Free or Open Source Imaging Solutions
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Many of you are familiar with the concept of computer imaging. Essentially, you take a system, configure it the way that you would like, and then duplicate the hard drive to all of the other systems, saving yourself all of the same steps that you did on the first system.
Now, there are a lot of great commercial software programs out there that can do this for you. Acronis and Ghost come to mind. But, not everyone can afford these options. For those of you find yourself in this situation, I present you with a list of options that are available for free or are open source. (All descriptions are copied from their respective websites.)
Partimage
Partimage is a Linux utility which saves partitions having a supported filesystem to an image file. Most Linux and Windows filesystems are supported. The image file can be compressed with the gzip / bzip2 programs to save disk space, and they can be splitted into multiple files to be copied on CDs / DVDs, … Partitions can also be saved across the network since version 0.6.0 using the partimage network support, or using Samba / NFS. If you don’t want to install Partimage, you can download and burn SystemRescueCd. It’s a livecd that allows to use Partimage immediately even if your computer has no operating system installed (useful to restore an image), and it allows to save an image on a DVD on the fly.
PING is a live Linux ISO, based on the excellent Linux From Scratch (LFS) documentation. It can be burnt on a CD and booted, or integrated into a PXE / RIS environment. Several tools have been added and written, so to make this ISO the perfect choice to backup and restore whole partitions, an easy way. It sounds like Symantec Ghost(tm), but has even better features, and is totally free.
Clonezilla, based on DRBL, Partition Image, ntfsclone, and udpcast, allows you to do bare metal backup and recovery. Two types of Clonezilla are available, Clonezilla live and Clonezilla server edition. Clonezilla live is suitable for single machine backup and restore. While Clonezilla server edition is for massive deployment, it can clone many (40 plus!) computers simultaneously. Clonezilla saves and restores only used blocks in the harddisk. This increases the clone efficiency. At the NCHC’s Classroom C, Clonezilla server edition was used to clone 41 computers simultaneously. It took only about 10 minutes to clone a 5.6 GBytes system image to all 41 computers via multicasting!
Drive Snapshot (IRestorer) creates an exact drive image of your system into a file, including the operating system, installed programs, your data and all security attributes, while Windows is running and you continue to work. If disaster strikes (a virus, worm, trojan, or hard disk crash), a complete and exact restoration of your system will be possible in only few minutes. The image file can be mounted as a virtual drive, so you can easily restore (or use) single files or directories, using the Windows Explorer, or other programs. Restart to DOS is only necessary, if you must restore your system partition. Otherwise there is no need to reboot, not even during installation. Drive Snapshot saves only the used disk space, compresses the data and is extremely fast, a P4 - 3.0 GHz will save approx. 2.5 GB/Min on a modern hard disk!
The Linbox Rescue Server is an asset management software including 5 modules :
- system backup for emergency crash recovery, hard disk cloning or deployment using a
PXE network boot. This module was fully developped by Linbox FAS.- file backup, based on the famous BackupPC, to which we have added a configuration interface,
- inventory, based on ocs-inventory agents, and on an agent which runs during the PXE network boot,
- Software deployment module which works with Linux, MacOS X and MS Windows clients, or any Un*x system running OpenSSH,
- remote control, based on TightVNC.
Copies smaller drives onto larger ones for migrating or backing up complete installations as well as for data rescue. The download package contains a program to easily create a bootable floppy disk or CD/DVD under Windows with only few clicks. A floppy image, ISO image, and manual as PDF are also enclosed.
If you are setting up your new drive, you can use the install instructions to assist in mounting the drive, then use the tools built into your operating system to prepare the drive.
G4L is a hard disk and partition imaging and cloning tool. The created images are optionally compressed and transferred to an FTP server instead of cloning locally.
If you are setting up your new drive, you can use the install instructions to assist in mounting the drive, then use the tools built into your operating system to prepare the drive.
DriveImage XML Backup Software
DriveImage XML is an easy to use and reliable program for imaging and backing up partitions and logical drives.
The program allows you to:
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 runs under Windows XP, Windows Server 2003 and Windows Vista only. The program will backup, image and restore drives formatted with FAT 12, 16, 32 and NTFS.
DiskImage is the ultimate tool to backup and restore partitions, entire harddisks, USB keys, floppy drives and (read-only) optical media. DiskImage features built-in zip compression, it’s own compression method for data
> 2Gb, MD5 and SHA1 checksumming, a hex editor, and various tools like drive speed and seek testing.Dumping and restoring partitions, USB sticks, floppies, optical media, diskimage is the swiss army knife.
WinDD - Disk Dump for Windows! Windows XP version of Unix ‘dd’ command. Safe, effort-free backup for FAT, FAT32, NTFS, ext2, ext3 partitions.
Partition Saving is a DOS and Windows program that is used to save, restore and copy hard-drive, partitions, floppy disk and DOS or Windows devices.
With this program you could save all data on a partition to a file (such as you could save this file on a CD for example). Then if something goes wrong, you can completely restore the partition from the backup file. You no longer have to reinstall every piece of software from scratch. All you have to do is restore the partition from the backup file and then update any software that was modified since the backup was created.
nfgdump (Ntfs-Fat-Generic-dump) is a Win32/Linux tool that dumps/restores NTFS (including 3.1=XP), COMPRESSED NTFS, FAT16, FAT32 and arbitrary (generic) partitions. Dump files support compression, encryption, splits, page file content removal, etc.
