Removing Grub for Ghost image?
Tom Metro
blu at vl.com
Tue Sep 26 12:50:59 EDT 2006
Scott R Ehrlich wrote:
> Symantec's web site states that Ghost 2003 (what I have) will NOT
> work with Grub.
>
> ...performed an fdisk /mbr...so Grub apparently had been removed.
>
> What else could I be missing to fully remove Grub and permit Ghost to
> work?
You're removing your boot loader and reinstalling one of your OSs just
so you can use Ghost? Is there some reason why you need to use Ghost
that badly? There are plenty of alternative imaging programs, including
several that are open source.
I've used the SystemRescueCd[1] bootable Linux distribution for imaging
and partitioning. It includes Partimage[2], which I've found to be less
than reliable when imaging NTFS partitions, but recent versions of
SystemRescueCd include ntfsclone, part of the ntfsprogs[3] package. It's
a command line tool for imaging NTFS partitions and will intelligently
skip unused space (if you enable that option). It's quite fast, too.
(ntfsprogs also includes ntfsresize[4], which is the tool used by most
open source partitioning tools (QtParted[5], GParted[6], etc.) to resize
NTFS partitions.)
If I want to image an entire disk, or Linux partitions, it's hard to
beat dd. dd can also be used to backup the MBR, and sfdisk can be used
to backup the partition table[7].
It's been a long tine since I last tried Ghost, and the reason I did was
that it promised it could store images on network drives. It turned out
that feature was a joke - requiring DOS packet drivers and only
supporting the most common networking hardware, and even worse, not
supporting network file systems (I think you ran a copy of Ghost in
"server mode" on another machine). Writing to network drives using any
of several protocols is, of course, almost trivial with Linux.
One place where some of the commercial imaging tools have an edge is the
ability to store images on NTFS partitions. Write support to NTFS as
bundled with SystemRescueCd is still a pain, requiring the use of native
Windows drivers. Newer open source NTFS drivers should solve this
limitation in the future. Until then, I've found it best to set up
shared data drives using ext2 and then use a freeware ext2 driver[8] on
the Windows side.
1. http://www.sysresccd.org/
2. http://partimage.org/
3. http://www.linux-ntfs.org/
4. http://mlf.linux.rulez.org/mlf/ezaz/ntfsresize.html
5. http://qtparted.sourceforge.net/
6. http://gparted.sourceforge.net/
7. http://mlf.linux.rulez.org/mlf/ezaz/ntfsresize.html#cli
(scroll down for MBR and partition table backup instructions)
8. http://www.fs-driver.org/
-Tom
--
Tom Metro
Venture Logic, Newton, MA, USA
"Enterprise solutions through open source."
Professional Profile: http://tmetro.venturelogic.com/
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