![]() |
If this is your first visit, be sure to check out the FAQ by clicking the link above. You may have to register before you can post: click the register link above to proceed. To start viewing messages, select the forum that you want to visit from the selection below. |
|
|
Thread Tools | Display Modes |
#31
|
|||
|
|||
![]() My mistake, we're restoring the 780/8500? and then cloning correct? On cloning, I don't remember that we changed the partition size I think we did that once before but with the 8200. With the 8500 we've just done straight cloning. Robert |
Ads |
#32
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
Robert in CA wrote:
I should of posted this earlier but here's the WBM screen: https://postimg.cc/KR22qbSQ Robert There is a diagram here, which helps explain the boot menu. There really should only be one Macrium item, not two, to my way of thinking. https://knowledgebase.macrium.com/di...+Media+Builder # At the very least, System Reserved has to be intact, for # this menu to even appear. Hopefully, to boot the WinRE, does not # require C: to be working. The Macrium CD on the other hand, # doesn't have these issues, and it should always boot. https://knowledgebase.macrium.com/do...73870&ap i=v2 One question would be, if the BCD is ever rebuilt, will all those optional materials end up in the BCD again. That I don't know. The Macrium CD, for example, if you select boot repair, it does not particularly preserve the structure of the existing BCD when it builds a new one. It just does a scan, detects the things it "sees" and adds them. The Macrium CD should always work. Any other items with the word "Macrium" in them, will work as long as the storage they sit on, is not corrupted. There is no particular performance difference. If a WinRE or a WinPE boots, the contents are stored in RAM (drive X: ), and all materials run at RAM speed. The largest item designed this way so far, is a "Hirens" disc, which stores several gigabytes in RAM (and then, the machines running such a disc, need at least that much RAM for the boot to finish). If you didn't have your CD, you could use a menu item like that, but it's unclear what issues might arise. Since the OS and X: are in RAM, you should (in theory) be able to *overwrite* the disk drive the thing booted from. How kooky is that ? Well, maybe for once they did a good thing. If the Macrium Restore went half way and stopped while doing that, you could very well be screwed (then you'd need the CD to finish the job). Paul |
#33
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
Robert in CA wrote:
My mistake, we're restoring the 780/8500? and then cloning correct? On cloning, I don't remember that we changed the partition size I think we did that once before but with the 8200. With the 8500 we've just done straight cloning. Robert First off, when doing your planning, for a given machine, we prefer to have the two "working" disk drives. Say you attempt to restore over the 780. Then we want the disk drive with that emergency OS on it, to still be available if there is trouble. You can restore over the existing C: on either machine and test if you want. Determine if your backspace key is working. My suspicion is, with the one month old backup, the backspace is still busted. But, you can test. You remember in the slide sets I made, you can click the "Back" button, select a partition and edit the size. So it is possible to adjust *any* restored OS to the size you want. When restoring the daily driver disk for the 780, you might want a slightly larger C: than for the emergency boot C: on the new drive. To control the size of *all* of them, you restore the partitions one at a time. +-----+------------------+ | MBR | First partition | +-----+------------------+ +-----+------------------+------------------+ | MBR | First partition | Second partition | +-----+------------------+------------------+ +-----+------------------+------------------+-----------------+ | MBR | First partition | Second partition | Third partition | +-----+------------------+------------------+-----------------+ You "drag and drop" a partition from the source MRIMG you browsed to, then place it on the drive you're "building". When you do a drag and drop restore like that, it's not likely to boot. That's because, when you "tease" it by doing one partition at a time, it does not engage its boot repair as a side effect. When we get here, and have finished this much... +-----+------------------+------------------+-----------------+ | MBR | First partition | Second partition | Third partition | +-----+------------------+------------------+-----------------+ now, it's time to shut down and disconnect the drive with the backups on it. We *don't* want the boot repair to see the C: on the emergency boot. The next step is to boot with the Macrium CD again, just the drive inside the 780 is present, now we use the menu item with "Boot Repair" in it. Now, we reboot and allow the 780 hard drive to boot, to prove it all works. Let's say the third partition was intended to hold backups. You would likely want to avoid copying excessive amounts of material from any backup partition. You can use Disk Management (diskmgmt.msc) to create a new NTFS partition, call it BACKUPS and format it, and then it's ready to take backups. That's an example of a "custom restore". Build it in pieces as you see fit. Click the Back button, highlight the partition, use the button to "Edit Partition Properties" and you can set the size you want. You can fix drives up, after the fact, with things like the free Paragon Disk Management 14 program, but Macrium can also do some of these things for you. ******* To erase the 780 main drive, you can do that as follows. 