Brian:
From my original post:
My latest Ghost is v11.5.1.2269, which I found out from
Symantec has issues with GPT.
--------------------------------
I sent TBU an E-Mail that was almost a dupe of my original
post here with this added:
The image that Ghost makes can have ANY file deleted OR added
to the image using "Ghost Explorer" and will restore as if
it were never touched.
My full exchange with TBU....
Yes, it supports GPT partitioned drives.
If your new drive uses 4K sector sizes you
wouldn't need to have a GPT.
If you do an entire drive backup / restore
it will keep whatever partitioning type was
backed up when it restores. If you want to
move something, you'd have to do individual
partition restores. I would recommend you
keep your existing drive for booting Windows
and anything else and use the larger GPT drive
for your data because the boot process is
completely different under UEFI.
You can setup and customize the boot disks with
your own scripts that do anything you want.
However, we don't allow changing the backup files.
If you have files to archive you can store them somewhere
and have your script copy them over after the backup.
December 16, 2013
Dear TBU Sales,
First, thank you for your VERY prompt reply. Nice to see
a company that values its customers.
Unfortunately "However, we don't allow changing the
backup files." was a deal killer.
Something you said:
"If your new drive uses 4K sector sizes you
wouldn't need to have a GPT."
flies in the face of EVERYTHING that I have read in pursuit of
my 3TB goal. Basically that Windows 7's (64-Bit included)
CANNOT utilize over 2.1 or so TB's when a MBR is used. Ie:
http://www.sevenforums.com/general-discussion/197004-how-do-i-create-new-volume-...http://answers.microsoft.com/en-us/windows/forum/windows_7-hardware/using-3tb-dr...BTW, This is what my present Toshiba 2TB looks like
Near the bottom):
http://technet.microsoft.com/en-us/library/hh147334%28v=ws.10%29.aspxChecking the Toshiba specs they BOTH have Advanced Format 512e:
http://storage.toshiba.com/storagesolutions/pc-notebook/dt01aca-seriesIf my Toshiba 3TB cannot go beyond the 2.1 or so TB's when a MBR is
used, do you have software that can make BOTH the 2.1 and the
balance of the drive (600 GB or so) NTFS so I can use a MBR?????
I await your reply.
Sincerely,
Al Camp
-------------------------------------
December 16, 2013
If you expose the 4K sector size and not the emulated
normal 512 byte sector size, you can use an MBR and
use the entire space (up to 16TiB).
0xFFFFFFFF*512=2,199,023,255,040
0xFFFFFFFF*4096=17,592,186,040,320
-------------------------------------
December 16, 2013
Dear TBU Sales,
>If you expose the 4K sector size and not the emulated
>normal 512 byte sector size, you can use an MBR and
>use the entire space (up to 16TiB).
>0xFFFFFFFF*512=2,199,023,255,040
>0xFFFFFFFF*4096=17,592,186,040,320
With what software and what is the procedure to go about
doing this?
Can it be done via a Bootable CD or must it be done in Windows
with just my SSD and empty 3TB connected?
Thank you,
Al Camp
-------------------------------------
December 16, 2013
It would be a drive feature/option, typically using
a jumper. The BIOS would also have to support the larger
sizes too so it doesn't crash reading larger sectors, a
modern BIOS should be able to handle it.
I've got an E-Mail in to Toshiba about this. Still waiting for a reply.
**********************************************************************
NightOwl:
>you haven't actually tried using that large HDD with imaging software as yet--correct?
You are correct, Sir!
>Could you clarify what the *issue* is
After searching the Symantec site a LOT, the bottom line
was that my Ghost is v11.5.1.2269 (From Ghost Solution Suite
2.5) must be updated to v11.5.1.2298. I have no way to do
that and this came up too:
Does Ghost work with GPT partition tables?
The GPT supports up to 128 partitions and uses a false Master Boot
Record (MBR) with only one entry that points at the GPT. This is for
legacy compatibility reasons.
Because the Ghost virtual partition replaces the MBR with it's own
version, it will cause problems with systems that use a GPT.
and THIS horror:
http://www.symantec.com/business/support/index?page=content&id=DOC6587From my post:
If the source is Fat32 and the destination is NTFS, after cloning, the destination is now Fat32.
This is SOP with my v11.5.1.2269 bootable CD.
When I put my 2TB HDD in my box in June, I partitioned it
with EaseUS Partition Master Pro v9.0 and set all partitions
as NTFS to check out this exact question.
When I Ghosted my 1TB HDD's partitions to the 2TB, all of
the 1TBs FAT32 partitions came out FAT32 on the 2TB.
>Don't know if this applies
Doesn't--Check my original post: Windows 7 Pro 64-Bit
with an ASRock P67 PRO3 (B3) MoBo that has a UEFI BIOS.
Just found a SEMI solution:
Acronis True Image 2014 CAN make that second partition that
is set as "unallocated" by Windows into a usable MBR partition.
Check out the scan I made of their "Extended Capacity Manager".
The last 3rd of a 3TB is made to look like a second MBR disk
to Windows, and all is good.
Unfortunately, my future F Drive cannot be 2.538 TB's, just
2.037 TB's.
AND the Acronis True Image 2014 cost $50.00.
BUT, my Easy-peasy "Make", "Restore" and Manual Ghost DOS
Bootable CDs are still in the game!
Big Al