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Number : 57 Date : 2001-05-17 Author : Kenneth Ives Subject : Re: backup to CDR retaining LFN Size(KB) : 3
There is an inexpensive utility which is well worth mentioning here. I use a DOS utility, I got from D. Murdoch called Doslfnbk at http://www8.pair.com/dmurdoch/programs/doslfnbk.htm Current version is 2.5 for $10. When you boot to DOS, you run this in the root directory and it saves all the long file names to a file. Then do your full backup to an external storage device. After you do a full restore, run this utility with a /r switch to update the file allocation table with the long file names again. I have never had a problem with a full restore using this utility. To boot from DOS with Windows ME, create a startup disk thru the Windows control panel, System. This will allow you to boot directly to a DOS prompt and have access to the CD drive. You may have to add a couple of drivers to get the CD-Writer to work, but that should be in the user's guide for the CD-Writer. Kenneth Ives mailto:kenaso@h... -----Original Message----- From: Dan Anderson [mailto:dan.anderson@s...] Sent: Wednesday, May 16, 2001 6:15 PM To: xxcopy@yahoogroups.com Subject: [xxcopy] Re: backup to CDR retaining LFN I currently use an XXCOPY batch file to backup my laptop to my desktop through a simple network link, retaining full LFN (long file name) support, and then use Norton Ghost (as an alternative to DriveImage) to backup the resulting desktop partitions to CDR (with compression and spanning of CDRs and retention of LFN). I know the process works because when my hard drive crashed on my laptop I was able to recover the primary partition et al from my desktop backup (and another time when my desktop crashed I used the CDRs as the recovery method for the desktop itself). I do use an XXCOPY batch file to make backup copies of some directories to CDR, but only for non-operating-system data files (because of the LFN limitations). Regards, Dan Anderson ====================================== ----- Original Message ----- From: To: Sent: Wednesday, May 16, 2001 4:04 PM Subject: Re: Re: [xxcopy] xxcopy switches, etc. > At the risk of flames, I would like to point out that > XXCOPY or, indeed, any file-level utility may not be the > best resource for system backups to removable media. > > 1) since you want to minimize used space, cluster waste (at the end of > each file) is important to minimize. > > 2) Every complex OS keeps files open-- those files are not backed up. > Boot to DOS and you lose LFN support, which means copying the files > from DOS won't have the long file names associated. > > 3) compression is very helpful if you have more than 680 MB of stuff > on your HD and want to minimize the number of CD's. > > I actually use Drive Image 4.0 from Powerquest to make an entire disk > image in 680 MB chunks onto a spare partition (The one I have my swap > file pointed to, so it doesn't get backed up) works just fine. I then > burn the separe files to CD. > > Drive Image 4.0 (the latest version) has support for burning directly to > CD, skipping the intermediate file stage, but I've had mixed results > with it. On the plus side, it makes perfect copies-- all files, > compressed, skipping blank space. > > It does cost though. For a low cost solution, it's hard to beat XXCOPY. > > Joseph Maddison > > P.S. does the /NX0 switch mean that I will get a file overwritten in > the situation I described previously with short filenames ending in ~1? > > To unsubscribe from this group, send an email to: > xxcopy-unsubscribe@yahoogroups.com > > > > Your use of Yahoo! Groups is subject to http://docs.yahoo.com/info/terms/ > > > To unsubscribe from this group, send an email to: xxcopy-unsubscribe@yahoogroups.com Your use of Yahoo! Groups is subject to http://docs.yahoo.com/info/terms/
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