1) 780 main drive only. (*Don't* connect the backup drive, as that would be confusing!) 2) Boot from Macrium CD. 3) There is a Command Prompt icon on the taskbar. Click it. It runs as Administrator, so you don't need to worry about elevation. 4) Now, run "diskpart". diskpart list disk # only the one disk should now show select disk 0 # select the drive from the list, which is 0 clean # MBR and partitions blown away exit (Close Command Prompt window) 5) What that does, is make an unambiguously clean main drive, now ready for Restore. Don't do this, unless you are absolutely sure you have a good backup image to restore! Anyway, those are some ideas for "doing things your way" and getting what you want. Yes, we could just restore any old thing, and "fix it later", but that takes time, it slaps the disk heads around moving data blocks, and it's just not very efficient. ******* After a disk restore, you can move or resize partitions with this, but it's a bit clunky. The first thing you have to figure out, is (purple) "Switch to full scale launcher" before it's ready to go to work. It's filled with features that are not enabled (being "free"), but it can move and resize a bit more than the Windows-provided features (which only resize). Just use the "Move/Resize" if using this, nothing else. https://download.cnet.com/Paragon-Pa...-10904411.html Paul |
#34
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
Robert in CA wrote:
Ok so we select the most recent Mrimg to avoid the loss of data and I've already put working documents on the Patriot drive for safe keeping. What about bookmarks? Do I have to save them as well? I understand what your saying and perhaps that's what I should be doing although I'm not using much of my C: drive as you can see: https://postimg.cc/zHFyRBNP https://postimg.cc/Yv9vhMsb https://postimg.cc/q6J3wn1d === Previous Versions enabled ??? https://postimg.cc/gw4dRZLh ("Check now" picture) Should we check the drive for errors on both computers before we clone an mrimg? Should I defrag both computers? I still have (2) Startech cases and perhaps I should dedicate one for all my personal files as another way to protect my data and just connect it daily to use it. I would also do it manually so I can see what's going on but it should be an easy matter. Once we create Win 7 Pro on the spare HD's I can use one for all my personal data. Basically, it would be the same exact setup I have now except all my persona data would off this computer and as you say I would free up this C: drive. Would that make it run faster? I went back and checked the 780 mrimgs because the ones I gave you had old dates and as you noted I create backups every month so there should be more current mrimgs for the 780 and I found them: https://postimg.cc/GBDgnwdm The most current being 3-4-21 for both the 780 and 8500 since I do them the same day. So should I clone the 780 ? Then if the backspace key returns we know it should for the 8500 as well. Thoughts/suggestions? Robert You can do a CHKDSK if you want. In File Explorer, you highlight the partition needing a check, do Properties on it, then under the Tools tab is "Check Now". To be able to repair C: , the machine may tell you a reboot is required. At the beginning of the reboot, before C: is mounted, that's when it can run the check. That could take a while. The basic check just verifies any linkages. It does not verify that all files are readable. Your Previous Versions picture, is coming from System Restore points. So that's the storage area it uses on C: . It has a limited amount of storage for Previous Versions. The oldest Previous Version is thrown away, to make room for the latest one. https://www.howtogeek.com/56891/use-...ve-your-files/ I think that might get backed up, but I haven't verified that. THe actual storage location, could be vaguely related to "System Volume Information" at the top of C: , but you're not allowed to look in there. Taking materials off C: , the purpose of that is to de-duplicate your backups a bit. It depends on how many copies of the materials, make sense to keep. If you do full backups, one after another, then every one of those has a copy of Downloads for example. Storing materials in a separate partition, you still have to back up the separate partition. But, you can alter the frequency of such backups, to whatever makes sense to you. For example, I have 1.3TB of stuff off of C: , and that might get backed up twice a year. I could easily lose newer materials. But being as large as it is, first I have to find space to