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DriveImaging. This article is dedicated to documenting methods of performing drive imaging (also called bare metal backups, or disk cloning).

DriveImaging

Drive imaging is a complete copy of all information on a drive, necessary to restore all of the data or entire operating system on a drive to the same state it was when the image was created. This is different from imaging a partition, where one is making a copy of an individual partition that resides on a drive, or backing up individual files and folders. Please ensure you are comfortable with the information discussed before proceeding. Improperly executing a command may result in partial or complete data loss. Please double- or even triple-check your target device to avoid such catastrophic loss. Here are the requirements for drive imaging using Ubuntu: Exclusive access to the drive being imaged (i.e. the drive being imaged shouldn't be mounted). Dd is a universal command line program used for low level copying of data. Sudo fdisk -l Backup with dd sudo blkid. Setting Up a Scripting Environment « Helpful Linux Tidbits.

When first starting learning Linux, I didn’t realize lot of it lies beneath the surface.

Setting Up a Scripting Environment « Helpful Linux Tidbits

Linux still holds on to it’s developmental roots and a good deal of it’s power can be found directly from the command line. Windows doesn’t have this type of functionality, and though Mac OS X has some of it few people know about it. If needing to do powerful or automated commands with Linux (whether it be switch mouse buttons, or launch multiple programs at once), many times I can turn to the command line and write a bash script for it. The command line can be very powerful: there are few things that can only be done only from a window, and many more from the command line that can’t be done in a window. Setting up a scripting environment means creating a place to store the scripts, easily getting to them, and executing them like a regular command. Directory Setup First thing I do is set up a directory to place the scripts in. Mkdir ~/.scripts alias cds="cd ~/.scripts" source ~/.bashrc echo $PATH Related.

Windows Explorer-like File Explorer in Linux (X)Ubuntu 8.10. Tell you the truth I am not the biggest fan of Nautilus. I don't know it's habitual or what but I like how Windows Explorer (WE) handles things. But no, I'm not going back and I don't have to. If you are like me then you'll find this app interesting and worth of download. It's called XFE , simply a WE-like file manager/explorer/browser for Linux. I tried it in Ubuntu and Xubuntu, and it does its work nicely and lightly.

Unfortunately XFE that available at Ubuntu repository is not the newest version. The next thing I want to do is to make XFE as the default file manager, but I don't know how, yet. X File Explorer (Xfe) is an MS-Explorer or Commander like file manager for X. Keyword : ubuntu, file explorer, windows like. Simple backups. A simple backup scheme is to back up everything once, then back up everything that has been modified since the previous backup.

Simple backups

The first backup is called a full backup, the subsequent ones are incremental backups. A full backup is often more labourious than incremental ones, since there is more data to write to the tape and a full backup might not fit onto one tape (or floppy). Restoring from incremental backups can be many times more work than from a full one. Restoration can be optimised so that you always back up everything since the previous full backup; this way, backups are a bit more work, but there should never be a need to restore more than a full backup and an incremental backup. If you want to make backups every day and have six tapes, you could use tape 1 for the first full backup (say, on a Friday), and tapes 2 to 5 for the incremental backups (Monday through Thursday). If you have more than six tapes, you can use the extra ones for full backups. 12.4.1. Which folders to backup? Synkron - Folder synchronisation. Backing up in Ubuntu 9.04 Jaunty Linux « Reformed Musings. I’ve been looking for a good backup program in Ubuntu Linux for a while.

Backing up in Ubuntu 9.04 Jaunty Linux « Reformed Musings

When I was using Kubuntu, I tried Keep, but it kept crashing. I’ve been using Krusader‘s excellent Synchronize Directories function ever since. It works great, but required a lot of repeated actions each time. Download music, movies, games, software! The Pirate Bay - The world's most resilient BitTorrent site. Higherpoweredh2o's Channel. TitleIndex. This is an index of all pages in this Wiki. See also: WordIndex -- a permuted index of all words occuring in titles SiteNavigation -- other indexing schemes. DistroWatch.com: Put the fun back into computing. Use Linux, BSD.

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Linux U-Lite.