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| Performance and Maintainance of Windows Vista A forum for performance and maintenance tasks in Windows Vista. (microsoft.public.windows.vista.performance_maintainance) |
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I'm running Vista Ultimate 32. I have two drives. Disk 0 is partitioned as follows: C: (system disk) = 20Gb, D: = 80 Gb, F: = 20 Gb. All partitions on Disk 0 are Dynamic. Disk 1 has only 1 partition (E = 120Gb and it is Basic.Eventually, Vista filled up my C: drive. I tried several different things to clear space on C:, but nothing seemed to work for long. I was unable to extend my C: drive. I made the decision to do a Vista Full PC Backup (drives C, D, E, F) to an external USB HD (G which completed successfully. I thenreformatted/partitioned Disk 0 as follows: C:= 40, D:= 40, F:=40. They are now Basic, not Dynamic. When I try to run the Full PC Restore, it does not find an existing OS (since I reformatted C). I don't think this is a serious issue, since I am using my Vista install CD. It does find my backup on the external HD...but it sees it as Drive E. I think this is the problem because it see the location of the backup as E:, but the list of Disks to Restore includes E: (which should be Disk 1 in my system). When I try to run the restore, I get a wonky error (can't remember the exact verbage ) about %1 or %2 not found.How can I designate my external HD as a different drive (like G ? Isthere something else I'm doing wrong? Can I reinstall Vista to my C: drive, then run the Full PC restore from within Vista? My only other alternative is to reinstall Vista from scratch. If that's the case, is there someway for me to restore specific files/folders from my Full PC Backup image on the external HD? -- Doopus |
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Unless you plan to use RAID configurations, basic disks asre recommended -
technically dynamic disks are partitioned into volumes. " I made the decision to do a Vista Full PC Backup (drives C, D, E, F) to an external USB HD (G which completed successfully. I then reformatted/partitioned Disk 0 as follows: C:= 40, D:= 40, F:=40." Note that backup restoration would be the original configuration. " When I try to run the Full PC Restore, it does not find an existing OS (since I reformatted C)." Restoration must be from the option presented booting from the Vista DVD. " I am using my Vista install CD. It does find my backup on the external HD...but it sees it as Drive E. I think this is the problem because it see the location of the backup as E:, but the list of Disks to Restore includes E: (which should be Disk 1 in my system)." Should not be a problem - drive designation is set and used by WIN PE which runs the restore process "When I try to run the restore, I get a wonky error (can't remember the exact verbage ) about %1 or %2 not found."Important info - %1, %2 are place settings referencing files by default locations. " My only other alternative is to reinstall Vista from scratch. If that's the case, is there someway for me to restore specific files/folders from my Full PC Backup image on the external HD?" Installing Vista and restoring may work - however keep in mind it will be the original configuration. The backup format is VHD - virtual hard drive. You can use vdmount - utility available from the Win 2003 resource kit on line to "mount" the backup and access via Windows Explorer... |
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AJR: If I understand your response, you're saying that the backup restoration would need to be the original configuration. I didn't change the actual drive letters, just the size of the partitions. This is necessary to give me more free space on the C: drive, which was the original problem. Are you saying that change the sizes of the partitions will not work? -- Doopus |
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Complete PC creates a .vhd disk image file of an entire volume (drive) -
including partitioning. However your situation is interesting - original disk layout (that which was backed up) was dynamic - you stored the backup on an external drive - a removeable external drive cannot be a dynamic disk, however I do not have any knowledge as to whether or not a virtual drive existing on an external drive can be dynamic. I have utilized Complete PC Backup and Restore via external USB and internal drives but in not a situation such as yours. One of the third party utilites such as Acronis, Ghost or Partition Magic may provide non-destructive conversion of a dynamic disk to basic. Sorry I can't provide any assistance other than the information above. If you solve the problem please post. "Doopus" wrote in message ... AJR: If I understand your response, you're saying that the backup restoration would need to be the original configuration. I didn't change the actual drive letters, just the size of the partitions. This is necessary to give me more free space on the C: drive, which was the original problem. Are you saying that change the sizes of the partitions will not work? -- Doopus |
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A third party tool would enable you to resize your partitions with no loss
of data (allthough data backup is allways wise. Also a third party tool eg Acronis TI can create a complete Image of your system and allow you to restore that Image to ammended partition sizes. Your initial mistake was of course in creating a win partition that was far to small. There is no advantage to Partitioning a single disk to locate win/apps/data on seperate partitions. "Doopus" wrote in message ... AJR: If I understand your response, you're saying that the backup restoration would need to be the original configuration. I didn't change the actual drive letters, just the size of the partitions. This is necessary to give me more free space on the C: drive, which was the original problem. Are you saying that change the sizes of the partitions will not work? -- Doopus |
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Like most issues I have with Microsoft, it wasn't worth the days of investigation and research to solve the issue. I repartitioned/formatted the disk and did a fresh install of Vista. I'll just use VHDMount to get my data from the back file and just reinstall all my apps. It's a good chance to clean-up my PC anyway. Thanks for your help. -- Doopus |