store the output :-/ Features such as Incremental Backups in Macrium, make the storage of backed-up material more efficient. But that's a function in the paid version. ******* You can do CHKDSK, before defragmenting, for safety. When you make backups with Macrium, the clusters are recorded in cluster-order. The hard drive head does not fly around trying to trace down chunks in "file name order". file1.txt cluster 1, cluster 3 === fragmented, two clusters file2.txt cluster 2, cluster 5 === fragmented, two clusters Macrium backup order is 1,2,3,5... to the MRIMG. During the Restoration process, if you resize the restored partition, it (as a side effect) can defragment a bit. So you can get a bit of defragmentation during restore, by resizing a partition. The defragmentation is not "done with a purpose", it's not "perfect", but you'll notice that it's been screwed around a bit. None of the defragmentation options work like the built-in feature in Windows XP. There, the files were shoulder to should, like a brick wall. The Windows 7 defragmenter doesn't do that. The Windows XP defragmenter could easily run for 8 hours. The Windows 7 one, maybe 10-15 minutes (because it doesn't work as hard). https://i.postimg.cc/zDxRR4yv/jkdefrag.gif In that example, JKDefrag is being used from the command line. These are some examples of JKDefrag commands: jkdefrag -a 1 -d 2 C: # Graphical representation of current fragments # This is how I can tell how hard it will be for # any tool to clean up. jkdefrag -a 5 -d 2 C: # Dumb function, to consolidate free space by # "shoving all the files downwards". Still needs # a defrag after this! (Now, run the Windows 7 defragmenter, which is sorta intelligent) jkdefrag -a 2 -d 2 C: # Defrag. Run this after Windows 7 defrag for # best results. It defragments the files larger than # about 50MB or so, that Win7 didn't process. -a N The action to perform. N is a number from 1 to 11, default is 3: 1 = Analyze, do not defragment and do not optimize. 2 = Defragment only, do not optimize. 3 = Defragment and fast optimize [recommended]. 5 = Force together. 6 = Move to end of disk. 7 = Optimize by sorting all files by name (folder + filename). 8 = Optimize by sorting all files by size (smallest first). 9 = Optimize by sorting all files by last access (newest first). 10 = Optimize by sorting all files by last change (oldest first). 11 = Optimize by sorting all files by creation time (oldest first). https://www.kessels.com/JkDefrag/ https://www.kessels.com/JkDefrag/JkDefrag64-3.36.zip # 64-bit version ******* That backspace key is going to haunt you. It's some application you've installed, and could have been one of your automatic updates. I would be surprised, if going backwards had good odds of fixing it. I just don't know how to debug keyboard issues. Yes, there's a translation table, but applications can install filter drivers too, devcon might list such things, but I don't know if there are any additional failure modes or holes in the scheme where they are messing about. Maybe it could be caught with ProcMon, seeing some compute activity captured at the instant the key is pressed. But generally, I don't have a warm feeling on the topic. ProcMon is always a "needle in a haystack" - analysis is a pain. And I can't help you from here, because I don't know what application is doing it, and it's pretty hard to simulate. (The new versions are Win7 and higher) https://docs.microsoft.com/en-us/sys...nloads/procmon I tried a fake test case here with that, and could not find the trigger event. Already, an easy test, I can't catch it. Paul |
#35
|
|||
|
|||
![]() +++++ Two disks were present when the menu was rebuilt, and now the menu choices are both being shown. Rebuilding the menu with one disk only present, will fix it. Macrium boot CD has a "boot repair" menu item, which can be used to restore normal boot behavior with one disk. I tried running the boot repair off the rescue cd (ver 7.2) to correct the WBN screen logon on the 780 but I'm not sure which items to un-tick https://postimg.cc/p5M2g2BZ https://postimg.cc/GTPcRZ71 https://postimg.cc/t11pJ1Sk https://postimg.cc/fSvhpYyz Robert |
#36
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
Robert in CA wrote:
+++++ Two disks were present when the menu was rebuilt, and now the menu choices are both being shown. Rebuilding the menu with one disk only present, will fix it. Macrium boot CD has a "boot repair" menu item, which can be used to restore normal boot behavior with one disk. I tried running the boot repair off the rescue cd (ver 7.2) to correct the WBN screen logon on the 780 but I'm not sure which items to un-tick https://postimg.cc/p5M2g2BZ https://postimg.cc/GTPcRZ71 https://postimg.cc/t11pJ1Sk https://postimg.cc/fSvhpYyz Robert If you look in Disk Management, System Reserved is marked "Active" and "System". It is the Active (Boot Flag = 0x80) partition that the boot process starts on. You can see the Macrium menu identified a partition, and it did that by looking for the Boot Flag. Sometimes the Boot Flag is not in the right place and needs correction, but this does not happen too often. If two