[realmusicians] Re: backing up and dual booting

  • From: Chris Belle <cb1963@xxxxxxxxxxxxx>
  • To: realmusicians@xxxxxxxxxxxxx
  • Date: Wed, 03 Feb 2010 23:06:41 -0600

Actually, there is ntfs pro which will allow you to see ntfs partitions in dos, it takes a litle more precious conventional memory, but it helps.


I don't think it'll be possible with micro-crap to do a talking windows install because we don't implement efi yet, and what with real mode text mode drivers, and sata drivers, well we do have ide immulation, but what with all the old and new bits clunky legacy dos and windows technology that has to be considered, it may not be possible without completely installing the os from scratch.

Now that's possible with a cd and floppy, or just a cd with a .sif file, but you don't get as much control as you do with a hard-drive unattended installation where you can use dos ahead of time to format and partition and such.

YOu can always do stuff with an existing windows install to clone to another hard-drive and such but inevitably, we always have to re-boot and go in to text mode or console mode, and that's the problem.

Linux and mac users can have talking installs because things are done differently, I have heard that there is a way with some of the system accewss to go products to do a talking w7 or vista install, I'll have to check that out, I haven't gotten away from xp yet, and what with all our old favorite plug-ins probably crapping out and not being updated so soon, I'm not in a hurry to dump for the dubious benefits of 64 bit but as time goes on, that will get better.

But now is the time to learn about it because it'll be our future.

It'll be nice to load those huge sample libraries up in to memory and say good bye to all the hassle with disk streaming.

So my next work station will be a 64 bit w7 but I'll certainly have xp dual booting on it for all the good old stand bys we love and that work fine with today's technology.


At 06:17 AM 2/3/2010, you wrote:
Hay Chris, nice message. I will keep it for reference here.
I have been using image for windows myself for quite some time now and I am
very pleased with it.
I have been playing with some windows xp live cds lately, and I am trying to
integrate NVDA so that I will be able to boot from a talking windows cd
rather than dos.
All my partitions around here are ntfs so booting from a pure dos
environment is no option for me.
Nice job.

Nektarios.


-----Original Message-----
From: realmusicians-bounce@xxxxxxxxxxxxx
[mailto:realmusicians-bounce@xxxxxxxxxxxxx] On Behalf Of Chris Belle
Sent: Saturday, January 30, 2010 10:58 PM
To: realmusicians-freelists.org
Subject: [realmusicians] backing up and dual booting

Just wanted to start a little discussion about back-up software and imaging
and such.

I've been playing with operating system configs and such and have managed to
create a dual boot system with the use of selected software packages without
any sighted help.

I am using two copies of xp at the moment and here's what I did.

One piece of software that I am now embracing is casper, I formerly didn't
care for it because it was window's only based, but since casper can now
boot from usb devices, you can run windows from a thumb drive if you wish,
then this makes it more valuable and also although I think traditional
methods of restoring without windows being in the way are more secure and
safer, ie, less likelihood of viruses and such being transferred, it's still
nice to be able to restore partitions and such in windows only when desired.

Casper and the terrabyte unlimited products both ddos and windows versions,
and an old copy of partition magic were my main tools of choice.

I did use ghost, and drive snapshot too, but the main disadvantage of ghost
is that the dos side of things doesn't talk at all and your limited to batch
files and knowing ahead of time where your drives are as you need the
controller numbers and partition numbers to accomplish this.

But with image for dos from terrabyte you can restore interactively and with
casper operating in only windows, if you have a second partition somewhere
that's got a copy of your OS on it, you can restore to the version of the OS
your not using currently.
It's helpful to keep a copy of your boot.ini file in another location that
has references to all your operating systems handy so you can restore that
configuration on the fly after restoring a partition.

My only problem is that I can't seem to get a copy of windows which was
installed on the first or only partition of a drive to boot from the second
or third partition of a drive and I think this is an nt thing, 2k was even
more picky about this sort of thing, but what I did was to partition my
third  drive in to several partitions it's a 300 gig drive, and each
partition is now less that 120 gigs.

When in dos it seems with sata drives you have to keep some factors in mind,
files larger that 2gb or partitions that are too large or have too many
files on them won't get read properly and you can't restore.

I was having this problem with image for dos until I made smaller partitions
and now things work well.

Image for windows will also resize partitions on the fly, some of these
backup softwares expect to have the same size drive or partition to restore
to and will puke if they don't see that.

That's the way drive snapshot is, at least with fat32 partitions.

I like to use fat32 for all the obvious reasons, at least on system drives,
I keep some ntfs partitions for large ISO files and other things, but if you
ever have a drive problem fat32 is much easier to deal with.

So because drive snapshot has problems with resizing images, I'm converting
all my images to ghost or terra byte images.

So far if I had to tchose the two products I'd use exclusively, it's be the
terrabyte atuff for flexibility and accessibility and casper for the
window's only aspect and ease of use for the non-technical person or command
line challenged individual.

But casper's partitioning and drive c onfiguration facilities aren't as
advanced as even the old partition magic so you really need a couple of
different tools.

So I have my operating systems on a loan partition on my c drive which is
drive 0 in the bios, and the first partition of drive 1 which is the way it
shows up in dos or the bios.

Of course windows changes things around so it's important to check depending
on whether your in dos or windows to make sure what's refering to what.

A couple of good ways to help are making sure you always give your drives
meaningful volume labels and observing the size of the partitions or drives.
What I did was to put an early unclutered installation of my studio machine
on the first partition of the second drive and leave the hither to system
drive alone, I didn't re-partition it because remember, some of this drive
software expects to see the same size partition that was backed up when it
restores, so until I get these images re-sized, I'm playing it safe.

So we have gwo default places to back up or restore images to and from and
we can do so in windows or in dos.

I'm going to make a small partition on my third drive and make it the first
partition and see if I can get a third os to boot.

Right now according to the best information I have, there are issues with
the boot configurations with vista and windows
7 which make it hard to back up properly since microslop changes the way in
which things boot and one has to adjust the boot record to make these new
operating systems boot properly when one deploys an images or such, and I'm
not properly using w7 yet, but we'll be nailing these issues down soon I
hope.

Anyway, that's some of what we've been doing  after christmas here at the
studio.

So if you don't want to have to install from scratch a complete operating
system, you can use a copy of the one you already have installed if you put
it on the same place on another drive in regards to partition position.

There's probably a way to fix or change this in a boot record.
I bet DJX knows some real nuggets about this sort of thing 'grin'.

But anyone feel free to chime in with experiences because we all need to
keep our machines fresh and well oiled to make all that great music and also
to do daily things, and I'm a bad boy, I swore I wouldn't do anything else
with this machine but studio things, but it's just too atractive to use your
fastest machine in the house to do everything, so one needs to learn to
manage those dangerous habbits 'grin'.


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