This function creates a backup for an entire disk by creating a compressed file for the disk, and all partitions and files on the disk will be contained within the compressed file which is saved as an image file with .pmfx extension. DiskGenius supports three modes to image a disk.
All Sectors: Back up all sectors of the source disk to the image file in sequence from beginning to end, without checking whether these sectors contain valid data. This disk imaging method will copy a large amount of invalid data and take longer time, and yet it is the most complete method. When restoring the image, the target disk should not be smaller than the source disk.
Data Sectors Only: Valid data is backed up to the image file "as it" according to the file system layout of each partition on the source disk. The disk imaging process only backs up sectors containing valid data and it is the fastest way. When restoring the image, the target disk should not be smaller than the source disk.
All Files: Backup all files and other valid data of the source disk one by one into the image file. This method does not backup sectors that contain invalid data, so it is quite fast. The disk image can be restored to a smaller disk which is large enough to receive the data to be restored. The storage location of restored files will be rearranged, and the newly restored disk will be free of file fragmentation.
The disk image can be created with various compression levels, from Fast, Normal to High Quality. Data compression option affects disk imaging speed and the size of the image file. The higher compression quality you choose, the slower the disk imaging speed will be, but the smaller the image file will be.
"Hot Migration" or "Hot Backup" will image the disk without stopping or restarting Windows OS. "Lock & Execute" means the source disk will be locked temporarily during the disk imaging, and other programs cannot access the disk.
Then I took the SSD out of the laptop and connected it with another computer(windows-7) where my data were backed up. I used "clone partition" of DiskGenius to transfer data from the HDD of the win-7 computer to my SSD.
However, when I insert the SSD into the laptop and turned on the laptop, nothing shows up as if data transfer were never done. But the strange thing is that when I connect the SSD back to the win-7 computer, I can find all the copied data.
Now I transferred my data from the win-7 computer to an extra HHD (via AOMEI's clone-partition). And I can see the copied data when the extra HHD is connected to either the win-7 computer or my laptop.
I first transfer the data from the win-7 HDD to a portable HDD. Then I connected the portable HDD to my laptop. Lastly I transferred the data from the portable HDD to the SSD of my laptop. All operations were done with AOMEI.
When dealing with broken storage you never use fair weather software, such as DiskGenius.Broken drives often come with so-called pending sectors (unreadable ones).Most of the software around that deals with drives, volumes, partitions and files has not been programmed to deal with unreadable sectors.
Therefore you are better of using a fault-tolerant software such as ddrescue (Linux,open source, free) to create a copy that is at least physically healthy. That means that every sector can be read. Keep in mind that such a copy won't provide you with the content of pending sectors.But having such a physically healthy disk ready, fair weather software can be used again.ddrescue provides you with information about unreadable sectors and is updating this information during the copy process.
there are professional and freeware disk genius versions, but the dos port is always free so i attached just it here (with all the files included as-is). i imagine the windows port has the same ntfs functionality under win9x, but i never tried it.
I have an external 2 TB Harddisk that had a 1.5 TB exFAT Partition and a 500GB HFS+ encrypted Partition. I wanted to shrink the 1.5 TB to 1 TB. I used to shrink the exFAT Partition which worked, I ended up with a 1 TB Partition visible in Windows.
It took a lot longer because I expected that disk2s2 was a HFS+ encrypted volume but viewing it in a hex editor I didn't find the markers for that, so I thought my data somehow has been overwritten or that the partitions were not aligned properly anymore. Only after recreating my previous setup I found out that there was a CoreStorage layer in between and then it was an easy fix.
Still not entirely sure what went wrong in the first place, because I tried to recreate my scenario on another harddisk and it worked there. My guess is my old harddisk had an mbr and gpt (hybrid) and thats what confused disk genius, but I don't know for sure.
While the user interface is lacking and leads to some confusion, the functionality on offer in Eassos DiskGenius is considerable. Pricing is sensible, matching competitors while offering a little more, but most importantly, the free version of DiskGenius is largely unrestricted, making it ideal for home users and small businesses.