disk drives were present, there could be confusion about which one. You will be asked to identify the Active partition, because that's where the BCD file for the boot menu goes. You will be asked to identify all the C: partitions, so they can be added to the boot menu as boot-time-options. The four tick boxes a Reset the Boot Disk ID This is a four byte field in the MBR, near to the four entry partition table. The disk may be named ABCD1234 for example. When cloning a disk, initially two disks have the same ABCD1234. This is bad. If left this way, the first disk is "Online", the second disk goes "Offline". Not very useful for daily work. If ticking this box, a new DiskID is assigned to the drive needing boot work. When Macrium clones, the second disk is automatically given a new ABCD1234, so this tick box is not needed. If duplicating a disk drive using dd.exe (Disk Dump), then, a new DiskID is needed and the box should be ticked. It generally does not hurt anything. Replace the Master Boor Record (MBR) That's the boot code, in the first 440 bytes or so. I'd have to look up the exact number of bytes. There is boot code in there and the four primary partition table entries, as examples of materials that are present. If a disk was zeroed, then partitioned, the boot code would be missing. But Macrium prepared disks would not usually be missing this code. If the BIOS simply won't boot from the hard disk, claiming there is nothing there, you can tick this box. Replace Partition Sector Boot Code This is three sectors in the Active Partition. The MBR jumps to that code. If a partition is "formatted" with a format routine, the three sectors are lost. Generally, if Macrium clones a partition or restored from backup, everything there is OK and the tick box is not needed. Rebuild the Boot Configuration This is the one normally ticked. If you're going to use this feature, Boot Repair, you tick this one, as it's the only option that makes sense for the feature :-) So bare minimum, tick the last box. Tick other boxes, if the first attempt at boot repair, does not work. HTH, Paul |
#37
|
|||
|
|||
![]() I ran the Rescue CD again with the 'Rebuild Boot Configuration' checked but it booted directly to the desktop and the WBM didn't appear at all. So I ran the Rescue CD again with all boxes ticked and it still does the same thing. It boots directly to the desktop. https://postimg.cc/YLhK62J6 https://postimg.cc/pmNbjHkj https://postimg.cc/V0BMF1nN https://postimg.cc/xXWvYsfn Thoughts/suggestions? Robert |
#38
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
Robert in CA wrote:
I ran the Rescue CD again with the 'Rebuild Boot Configuration' checked but it booted directly to the desktop and the WBM didn't appear at all. So I ran the Rescue CD again with all boxes ticked and it still does the same thing. It boots directly to the desktop. https://postimg.cc/YLhK62J6 https://postimg.cc/pmNbjHkj https://postimg.cc/V0BMF1nN https://postimg.cc/xXWvYsfn Thoughts/suggestions? Robert From the Rescue CD, Command Prompt window (which is administrator)... dir /AH C:\boot\BCD # verify it is there. bcdedit /store C:\boot\BCD /set {bootmgr} displaybootmenu True ******* Or, from the running system, using just the regular windows stuff. You want to run "cmd" and right-click on the returned item and select Run As Administrator. The following is "online" editing of boot menu. bcdedit /set {bootmgr} displaybootmenu True ******* Using the last one from my running OS, this is my result. https://i.postimg.cc/P5DfBhb7/boot-menu-edit.gif Paul |
#39
|
|||
|
|||
![]() I tried it both ways: https://postimg.cc/Jt5KGSDp https://postimg.cc/k6c8g318 btw I like your idea of moving all the data to a dedicated external hd but I was thinking if I do that then I'll also have to create a backup hd for that, correct? I realized that I don't need to move anything once we clone the drives with Win 7 Pro. I just need to delete everything off the 8500, one folder at a time, correct? I thought what I would do is take a screenshot of all the folders of My Documents from the newly created hd that we'll use as a dedicated data drive and use it to check the folders as I delete them off the 8500 one by one Not get ahead of the problem were having with the 780 but how do I create a backup if my data is on an external drive? Can I do a backup from an external drive to an external drive? If so, could you please give me numbered step by step instructions like you did before when we get to that point? Since I'm already backing up the 8500 and the 780. I think I should buy more hd's next month so I have spare hd backup's for all the computers. Thoughts, suggestions? Robert |
#40
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
Robert in CA wrote:
