• multi-partition hdd to larger ssd

    From August Abolins@618:500/23.10 to All on Sun Jan 8 14:24:00 2023
    I think EaseUS will be my cloning tool of choice. It even
    allows me to re-allocate the partition sizes BEFORE I do the
    clone, if I want.

    In this screenshot, I simply dragged the C partion boundary to
    about 64GB (from its original 35GB), and it automatically
    "borrows" from the unused H partition and resizes that
    accordingly.

    https://susepaste.org/12138178

    So, it would seem that I could FIRST simply clone the hdd to
    ssd as-is, install the ssd into the pc, boot, and THEN run
    EaseUS to resize the partitions after that!


    --- OpenXP 5.0.51
    * Origin: (618:500/23.10)
  • From Jas Hud@618:200/44 to August Abolins on Sun Jan 8 14:29:10 2023
    To: August Abolins
    Re: multi-partition hdd to larger ssd
    By: August Abolins to All on Sun Jan 08 2023 02:24 pm

    From Newsgroup: Micronet.MIN_COMP

    I think EaseUS will be my cloning tool of choice. It even
    allows me to re-allocate the partition sizes BEFORE I do the
    clone, if I want.


    you should have a clone tool by the mfg on their website.
    --- Synchronet 3.19b-Win32 NewsLink 1.113
    * bbses.info - http://bbses.info - telnet://bbses.info
    * Origin: Star Frontiers starfron.synchronetbbs.org (618:200/44)
  • From August Abolins@618:250/1.9 to Jas Hud on Sun Jan 8 19:20:00 2023
    you should have a clone tool by the mfg on their website.

    They don't have one that runs on XP!

    --
    ../|ug

    --- OpenXP 5.0.51
    * Origin: (} Pointy McPointface (618:250/1.9)
  • From Jas Hud@618:200/44 to August Abolins on Mon Jan 9 05:20:12 2023
    To: August Abolins
    Re: multi-partition hdd to larger ssd
    By: August Abolins to Jas Hud on Sun Jan 08 2023 07:20 pm

    From Newsgroup: Micronet.MIN_COMP

    you should have a clone tool by the mfg on their website.

    They don't have one that runs on XP!

    dont run xp.
    --- Synchronet 3.19b-Win32 NewsLink 1.113
    * bbses.info - http://bbses.info - telnet://bbses.info
    * Origin: Star Frontiers starfron.synchronetbbs.org (618:200/44)
  • From Mark Hofmann@618:100/12 to August Abolins on Mon Jan 9 07:15:38 2023

    I think EaseUS will be my cloning tool of choice. It even
    allows me to re-allocate the partition sizes BEFORE I do the
    clone, if I want.

    That program is really good and I have used it many times.

    I ran into an issue I never experienced in the past. I was growing a large NTFS partition on one of my arrays. It was going from 62TB to 98TB. I had to change the cluster size on the NTFS partition to 32KB in order to do that.

    EaseUS will automatically do that, or you can also select it as an option to just change the default cluster size. The one thing to keep in mind however, is this takes A LONG TIME to complete. With a partition that large, probably weeks.

    It ended up being faster for me to re-create the partition from scratch and re-copy everything.

    - Mark

    --- WWIVToss v.1.52
    * Origin: http://www.weather-station.org * Bel Air, MD -USA (618:100/12.0)
  • From August Abolins@618:250/1.9 to Jas Hud on Mon Jan 9 08:13:00 2023
    you should have a clone tool by the mfg on their website.

    They don't have one that runs on XP!

    dont run xp.

    I suppose I could boot with a live-CD (linux) and use one of
    the cloning tools from that environment.

    --
    ../|ug

    --- OpenXP 5.0.51
    * Origin: (} Pointy McPointface (618:250/1.9)
  • From Nick Andre@618:500/24 to August Abolins on Mon Jan 9 09:21:09 2023
    On 09 Jan 23 08:13:00, August Abolins said the following to Jas Hud:

    I suppose I could boot with a live-CD (linux) and use one of
    the cloning tools from that environment.

    I use Drive Snapshot... runs on anything from NT to 10 Enterprise.

    In use here in a scripted-setup for years... its Shareware but worth the 89 Euro.

    Nick

    --- Renegade vY2Ka2
    * Origin: Joey, do you like movies about gladiators? (618:500/24)
  • From August Abolins@618:250/1.9 to Nick Andre on Mon Jan 9 13:48:00 2023
    Hello Nick!

    I use Drive Snapshot... runs on anything from NT to 10 Enterprise.

    In use here in a scripted-setup for years... its Shareware but worth the 89 Euro.

    Thx for the tip. Appreciated. An automated backup (if I had a
    NAS) would be a pleasure to implement.

    --
    ../|ug

    --- OpenXP 5.0.51
    * Origin: (} Pointy McPointface (618:250/1.9)
  • From Nick Andre@618:500/24 to August Abolins on Mon Jan 9 15:47:31 2023
    On 09 Jan 23 13:48:00, August Abolins said the following to Nick Andre:

    I use Drive Snapshot... runs on anything from NT to 10 Enterprise.

    In use here in a scripted-setup for years... its Shareware but worth t 89 Euro.

    Thx for the tip. Appreciated. An automated backup (if I had a
    NAS) would be a pleasure to implement.

    I wrote a script which automates Drive Snapshot to do a full backup on Friday nights with differentials the other days of the week.

    Before the first round of imaging starts on Friday night, I swap the USB external drive and keep that week's set off-site, so theres always a rotation of backups and safeguard against everything if "shit happens".

    The images can be restored to different hardware, drive sizes etc, can be restored to physical or virtual hardware, you name it.

    Drive Snapshot encrypts the backups as well...

    Nick

    --- Renegade vY2Ka2
    * Origin: Joey, do you like movies about gladiators? (618:500/24)
  • From Sean Dennis@618:618/1 to August Abolins on Mon Jan 9 16:16:21 2023
    August Abolins wrote to Jas Hud <=-

    I suppose I could boot with a live-CD (linux) and use one of
    the cloning tools from that environment.

    ...that's what Clonezilla is...

    --Sean
    ... Real sysops disconnect the speakers.
    --- MMail/FreeBSD
    * Origin: Outpost BBS * Johnson City, TN (618:618/1)
  • From Mark Hofmann@618:100/12 to Nick Andre on Tue Jan 10 07:12:36 2023

    Before the first round of imaging starts on Friday night, I swap the USB external drive and keep that week's set off-site, so theres always a rotation of backups and safeguard against everything if "shit happens".

    The images can be restored to different hardware, drive sizes etc, can be restored to physical or virtual hardware, you name it.

    Having those options is super important (restore to different hardware, drive sizes, physical/virtual).

    I remember the first time I tried a restore to different hardware (like radically different hardware) using Symatec System Recovery long ago. I was shocked it all worked.

    The most radical restore that I can remember doing was restoring a domain controller image that was originally on a workstation to a server. Very different hardware, controller, CPU, everything was different. It took a while, but worked and was super impressed. That saved a ton of time.

    - Mark

    --- WWIVToss v.1.52
    * Origin: http://www.weather-station.org * Bel Air, MD -USA (618:100/12.0)