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This is an old revision of Archiving made by coolpup on 2010-09-27 04:02:15.

 

Using the dd command

Dd is like Symantec Norton Ghost, Acronis True Image and Symantec Drive Image. It can perform any type of drive/partition/image duplication, imaging, cloning, transferral and restoration.
http://www.linuxquestions.org/questions/linux-newbie-8/learn-the-dd-command-362506/

# dd --version
dd (coreutils) 6.9
Copyright (C) 2007 Free Software Foundation, Inc.
This is free software.  You may redistribute copies of it under the terms of
the GNU General Public License <http://www.gnu.org/licenses/gpl.html>.
There is NO WARRANTY, to the extent permitted by law.

Written by Paul Rubin, David MacKenzie, and Stuart Kemp.

For usage instructions enter into the command-line interface:
dd --help

When using the dd command the source and target drives/partitions:

References

http://www.murga-linux.com/puppy/viewtopic.php?p=453827#453827
http://www.cyberciti.biz/tips/how-do-i-make-linux-filesystem-backup-with-dd.html
http://www.debianhelp.co.uk/ddcommand.htm
http://www.inference.phy.cam.ac.uk/saw27/notes/backup-hard-disk-partitions.html
http://lazysystemadmin.blogspot.com/2010/07/creating-hard-disk-image-file-it-is.html
http://www.backuphowto.info/linux-backup-hard-disk-clone-dd



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