I tried it both ways: https://postimg.cc/Jt5KGSDp https://postimg.cc/k6c8g318 The first picture is more likely to work. You need to put some space characters in that command, to separate the fields. bcdedit /set {bootmgr} displaybootmenu True btw I like your idea of moving all the data to a dedicated external hd but I was thinking if I do that then I'll also have to create a backup hd for that, correct? I realized that I don't need to move anything once we clone the drives with Win 7 Pro. I just need to delete everything off the 8500, one folder at a time, correct? I thought what I would do is take a screenshot of all the folders of My Documents from the newly created hd that we'll use as a dedicated data drive and use it to check the folders as I delete them off the 8500 one by one Not get ahead of the problem were having with the 780 but how do I create a backup if my data is on an external drive? Can I do a backup from an external drive to an external drive? If so, could you please give me numbered step by step instructions like you did before when we get to that point? Since I'm already backing up the 8500 and the 780. I think I should buy more hd's next month so I have spare hd backup's for all the computers. Thoughts, suggestions? I like your enthusiasm, but you don't want to fall into a trap like me, and end up with way too many hard drives around the house :-) You could partition a hard drive like this. You don't have to keep the Downloads on an external drive, you can just keep a partition next to C: . The advantage of this, is with C: being unloaded occasionally, you can keep C: from getting too big. +-----+-----------------+-------------+----------------+ | MBR | System Reserved | C: 100GB | D: Data 800GB | +-----+-----------------+-------------+----------------+ Maybe C: gets backed up once a month, D: is backed up once a year. My illustration, is to show that you can have two kinds of files, and have different backup practices for each. But really, you have a good scheme as is. A backup is a couple hundred GB so it hasn't gotten completely out of hand. If you purchased Macrium, then you could use a feature called "Incrementals Forever", and your first backup would be around 200GB, but the next month, the backup might only be 5GB. That's because the combination of the two, 200+5 is read back, to prepare the Restore later. Incremental backups rely on more than one backup file being intact. The "Incrementals Forever" feature, adds to that, the squashing of the 200+5 thing, down to the approximately 200GB it really represents, then adding more incrementals on the end. It's a kind of sliding window of incrementals. The purpose of all this manipulation, is to make the backup drive last longer, and hold more months of backup. By not doing the Free Version "Full" all the time, some space is saved. Incrementals de-duplicate, so if mypicture.png is already stored in a backup, it does not have to be recorded a second time. The Incremental feature keeps track of which files belong in the Restore, based on any time point you select for restoration. Again, that's an example of how some people arrange their backups. Now, me, I just use "Full" ones like you, and I occasionally toss some, to make room for new ones. But in any case, when making backups, the temptation is to hold onto too many backup images, buy too many hard drives, spend long hours moving files from one big drive to another and so on. It can easily turn into a zoo. And I don't want you to make the same mistakes I've made (with the buying drives thing). When I make suggestions, I'm trying to give examples of various ways you can slice a pie. But not everyone likes their pie that way, and you have to think through the consequences of these ideas, to their logical conclusion. You had a decent collection in that picture you showed me, because you had a series of monthly backups. And say the backspace key problem, wasn't fixed by restoring last months MRIMG. You could go back a second month, and test there. Only on one occasion, did I need to go back two years, and I did move forward again later, when via Googling, I found another solution to my problem, and then I didn't need to keep using the two year old restore. Would I keep monthly backups for two years ? The demonstrated need shows that once you have a year of backups, you can keep just one of them per year so that is your "yearly". So maybe a couple yearly ones, and a bunch of monthly ones. Jan 2019 Jan 2020 Jan 2021 Feb 2021 Mar 2021 Maybe later in the year it looks like Jan 2019 Jan 2020 Jan 2021 Apr 2021 == ditched a few monthly ones, so quarterly Jul 2021 Oct 2021 \ Nov 2021 \___ Monthly for the most recent Dec 2021 / And maybe that will fit on a single 2TB drive. And those can be "Fulls", like you're making now, because the storage device has just enough room for the proposed backup set. No need to purchase Macrium, within those constraints. Since you're no longer using Windows XP, you can use huge drives for backups. The ones you're using now, seem reliable enough, and there is nothing wrong with them. You can get drives, like 14TB, you prepare those with GPT partitioning on Windows 7 and you're allowed to have one giant 14TB partition. But I don't buy drives that big, because it takes too long to move the data off them. The biggest drives I have today are 6TB. That's enough to hold two 3TB sets of backups for me. The pricing curve for drives, sometimes there's a kink and sometimes not. When they're linear with capacity, then there