Forensic Acquisition Utilities
This is a collection of utilities and libraries intended for forensic or forensic-related investigative use in a modern Microsoft Windows environment. The components in this collection are intended to permit the investigator to sterilize media for forensic duplication, discover where logical volume information is located and to collect the evidence from a running computer system while at the same time ensuring data integrity (e.g. with a cryptographic checksums) and while minimizing distortive alterations to the subject system. The components of this package are not intended to preclude changes to the subject system while the evidence collection process is under way. A third party hardware or software write blocker should be employed in those circumstances where it is deemed necessary to guarantee that no changes occur to the subject volume prior to and after the imaging process.
SelfImage is the little hard drive utility with big aspirations.SelfImage is capable of making an image file of a hard disk or hard disk partition, and can restore an image back to any drive or partition that doesn’t have open files. Useful for making backups. Unlike dd for Windows (or cygwin), SelfImage is capable of creating an image of a partition that is currently in use.
SelfImage can even create images of partitions that Windows doesn’t recognize (partitions that Windows doesn’t have mounted on a drive letter). This is perfect for the dual-boot system, you can create an image backup of a Linux partition directly from Windows.
PC INSPECTOR™ clone maxx is the new professional hard drive copying program from CONVAR. Using the new direct DMA support, data can be copied from hard drives in high speed mode with speeds up to 3.3 GB per minute.This high speed is achieved by PC INSPECTOR™ clone maxx through intelligent inspection of the PC motherboard and the hard drive controller. The software independently determines the fastest data transmission rate and achieves these exceptional speeds through optimal utilization of the DMA chipset on the motherboard of your PC.
PC INSPECTOR™ clone maxx can be started directly from a boot diskette. The copying process is always based on the physical drive and is independent of the file system (e.g. FAT12, FAT16, FAT32, HPFS, NTFS, Ext2, Reiser, etc.) or the number of partitions.
g4u - Harddisk Image Cloning for PCs
g4u (”ghosting for unix”) is a NetBSD-based bootfloppy/CD-ROM that allows easy cloning of PC harddisks to deploy a common setup on a number of PCs using FTP. The floppy/CD offers two functions. The first is to upload the compressed image of a local harddisk to a FTP server, the other is to restore that image via FTP, uncompress it and write it back to disk. Network configuration is fetched via DHCP. As the harddisk is processed as an image, any filesystem and operating system can be deployed using g4u. Easy cloning of local disks as well as partitions is also supported.
FOG :: A Ghost-like Computer Cloning Solution
Fog is a Linux-based, free and open source computer imaging solution for Windows XP and Vista that ties together a few open-source tools with a php-based web interface. Fog doesn’t use any boot disks, or CDs; everything is done via TFTP and PXE. Also with fog many drivers are built into the kernel, so you don’t really need to worry about drivers (unless there isn’t a linux kernel module for it). Fog also supports putting an image that came from a computer with a 80GB partition onto a machine with a 40GB hard drive as long as the data is
less than 40GB.Fog also includes a graphical Windows service that is used to change the hostname of the PC, restart the computer if a task is created for it, and auto import hosts into the FOG database. The service also installs printers, and does simple snap-ins.
- Each has its own pros and cons but all have a purpose. I am personally really liking FOG and am finding a lot of different places to put it to work.
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7 Responses to “Free or Open Source Imaging Solutions”
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Brian Says:
May 7th, 2008 at 11:04 amTim,
Thanks for taking the time to compile such an impressive list of free imaging programs!
It has been a while since I have emailed you and you helped me with a beginner question about one of your postings.
Since then my computer skills have progressed a little, (maybe to an intermediate now, but certainly way below that of your average reader),and would like to use an imaging program for backing up my Win XP computer.
So I am hoping you could suggest which of the programs you listed may be suitable for someone like me; and possibly there are a few other reader who could also benefit from your advise.
Thanks for the great newsletter
BRIAN
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furicle Says:
May 8th, 2008 at 2:58 pmOK - I know you’ll probably hate me for this, but…
I can’t believe you missed mondo rescue!
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Hugh Says:
May 8th, 2008 at 4:12 pmNothing to do with the article. I just wanted to say that I am glad to see you back.
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Brian Says:
May 8th, 2008 at 4:50 pmFuricle,
Thanks for the mention of Mondo Rescue.
But I am not sure what you mean when you say,
“I can’t believe you missed mondo rescue!”.Unfortunately, my expertise is way below the level of the average user on this site.
I looked at the site but it sure looks like it is beyond the level of a less skillful reader of the Daily Cup Of Tea postings.
BRIAN
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Isaac Says:
May 9th, 2008 at 5:57 pmGlad to see you back, Tim
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Chris Says:
May 12th, 2008 at 9:48 amThis is a great resource. I would like to ask which would would you pick? I have been looking for imaging program that would save to (and from) a network drive.
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Chris Says:
May 12th, 2008 at 3:02 pmTrinity Rescue Kit is also a nice restore and backup tool. http://trinityhome.org
