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I want to create Norton Ghost bootable Disk that upon booting display a small menu like this.eg:- - press 1 to backup c: to d: (ghost should auto load & make the complete disk image of c: and store in D: ) - press 2 to restore the image From d: to c: (ghost should auto load & Restore the image file back to c: from d: helpful in restoring c: partition in case of corrupt OS ) It is helpful for simply Backup & restore Pc's. Can some one please advice me in this regard of creating bootable disk with the above menu for Nghost 2003 or 11.5 version.
It would be fairly easy to make such a disk for a one time backup and then later be able to restore it. But to try to use it on an ongoing basis would be a lot more difficult because the name of the image would be static on the CD. That would take an extensive batch file to be renaming images on the system, or it would take another task running on the system once in a while to rename old images before the new one was made. It doesn't sound very productive to spend hours writing and testing batch files in order to save a couple minutes each use. Signalizaciya tiger 2 way car alarm systems. Thats what I would do too, move or rename the existing image out of the way and then create the new image that always starts out with the same name. The restore would be set to use that same image name of the most recent backup.
Then before each new image run something like if exist del image4.gho if exist ren image3.gho image4.gho if exist ren image2.gho image3.gho if exist ren image.gho image2.gho (insert ghost image creation line here) But that housekeeping task would really need to be done in windows, and thats why I said it would be a seperate task running in windows or it's going to be a rather extensive task if your running it all off just the CD. Trying to do it all from the CD, you would run into other problems especially because DOS couldn't access NTFS. You would either have to us FAT32 and anticipate how many file segments get made per image or account for all possible outcomes with a whole lot of 'if exist' lines.
Jan 31, 2018 - I have the Symantec ISO (Ghost 15.0). Norton Ghost 15 I make a ghost of a hard disk. With the boot cd, i do the ghost of a hard drive with.
Although FAT32 supports 4GB files, DOS is 16bits and the file segments are only going to be 2GB each if I rememeber correctly. Otherwise possibly use NTFS for DOS and clear out the space for the new image and then unload that driver and start ghost after a short pause. (I would never trust a third party driver in between ghost and the file system). Either way, tring to do the whole thing from a bootable CD seems like a lot of work for not much time saving. Not saying I wouldn't be tempted to do it just for fun.
Hi dave, sir, you misunderstood my concept! See i work in college consisting of library where there are about 60 pc's are there on which xp is installed on c:/ partition. And d:/ is for storing data and backup. Same is the case with computer lab. Where i use norton ghost boot disk to image the c:/ partition from the norton ghost dos boot interface and store the.gho file in d:/ partition.
I want to create Norton Ghost bootable Disk that upon booting display a small menu like this.eg:- - press 1 to backup c: to d: (ghost should auto load & make the complete disk image of c: and store in D: ) - press 2 to restore the image From d: to c: (ghost should auto load & Restore the image file back to c: from d: helpful in restoring c: partition in case of corrupt OS ) It is helpful for simply Backup & restore Pc\'s. Can some one please advice me in this regard of creating bootable disk with the above menu for Nghost 2003 or 11.5 version.
It would be fairly easy to make such a disk for a one time backup and then later be able to restore it. But to try to use it on an ongoing basis would be a lot more difficult because the name of the image would be static on the CD. That would take an extensive batch file to be renaming images on the system, or it would take another task running on the system once in a while to rename old images before the new one was made. It doesn\'t sound very productive to spend hours writing and testing batch files in order to save a couple minutes each use. Signalizaciya tiger 2 way car alarm systems. Thats what I would do too, move or rename the existing image out of the way and then create the new image that always starts out with the same name. The restore would be set to use that same image name of the most recent backup.
Then before each new image run something like if exist del image4.gho if exist ren image3.gho image4.gho if exist ren image2.gho image3.gho if exist ren image.gho image2.gho (insert ghost image creation line here) But that housekeeping task would really need to be done in windows, and thats why I said it would be a seperate task running in windows or it\'s going to be a rather extensive task if your running it all off just the CD. Trying to do it all from the CD, you would run into other problems especially because DOS couldn\'t access NTFS. You would either have to us FAT32 and anticipate how many file segments get made per image or account for all possible outcomes with a whole lot of \'if exist\' lines.
