Move System Reserved Partition To Another Drive

DriveImage XMLwill do the job. It runs from within Windows and it can copy directly from drive to drive.

A lot of people rave about it after good experiences with the software.DriveImage XML is an easy to use and reliable program for imaging and backing up partitions and logical drives.Image creation uses Microsoft's Volume Shadow Services (VSS), allowing you to create safe 'hot images' even from drives currently in use. Images are stored in XML files, allowing you to process them with 3rd party tools. Never again be stuck with a useless backup! Restore images to drives without having to reboot. DriveImage XML is now faster than ever, offering two different compression levels.EASEUS Disk Copyis a great alternative if you don't want to go for a 'hot' backup that runs from within Windows. Good review at and on a par with DriveImage XML. They quite clearly state that it is ideal for moving from one disk to a larger one.

Like other suggestions, this requires that you create a boot CD.EASEUS Disk Copy is a potent freewareproviding sector-by-sectordisk/partition clone regardless ofyour operating system, file systemsand partition scheme by creating abootable CD. The sector-by-sectormethod assures you a copy 100%identical to the original.

Disk Copycan be used for copy, cloning, orupgrading your original small harddrive to a new larger drive. Simplyspeaking, it can copy anything fromthe old hard drive including thedeleted, lost files and inaccessibledata. So, the freeware is a perfecttool for Data Recovery Wizard torecover files from a backup disk.

DriveImage XML internally uses the same backup / restore Windows uses, and inherits its quirks, but is way easier to use. The Pros have been mentioned, two Cons to consider: (1) DriveImage is relatively slow (2 hrs for one disk, 0.5 hours same disk with, for instance, Macrium Reflect). (2) DriveImage cannot restore to a Disk smaller than the original disk. Mind you: this is not about partition sizes, but about disk sizes (try to restore a backup of a 1TB partition of a 6TB disk to a 1TB partition of a 2TB disk, won't work).–Jan 20 '11 at 9:08.

Although is quite an underrated allround (offline) non-gui Linux tool (from the creators of PartImage that iirc doesn't support Ext4), I agree that DriveImage XML is the best answer so far. But also try.

Next time.;)Here's a summary of tools for partition cloning I have used in the past:. (Home Edition is free). (free for personal non-commercial use) (Disk To Disk). (Open Source). (Online with -A (untested)). (Open Source). (Disk To Disk).

Another

(Open Source) (No Ext4) (Image Required). (Full Shadow Copy) (Skips EFS on NTFS)( for offline cloning, for online cloning). My easiest way is to put in a booting NetBSD or Linux CD, boot, and tell it to dd if=/dev/hda of=/dev/hdbI then shutdown, unplug the first drive, and reboot. Just as my easiest way may not seem easy to you, I guarantee you that all these other easiest ways don't seem like it to me. The important thing here is:. Your system is not running off of the disk you are cloning while you clone it.

You get all of the associated data of the boot sector and the partition map. Because both disks remain bootable, you've got to switch them about or remove one in order to get the new disk to boot.Now granted, this copies only the exact same partition map; if you want something different, you need to ask.

Acronis TrueImageI have personally used Home Edition, upgraded that to Home Edition 2009.Acronis True Image Home 2011 assures that all your important data, including photos, videos, music, documents and applications, are fully protected and can be recovered quickly in the event of any disaster.Have NEVER had a failure, never had a gotcha. Now however, as mentioned above, you can get it for FREE by downloading Seagate Disk Wizard, from their website. It's the same as Acronis, but with Seagate's name on in, obviously because they paid a fee for that. My preference is that it would bereally easy. Boot into Vista. Pickdrive to move, pick target drive,copies everything over, and rebootsto correct partition.if you mean the newly cloned drive by 'correct partition', then this cannot be done automatically. You'll have to clone the drive and then set it in the BIOS as primary boot device or (if the BIOS doesn't provide this option) connect the drive to the primary controller.furthermore, you're looking for 'hot imaging' of a 'live operating system' which is not recommended (unless absolutely necessary), too many things can go wrong.for further reference, you may want to read this:presents what manyconsider the ultimate back-upstrategy.

It is based on featuresfound in Ghost, a hard driveimaging/cloning software programdeveloped by Symantec. Altho designedaround Ghost (considered the mostreliable application of its kind), thestrategies presented here (such asperforming a test-restore, to ensureyour back-up image will work when youreally need it) can be applied toany disk cloning program. Afternearly 9 years on the 'Net - andcountless updates - it is still thesite's most requested Windowstutorial. Users of Ghost from allover the world contribute regularly tothe insights it contains, which mightbe why its popularity continues togrow.

When you realize how much time &misery Ghost's supernatural disasterrecovery features can save you.as outlined, many of these practices and tips can applied to other disk cloning programs, in case you have other preferences than Ghost. I will not tell you to which program to use because there are many available that are equally as good (Ghost, Drive Snapshot and DIXML are just very easy to integrate into BartPE) but Radified's is (by a far cry) the best tutorial on drive cloning i have ever come accross. This may not be the 'easiest method' but data security in general and drive cloning in particular is too serious to be taken lightly. Even if you get lucky and don't need the backup, you definitely want it to be reliable and ready to be applied at a moments notice (should the faeces ever hit the paddles:). +1 for GParted.

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I needed to migrate XP from a 60G drive to a 320G drive. Here's what I did:.

System Reserved Partition Full

I installed Ubuntu Desktop Edition on a 8G USB Drive. I put the new drive in an external drive enclosure (this one actually: ). I backed up my old 60G drive. I shut down the PC, then powered up but upon startup entered the BIOS (by hitting F2 in my case). In the BIOS I changed the boot ordering so the the USB drive would have first priority. I saved the BIOS change and allowed the PC to boot into Ubuntu from the USB drive. From a Linux command shell I ran: sudo gparted.

In gparted I created a single ntfs partition on the new 320G drive. In gparted I navigated to the old 60G drive, clicked on the existing partition, and selected 'Copy'. In gparted I then navigated to the new 320G drive, clicked on the new partition, and selected 'paste'. After asking if I was sure, Gparted proceeded to copy the contents of old drive to new.

Move System Reserved To Ssd

In gparted I marked the new drive's partition as bootable (from menu: Partition-Manage Flags). I shutdown the PC, took out the old drive, put in the new. (Note: do not attempt to boot with both drives attached - I've read that XP doesn't like that).

Move

I powered up and it booted to an XP Chkdsk screen (presumably XP noticed that something about the drive had changed and decided to check it out). No errors were found and XP then booted up. Migration done.

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