Symantec Ghost 11.5 Bootable Usb

Hi,

Norton Ghost 11.5 Bootable Usb Drivers Constant In; Why would you need to do that Norton Ghost is usually a disc cloning and back-up device that will be. Retrieving and Restoring Windows with USB Booting Symantec Ghost 11.5 Preparatory step backup windows For the first preparation that we use USB should be able to boot the USB, the USB can be used in order to boot it must be formatted with the tools available in the download package.

I merely a user, not a technician just to take a correct option of the 4 available according to the User's Guide within 186 pages, as it is compiled by technicians for technicians. Hence, I have to ask how to just make an image of the whole C:/ disk to retain its ability to boot after I have prepared a disk of the same size (80 Gb) or even doubled 160 Gb.

Which switch option should I preferably take in my case? The description is too much wordy and specific to understand for me. There are 4 options available.

I allow me to cite here the User's Guide:

-ia The image all switch forces Norton Ghost to perform a sector-by-sector copy of all
partitions. When copying a partition from a disk to an image file or to another disk,
Norton Ghost examines the source partition and decides whether to copy just the files and
directory structure, or to do a sector-by-sector copy. If it understands the internal format
of the partition, it defaults to copying the files and directory structure. Generally this is the
best option. However, if a disk has been set up with special hidden security files that are in
specific positions on the partition, the only way to reproduce them accurately on the
target partition is through a sector-by-sector copy. If you use this switch to create an
image of a dynamic disk, then the image must be restored to a disk with identical
geometry.


-ib The image boot switch copies the entire boot track, including the boot sector, when
creating a disk image file or copying disk-to-disk. Use this switch when installed
applications, such as boot-time utilities, use the boot track to store information. By
default, Norton Ghost copies only the boot sector, and does not copy the remainder of the
boot track. You cannot perform partition-to-partition or partition-to-image functions
with the -ib switch.

Command-line switches 159
-id The image disk switch is similar to -ia (image all), but also copies the boot track, as in -ib
(image boot), extended partition tables, and unpartitioned space on the disk. When
looking at an image with -id, you see the unpartitioned space and extended partitions in
the list of partitions. The -id switch is primarily used by law enforcement agencies that
require forensic images.
When Norton Ghost restores from an -id image, it relocates partitions to cylinder
boundaries and adjusts partition tables accordingly. Head, sector, and cylinder
information in partition tables is adjusted to match the geometry of the destination disk.
Partitions are not resizeable. You will need an identical or larger disk than the original.
Norton Ghost does not wipe the destination disk when restoring from an -id image.
Geometry differences between disks may leave tracks on the destination disk with their
previous contents.
Use the -ia (image all) switch instead of the -id switch when copying partition-to-partition
or partition-to-image. An individual partition can be restored from an image created with
-id.

I have a laptop that does not have a cd-rom or floppy drive. It is able to boot from USB though.

I have a disk image (ghost) of the disk that I need to restore back onto the laptop. I can't find a way to actually run the Ghost utility from a USB key though.

Bootable

I believe the ghost.exe should run from within DOS just fine but I can't seem to create a bootable USB key with DOS on it that allows me to run an EXE.

Edit: I managed to find a Ghost utility that I could load from a bootable USB drive. Unfortunately, when I plug in my NTFS external drive (USB), it is not detected.

Joe Phillips

4 Answers

You can use Hirens Boot CD. Newer versions have a free alternative to Norton Ghost, older versions have the real Norton Ghost (though it is shareware). Directions on their site how to make the 'boot cd' a bootable usb stick. Very simple, only takes a few clicks with the right software (all explained in the link).

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Update:

Newer versions of Hirens Boot CD contain Parted Magic, which has many disk management tools, including Clonezilla, a free alternative to Ghost. All in all I think Parted Magic is the best disk management utility I have ever used. Clonezilla doesn't have a polished GUI like Ghost (maybe it will someday?), but it still gets the job done.

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We use Symantec Ghost Boot Wizard here. I am unsure what Symantec program suites it is included in.

For creating the bootable USB using the Ghost Boot Wizard, see this thread.

Otherwise, see also How to Make a Norton Ghost Bootable USB.
Remark: Be very careful when using the DiskPart utility.

harrymcharrymc

From Making Ghost 9 recovery disk on bootable USB?:

I recently bought an ASUS Eee PC 1000H. Lacking an optical drive I wanted to be able to boot my Norton Ghost 9.0 recovery environment from a USB stick. I assume the recent flood of these ultra mobile PC's will cause a renewed interest in this topic.

Here are the steps to make a bootable Ghost 9.0 Recovery USB stick or SD card (works just as well with the builtin SD card reader of the ASUS 1000H):

Format the stick using the HP USB Disk Storage Format Tool (Google will easily locate this free utility for you). No need to use the 'Create a DOS startup disk' functionality in this case, the partition on the memory stick will be marked active for boot anyway.

Create Norton Ghost 11.5 Bootable Usb

Copy the folder I386 from the Ghost 9.0 Disk onto the memory stick and rename it to minint

Copy the file minintNTDETECT.COM to the root folder of the memory stick

Copy the file minintSETUPLDR.BIN to the root folder and rename it to NTLDR (without an extension)

If necessary install required Windows 2000 drivers. I copied the two files from the Eee support DVD, found in DriversLANAtherosWin2k into the memory stick folders minintINF and minintSYSTEM32DRIVERS and Ghost activates the builtin LAN adapter of the 1000H.

Symantec Ghost 11.5 Bootable Usb Free

Symantec Ghost 11.5 Bootable UsbCreate ghost bootable usb

You're done! Boot from the USB stick.

Symantec Ghost 11.5 Bootable Usb

As a side note, except for the formatting part, the same procedure can be used to boot Ghost9 from an external harddrive containing an NTFS partition. That allowed me to put the Ghost9 restore environment together with the actual backup itself onto a single 2.5' drive in a USB enclosure. Now that is what I call a portable backup solution! In contrast to memory sticks, the normal Windows Local storage disk management console (under Administrative Tools) allows to mark partitions on external harddisks as active. So no need for the HP format utility in this case.

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