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  • Linux Backup: Hard Disk Clone with "dd"

     

    Most of Windows users may know "Norton Ghost". Norton Ghost is a backup software for hard disks. It can backup a whole hard disk or a partition to an image file. Also, Norton Ghost can copy all the contents from a hard disk to another exactly. However, Norton Ghost is a Windows software, users on other operating system (such as Linux) can not enjoy its powerful function. Fortunately, most of Unix/Linux operating system provides a command line whose function is similar to Norton Ghost, it is called "dd".

    In fact, "dd" is much powerful than Norton Ghost. You can use many arguments to control it. In this short article, we only concern on how to backup a whole hard disk or a partition.

    Hard Disk Clone

    Suppose you have a 40GB hard disk and a removable hard disk whose capacity is 60GB, and you want to backup all the files from the hard disk to the removable disk. With "dd", it is a very easy task. Again, suppose your hard disk's Unix device name is /dev/sda and the removable disk is /dev/sdb. The following command can copy all the content from /dev/sda to /dev/sdb:

    dd if=/dev/sda of=/dev/sdb

    Here, if=... sets the source and of=... sets the destination. "dd" doesn't care of the contents of the hard disk. It just reads bytes from /dev/sda and writes them into /dev/sdb. It doesn't know what are files. So, the hard disk file system and how many partitions it has are not important. For example, if /dev/sda is splitted into three partitions, the /dev/sdb will have the same partitions. i.e. "destination" is completely same with "source".

    Notice: to execute "dd" you should login as "root" or switch to "root" using "su" command. And you must be careful, a small mistake may cause a serious problem!

    Making a Hard Disk Image File

    Most of time you don't want to make a complete duplication of your hard disk. You may prefer to creating an image file of the hard disk and save it in other storage devices. The following command will create an image file "disk1.img" in your user's directory from /dev/sda:

    dd if=/dev/sda of=~/disk1.img

    Since you have created an image file, you can compress it with "gzip" or "bzip2":

    gzip disk1.img #generates disk1.img.gz or

    bzip2 disk1.img #generates disk1.img.bz2

    You can save much storage space with compression. But it will take very long time.

    Partition Clone

    Backing up a hard disk partition is much similar to backing up a whole hard disk. The reason is that Unix/Linux uses device name, such as /dev/sda1, /dev/sda5... to indicate the partitions. For example, if you want to create an image file from the first partition of /dev/sda, use "dd" like this:

    dd if=/dev/sda1 of=~/disk2.img

    Also, you can compress the image file:

    gzip disk2.img

    By the way, you can copy a partition to another partition completely, just set "of" to the partition's device name. For example:

    dd if=/dev/sda1 of=/dev/sdb5

    This command will copy all the contents from /dev/sda1 to /dev/sdb5. You must be sure that the capacity of /dev/sdb5 is larger than /dev/sda1.

    Restoring from an Image File

    To restore a partition or a hard disk from an image file, just exchange the arguments "if" and "of". For example, restore the whole hard disk from the image file "disk1.img":

    dd if=disk1.img of=/dev/sda

    Restore the first partition of /dev/sda from the image file "disk2.img":

    dd if=disk2.img of=/dev/sda1

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  • 原文地址:https://www.cnblogs.com/linuxbo/p/4313747.html
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