Many data recovery software publishers offer their software as individual tools. Eassos has released DiskGenius as a suite of disk utilities, which features the Eassos Recovery tool alongside a backup and restore tool and partition manager
The free partition manager offers an all-in-one solution for data recovery, reliable and versatile partition management and Windows backup & restore. Deleted data can potentially be recovered from reformatted and lost partitions, and missing files found, whether using a standard hard disk drive, a removable drive, RAID, or even virtual disk. Optical disks and USB devices can also be recovered.
To assess DiskGenius's recovery tools, we connected a previously unmountable 16GB SanDisk Cruzer Blade USB thumb drive to a Dell 5505 laptop running Windows 10. This is one of the key methods to establish whether the software can meet its claims of recovery. As a rule, modern, expensive software should be able to detect the drive.
Soon, the drive had been successfully scanned using the Recover Lost Files menu command. At this stage, all recoverable files are listed. Those found within a directory tree are displayed as such, while orphaned data is listed separately.
Scanning of the 16GB drive completed in under 10 minutes, which is usual for such a device on a modern computer. The list of data displayed was good, although it wasn't easy to distinguish between complete and incomplete data.
This aside, the tool operates well. Disk partition and file deletion tools are also included in Eassos DiskGenius, extending its usefulness. There is also an OS migration feature, for cloning the system partition to a new location.
The website is a gateway to 24-hour support, where you will find a good list of frequently asked questions, mostly aimed at potential customers. Meanwhile, detailed instructions are provided in the How To section, intended to guide the reader through successful use of Disk Genius. For recovery purposes, this covers every data loss issue you can imagine.
As an extension to this feature, Eassos also offers detailed step-by-step guides for several problems. This is a knowledge base approach that works well, although you won't find yourself talking to anyone. If it is human intervention that you crave and if nothing else works, you can contact Eassos by email through your inbox or raise a support ticket on the website.
With so many disk recovery tools on the market, you might mistake Eassos DiskGenius (formerly Partition Guru) as another tool geared primarily toward corporations and pro recovery experts. But that's only part of the story. Offering competitive pricing and a complete collection of recovery features, DiskGenius finds and recovers data on almost any data you can think of. If the data can be recovered, this tool can find it and copy it to a new, reliable location. With disk management, RAID support, and operating system cloning, there is little to find fault in.
Slightly confusing user interface aside, the most striking thing about Eassos DiskGenius isn't the recovery speed or the feature set. This tool, to all intents and purposes, is free. While some advanced features for unusual media and Ext file tables require the premium tool, the main features are free and uncapped.
Christian Cawley has extensive experience as a writer and editor in consumer electronics, IT and entertainment media. He has contributed to TechRadar since 2017 and has been published in Computer Weekly, Linux Format, ComputerActive, and other publications. Formerly the editor responsible for Linux, Security, Programming, and DIY at MakeUseOf.com, Christian previously worked as a desktop and software support specialist in the public and private sectors.\n"}), " -0-7/js/authorBio.js"); } else console.error('%c FTE ','background: #9306F9; color: #ffffff','no lazy slice hydration function available'); Christian CawleySocial Links NavigationChristian Cawley has extensive experience as a writer and editor in consumer electronics, IT and entertainment media. He has contributed to TechRadar since 2017 and has been published in Computer Weekly, Linux Format, ComputerActive, and other publications. Formerly the editor responsible for Linux, Security, Programming, and DIY at MakeUseOf.com, Christian previously worked as a desktop and software support specialist in the public and private sectors.
A better suggestion would be to format it as exFAT so both systems can read it natively (unless there is a specific reason for ext4).
You might need packages on your linux system for it work properly - -to-mount-and-use-an-exfat-drive-on-linux/
Either make a partition on the USB stick with FAT32 or NTFS and put the files you want to transfer across in their or have Puppy Linux on the USB stick as well. Puppy Linux will work in and with any file system and only needs a frugal install so that it will only need less than 1 GB of the USB drive. After booting it up you can put your files from the USB stick anywhere you want. Puppy will let you do that easily.
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