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Full Discussion: Automated disk cloning
Special Forums Hardware Filesystems, Disks and Memory Automated disk cloning Post 302378271 by uvaio on Monday 7th of December 2009 11:43:27 AM
Old 12-07-2009
Well I'm trying to prove the Idea first in virtual environment, I don't want to screw up actually backed up data on real external disk and also it would take 2 hours each try on real drives to copy 100GB.
So I installed 2 different small linux distributions on 2 virtual disks in virtual machine simulating the stuff with much less data, so I have a sandbox to play with.

I want the external disk to be bootable. So I can boot directly from it and it will handle copying data from live OS disk to external disk itself.
I prepared external disk with small partition in the end of disk and made disk bootable from it. Linux starts up and runs shell script with steps I described.
I'm copying the data from lsource disk to external disk from position 0 which overwrites MBR on external disk with MBR of source disk, so I back up MBR of external and then restore it.
I coudl possibly do copy of data from position 513 which possible is the same thing as backing up and restoring later isn't it?

I just want to copy data from source disk to external but keeping external in its actual state, bootable and booting from partition at the end of the disk.
What I assumed was that if I keep external disk MBR including partition table created for one partition at the end, it would not matter on other data copied to the disk after MBR and not touching partition at the end of the disk.
I'm I completely wrong here?
 

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LM-PROFILER(8)						      System Manager's Manual						    LM-PROFILER(8)

NAME
/usr/sbin/lm-profiler - laptop mode profiler SYNOPSIS
/usr/sbin/lm-profiler DESCRIPTION
This manual page documents briefly the /usr/sbin/lm-profiler command. lm-profiler is a tool for profiling disk operations. It is a part of laptop mode tools and is useful only in relation to rest of laptop mode tools. It helps you to detect programs and services that use up system resources and that cause disk activity, and it allows you to disable them when laptop mode is active. When you start lm-profiler, it will execute a "profiling run", which can take some time. Start lm-profiler when you are working on batter- ies, preferably, because that will allow it to analyze the actual situation that it is supposed to optimize. During the profiling run, you can use your system normally; however, any disk activity caused by your actions will end up in the profiler's results. When the profiling run is finished, you will be presented with a list of programs that deserve your attention, either because they listen on a network (which is not usually useful when you are working offline) or because they caused disk activity in a disk-spindown-unfriendly pattern. When lm- profiler can guess an init script that belongs to a program, it presents you with the opportunity to disable the program when you are work- ing on battery. It does this by placing a link to the init script in /etc/laptop-mode/batt-stop. Any programs that lm-profiler cannot find an init script for is simply reported, so that you can stop the program manually if you want to. WARNING ABOUT DISABLING PROGRAMS: It may not be safe to disable some programs. They may be needed for proper operation of your system. Dis- able services only if you know what they do and why you don't need them. FILES
/etc/lm-profiler.conf lm-profiler retrieves its profiling rules from this file. SEE ALSO
lm-profiler.conf(8). laptop-mode.conf(8). daemons.conf(8). AUTHOR
This manual page was written by Bart Samwel (bart@samwel.tk) and Jan Polacek (jerome@ucw.cz) for the Debian system (but may be used by oth- ers). Permission is granted to copy, distribute and/or modify this document under the terms of the GNU General Public License, Version 2 any later version published by the Free Software Foundation. On Debian systems, the complete text of the GNU General Public License can be found in /usr/share/common-licenses/GPL. LM-PROFILER(8)
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