Jan 31, 2018 - I have the Symantec ISO (Ghost 15.0). Norton Ghost 15 I make a ghost of a hard disk. With the boot cd, i do the ghost of a hard drive with.
Although FAT32 supports 4GB files, DOS is 16bits and the file segments are only going to be 2GB each if I rememeber correctly. Otherwise possibly use NTFS for DOS and clear out the space for the new image and then unload that driver and start ghost after a short pause. (I would never trust a third party driver in between ghost and the file system). Either way, tring to do the whole thing from a bootable CD seems like a lot of work for not much time saving. Not saying I wouldn\'t be tempted to do it just for fun.
Hi dave, sir, you misunderstood my concept! See i work in college consisting of library where there are about 60 pc\'s are there on which xp is installed on c:/ partition. And d:/ is for storing data and backup. Same is the case with computer lab. Where i use norton ghost boot disk to image the c:/ partition from the norton ghost dos boot interface and store the.gho file in d:/ partition.
...'>Norton Ghost 115 Auto Boot Cd Iso(04.12.2018)I want to create Norton Ghost bootable Disk that upon booting display a small menu like this.eg:- - press 1 to backup c: to d: (ghost should auto load & make the complete disk image of c: and store in D: ) - press 2 to restore the image From d: to c: (ghost should auto load & Restore the image file back to c: from d: helpful in restoring c: partition in case of corrupt OS ) It is helpful for simply Backup & restore Pc\'s. Can some one please advice me in this regard of creating bootable disk with the above menu for Nghost 2003 or 11.5 version.
It would be fairly easy to make such a disk for a one time backup and then later be able to restore it. But to try to use it on an ongoing basis would be a lot more difficult because the name of the image would be static on the CD. That would take an extensive batch file to be renaming images on the system, or it would take another task running on the system once in a while to rename old images before the new one was made. It doesn\'t sound very productive to spend hours writing and testing batch files in order to save a couple minutes each use. Signalizaciya tiger 2 way car alarm systems. Thats what I would do too, move or rename the existing image out of the way and then create the new image that always starts out with the same name. The restore would be set to use that same image name of the most recent backup.
Then before each new image run something like if exist del image4.gho if exist ren image3.gho image4.gho if exist ren image2.gho image3.gho if exist ren image.gho image2.gho (insert ghost image creation line here) But that housekeeping task would really need to be done in windows, and thats why I said it would be a seperate task running in windows or it\'s going to be a rather extensive task if your running it all off just the CD. Trying to do it all from the CD, you would run into other problems especially because DOS couldn\'t access NTFS. You would either have to us FAT32 and anticipate how many file segments get made per image or account for all possible outcomes with a whole lot of \'if exist\' lines.
Jan 31, 2018 - I have the Symantec ISO (Ghost 15.0). Norton Ghost 15 I make a ghost of a hard disk. With the boot cd, i do the ghost of a hard drive with.
Although FAT32 supports 4GB files, DOS is 16bits and the file segments are only going to be 2GB each if I rememeber correctly. Otherwise possibly use NTFS for DOS and clear out the space for the new image and then unload that driver and start ghost after a short pause. (I would never trust a third party driver in between ghost and the file system). Either way, tring to do the whole thing from a bootable CD seems like a lot of work for not much time saving. Not saying I wouldn\'t be tempted to do it just for fun.
Hi dave, sir, you misunderstood my concept! See i work in college consisting of library where there are about 60 pc\'s are there on which xp is installed on c:/ partition. And d:/ is for storing data and backup. Same is the case with computer lab. Where i use norton ghost boot disk to image the c:/ partition from the norton ghost dos boot interface and store the.gho file in d:/ partition.
...'>Norton Ghost 115 Auto Boot Cd Iso(04.12.2018)