isn't a lot to be gained from buying huge ones. If there was some economy from the bigger ones, it might be more fun to buy them. But if a big drive costs $500, who needs that exactly. It's like buying a steak which is too big for one meal, and some going to waste. And if the big drive breaks, now you're out $500 (unless you want to pursue the warranty, and at that price, you have an incentive to do so). If there was a Free backup with Incrementals, I'd be testing that for myself :-) But that tends to be a paid feature. I think you're in pretty good shape as is. You're making backups. If you get ransomware, there's a chance you'll be able to recover from it. You won't be like the guy in another group - he tells me he's got data files that end in myfile.xls.osiris and that osiris thing means "ransomware". And the guy has no backups. It took *months* for him to do clean installs, try and tip computers upright and so on. It was a real mess. That's the only case of ransomware I've heard of in the newsgroups. How did he get it ? He opened an email from GoDaddy domain registrar, with an attachment called "invoice" and when he clicked on the "invoice", ransomware took over. The email wasn't from GoDaddy, it was forged. And why did the forgers send it to him ? When he registered his GoDaddy domain, he used his real email address (and the registration can be seen publicly). The perps just grab all the email addresses from those registrations, and they "spray" all the victims with "invoice" emails. That was the infection vector. Email. Paul |
#41
|
|||
|
|||
![]() It worked! https://postimg.cc/1fjXxbbM https://postimg.cc/BL4Qc31Z If I were to create a partition I still would want to backup my data monthly because I do allot of work that requires it. It seems for my purposes what I'm doing now is the best fit for me. As you say I 'm in pretty good shape as is. I thought about increasing the HD size for the external hd's but even if I stepped up to 4 TB I would never use that much. You saw my hd and how much free space I still have. I do the same as you and just delete older ones as needed. That scenario about the guy opening up the email and invoice is exactly what happened to my sister after I told her not to open it! I'm very careful with emails. I never open emails if I don't know who they're from and I don't use my real name (why do people do that? Its nuts? ) I have all my family and people I know on one email account and I have another separate email account for everything else and I set the filters very high. If I get any spam I block the senders so now I hardly get anything. I learned my lesson the hard way and since you were with me every step of the way you remember what a nightmare we went through trying to restore the 8200 and the 300+ updates to bring it back. Luckily we found a SP1 file so we could build off of it but afterwards I vowed never again and you helped created the backup system I now have including the spare power supplies, making all the backup and recovery CD''s and picking out the 780. So are we good to go in trying to restore the 780 with the 4-3-21 mrimg? Robert |
#42
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
Robert in CA wrote:
So are we good to go in trying to restore the 780 with the 4-3-21 mrimg? Make a backup of what exists on the 780 first. Then, if you don't like what happens with the 4-3-21 restore, you have options. Paul |
#43
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
The new mouse(s) arrived and I switched the 8500 mouse with a
new one thinking it might be the cause of problem I've been having and I think it is. So far it's acting normally and not opening or closing things I don't want it to. I did have to adjust the speed of this one as it was way too sluggish at first and I felt it in my wrists immediately. I started the 780 backup but ran out of space on the external hd so I had to delete some older Mrimgs. During this process it showed this for Mrimg 3-4-21which we wanted to use to restore the 780. https://postimg.cc/xJ3PhGcB So it looks as if I'll have to go back further for the 780 Mrimg 2-1-21 to restore it. While restoring the 780, I had a 'Build rescue media boot menu' pop up. I didn't know what to do because this isn't in your instructions you gave me previously so I cancelled the restore. https://postimg.cc/nXXn00CS Robert |
#44
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
Robert in CA wrote:
