,969
    Windows 7x64 Home Premium SP1
       #153

    Brink said:
    Good idea Michael. Added. :)
    Brink your addition
    "If you moved the WindowsImageBackup folder to another partition or drive, then you will also need to move it back to the original partition or drive letter it was created on."

    suggest this mod

    If you moved the WindowsImageBackup folder within another folder or to another partition or drive, then you will also need to move it back to the original partition or drive letter it was created on.


    ie. they don't need to be stored in the root but packed away in sub folders.
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  5. Posts : 72,051
    64-bit Windows 11 Pro for Workstations
    Thread Starter
       #154

    Sounds good. :)
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  6. Posts : 21
    Windows 7 Pro 64bit
       #155

    Hoping to avoid disaster (or at least a lot of work)


    _______________________________________
    UPDATE: I've narrowed the problem to a failure during image creation, not a file location/integrity issue as I originally thought
    I re-installed the bad drive and (keeping my fingers crossed that it doesn't completely fail at any second) have tried to re-run the back-up. It freezes at exactly the same spot each time....at a little under 25% completion on the green progress bar. Windows itself freezes, and upon restart, the "bootmgr is missing" error occurs until I do a cold boot.

    Is it possible to create a system image from outside Windows? Any suggestions? I'm very keen to get at least one usable image of this drive before disaster strikes.
    ________________________________________

    TIA for any help. Her system is using Win 7 Home Premium 64bit.

    (Great thread, BTW.....very helpful & friendly!)
    Last edited by BrodyBoy; 27 Nov 2010 at 03:59.
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  7. Posts : 560
    WIN10
       #156

    Macrium Reflect Free Edition?

    Macrium Reflect Imaging- Tutorial
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  8. mjf
    Posts : 5,969
    Windows 7x64 Home Premium SP1
       #157

    BrodyBoy said:
    _______________________________________
    UPDATE: I've narrowed the problem to a failure during image creation, not a file location/integrity issue as I originally thought
    I think I see what happened with her back-up. I re-installed the bad drive and (keeping my fingers crossed that it doesn't completely fail at any second) have tried to re-run the back-up. It freezes at exactly the same spot each time....at a little under 25% completion on the green progress bar. Windows itself freezes, and upon restart, the "bootmgr is missing" error occurs until I do a cold boot.

    Is it possible to create a system image from outside Windows? Any suggestions? I'm very keen to get at least one usable image of this drive before disaster strikes.
    ________________________________________

    Original Post:

    The Seagate HDD in a single-drive system I recently built for a friend began to issue S.M.A.R.T. warnings a couple days ago. I immediately went over there, installed a secondary back-up HDD, and used Backup & Restore to create a system image of the C drive. I also set it to create a separate back-up of her libraries. I formatted the secondary drive first, so there's nothing else on it.

    It was progressing normally and I left with the backup still running. She confirmed a little later by text that it was done.

    Now the Seagate drive appears to have failed. I've installed a new HDD to restore the image to, but Windows Recovery says it finds no available System Image. Neither that secondary back-up HDD I installed, nor the files on it, has been moved or renamed. From the command prompt, I confirmed that there is a folder named "WindowsImageBackup" on that drive (which Windows is calling "C" now).

    So, my question: How do I determine whether this is a "locating-the-image" problem, or a "there's-no-system-image-and-you're-going-to-spend-the-rest-of-the-weekend-rebuilding-her-entire-installation" problem. Obviously, I'm REALLY hoping it's the first, but when I called to ask exactly what message she saw when back-up completed, she said she doesn't actually remember any such message (gulp!) and she doesn't know whether it was done before she saw a "bootmgr is missing, press CTL+ALT+DEL to resart" message and rebooted. (double-gulp!!) I should have stayed til it was done......

    TIA for any help. Her system is using Win 7 Home Premium 64bit.

    (Great thread, BTW.....very helpful & friendly!)
    I need a clear statement of the current situation ie. right now. The above is too confusing.
    What disks have you got and what is on the disks?
    Do you think you have a valid image?
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  9. Posts : 21
    Windows 7 Pro 64bit
       #158

    mjf said:
    I need a clear statement of the current situation ie. right now. The above is too confusing.
    What disks have you got and what is on the disks?
    Do you think you have a valid image?
    Yeah, sorry....I should have just edited out the original post. There was no valid image to find, so that was not the problem.

    Currently, I have the original drive that's failing, a 1Tb Seagate. Though I can boot into Windows, it's triggering SMART errors, and diagnostics programs confirm that there are "irreparable errors." I have a new WD that I want to replace it with.

    I tried using Windows Backup several times to create a system image. It would consistently hang at the same point (~25% complete) and I'd have to reboot, always getting a missing boot mgr message. So Windows Backup never produced a valid image.

    I installed Acronis True Image and tried to create an image. I used a freshly-formatted 400Gb Hitachi as the destination drive (as I did with Windows Backup).

    Acronis sputtered for awhile, but at least it sent error messages. It was running into unreadable sectors, in this pattern:
    6,126,592
    6,126,600
    6,126,608
    6,126,616
    ...

    I told it to ignore these sectors, but eventually, I got a fatal error: "Connection to the service is refused. The operation was terminated unexpectently."

    SO.....the disc is damaged or defective, but apparently not in areas that affect Windows significantly. Upon back-up attempts, however, these sectors cause the backup programs to fail.

    I still do not have a valid image. Though I'm concerned about the drive really failing at any moment, should I run some sort of disc repair program first, to mark the bad sectors, and then try one of the back-up programs again? I could rebuild her installation, but I want to exhaust every possibility before doing that. Since it can still boot and function pretty normally, I figure this installation can't be too badly damaged. I just want to replace the bad disc.
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  10. mjf
    Posts : 5,969
    Windows 7x64 Home Premium SP1
       #159

    It looks to me that the disk is definitely on its last legs. Both Windows and Acronis are baulking I doubt anything like Macrium will perform any magic.

    At this stage your first priority should be to get all her personal data off the disk onto some storage media. Ideally an external HDD.
    (1) Can you do this?

    (2) You say every time you you boot (presumably the failing disk) you get boot manager missing - what do you do then?

    (3) Do you have the OS disks and apps to rebuild the system? Is the OS retail or OEM?

    (4) You attempted to reimage to a 400GB HDD - Yes? How big was the partition the images came from?
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