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Full Discussion: Mounting a disk clone
Operating Systems Linux Ubuntu Mounting a disk clone Post 302467890 by fpmurphy on Sunday 31st of October 2010 11:30:32 PM
Old 11-01-2010
I recommend that you start again. This time do logical imaging (i.e. by filesystem) rather than physical drive imaging. The standard free (as in beer) tool for doing this in the computer forensics world is dcfldd (DOD Computer Forensics Lab) dd.

If you do not want to start again you can use the mmls utility (may need -t dos option) to extract metadata for the relevant logical partition from the physical image. You can then use dcfldd skip=start_sector count=lenght bs=512 to extract the logical partition from the physical image.


Then, if partition is NTFS as is likely, use
Code:
mount  -t ntfs  -o ro,noexec,loop,show_sys_files  partition.img /mnt

Both dcfldd and mmls are available for download on the Internet. mmls is part of TSK (The Sleuth Kit.) dcfldd is available on SourceForge.
 

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WHAT-PATCH(1)                                                 General Commands Manual                                                WHAT-PATCH(1)

NAME
what-patch - detect which patch system a Debian package uses SYNOPSIS
what-patch [options] DESCRIPTION
what-patch examines the debian/rules file to determine which patch system the Debian package is using. what-patch should be run from the root directory of the Debian source package. OPTIONS
Listed below are the command line options for what-patch: -h, --help Display a help message and exit. -v Enable verbose mode. This will include the listing of any files modified outside or the debian/ directory and report any additional details about the patch system if available. AUTHORS
what-patch was written by Kees Cook <kees@ubuntu.com>, Siegfried-A. Gevatter <rainct@ubuntu.com>, and Daniel Hahler <ubuntu@thequod.de>, among others. This manual page was written by Jonathan Patrick Davies <jpds@ubuntu.com>. Both are released under the GNU General Public License, version 3 or later. SEE ALSO
The Ubuntu MOTU team has some documentation about patch systems at the Ubuntu wiki: https://wiki.ubuntu.com/PackagingGuide/PatchSystems cdbs-edit-patch(1), dbs-edit-patch(1), dpatch-edit-patch(1) DEBIAN Debian Utilities WHAT-PATCH(1)
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