The new mouse(s) arrived and I switched the 8500 mouse with a new one thinking it might be the cause of problem I've been having and I think it is. So far it's acting normally and not opening or closing things I don't want it to. I did have to adjust the speed of this one as it was way too sluggish at first and I felt it in my wrists immediately. I started the 780 backup but ran out of space on the external hd so I had to delete some older Mrimgs. During this process it showed this for Mrimg 3-4-21which we wanted to use to restore the 780. https://postimg.cc/xJ3PhGcB So it looks as if I'll have to go back further for the 780 Mrimg 2-1-21 to restore it. While restoring the 780, I had a 'Build rescue media boot menu' pop up. I didn't know what to do because this isn't in your instructions you gave me previously so I cancelled the restore. https://postimg.cc/nXXn00CS Robert https://forum.macrium.com/14596/XML-...1-is-not-valid "A new Full should correct the problem or you can edit the XML file" If you were attempting a backup, using an existing (defined) backup from the list of backup setups, then you need to make a new Full and select the partitions you want backed up. You can only reuse an existing definition from the menu, if it continues to match the disk you are backing up. If you make too many changes, you have to (somehow), make the disk match some definition file. Editing the XML file sounds a bit over the top to me, when the GUI can create another one for you. ******* The existing backups (during Restore) are also going to be compared to how the disk is partitioned currently. That's if you were partially restoring the setup on there. https://i.postimg.cc/CLQ47Rxn/restore-shows-config.gif The image there, says "you can drag and drop". You're allowed to restore one partition at a time, resize the partition (don't make it too small though or there won't be enough slack to boot). You're in full control in a sense. But you have to keep your wits about you. If restoring one partition at a time, it is always possible the system won't boot afterwards, but no problem, as the Macrium CD has the boot repair menu, and putting a new MBR boot code on it will probably fix it up. When you restore, you can completely blow away the original disk contents. Just tick all the boxes, select the disk you want to use, click Next and away it goes. If it asks you what configuration to keep, you would want to keep the partition structure as defined in the backup. But if you need to shoehorn like-partitions-in-like, you can do that. Or even, click Back and resize the partition as desired. Using the Command Prompt window available in the lower left of the Macrium screen during CD restore, you can even use diskpart to clean off a disk drive. diskpart list disk select disk 0 clean exit (close Command Prompt) But if you're going to do that, you have to be damn sure you're erasing the correct disk. The Macrium Restore is marginally safer (as typically, the DiskID shown in the upper pane of the Restore, will match the DiskID of the disk you select for restore. As that's the disk it came from in the first place. ******* The "Make Rescue Media" thing happens, if you update the version of Macrium, but have not made a new CD. I would think any Version 6 CD should restore any Version 6 backup, but I haven't tested that. But the newer versions can have a different feature set, and if you made a backup using Version 7 loaded on the C: drive, it would be expecting a lot for a Version 6 CD to do the restore. If running Version 7, I'd want at least one Version 7 CD kicking around the room. Then it's not going to complain about the version, during the restore. Since both my machines are roughly the same class, a CD I make on one of them, typically works OK for the other. Your machines would be in that ballpark as well, as the 780 is 64-bit and has mostly modern peripheral interfaces. Maybe the network driver might not work on both, but then, you don't use restores from network shares, and won't be facing a networking challenge as a result. Your strategy uses external USB holders of backups, and all that your CD needs as a result, is the appropriate generic USB2 or USB3 driver (or both). And one of the more modern choices of the list of WADK kits in the Make Rescue Media menu, will give you something that works on both machines. USB being generic, and say, a Windows 8 era or Windows 10 era WADK download, will have drivers for both USB2 and USB3 from Microsoft. That has nothing to do with the OSes you're restoring, which are both Windows 7. The boot CD does not "sniff" the OS being restored, for such purposes. It's when the Rescue CD is being prepared, some of the modern WADK choices have the right drivers to mostly bring up the hardware on your two machines. Then one CD is "good enough" for both. I don't like to waste media here, as I suspect if I go to the store, the selection will be extremely poor. Since you can't buy a DVD drive at retail now, there's hardly a reason for Ritek to continue making DVD blanks. There are still some BluRay drives, which burn all three disc types, but there aren't a lot of choices left there either. So the small cake box of media I have left, that's just about it. Paul |
#45
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
I don't understand what it means that the restore must be
completed in the Windows PE rescue environment? I thought I was in the PE mode when I connected the external hd? I understand that the partitions don't match up but I'm not understanding what you mean by a new full? If I drag and drop from the external to the C: drive I have to do it for all the partitions , making each the same size, correct? This is getting beyond me,.... I didn't realize I had to partition. I'm not sure how to proceed at this point. Robert |
Thread Tools | |
Display Modes | |
|
|