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Date:      Wed, 15 Dec 2010 12:20:05 -0700 (MST)
From:      Warren Block <wblock@wonkity.com>
To:        bsd <bsd@todoo.biz>
Cc:        freebsd-questions@freebsd.org, Robert Bonomi <bonomi@mail.r-bonomi.com>
Subject:   Re: Creating clone of a HDD including boot partition
Message-ID:  <alpine.BSF.2.00.1012151214220.98403@wonkity.com>
In-Reply-To: <58F35D2B-19D0-4FE0-A4DA-03FDA8128BD2@todoo.biz>
References:  <201012150800.oBF80FRf015357@mail.r-bonomi.com> <58F35D2B-19D0-4FE0-A4DA-03FDA8128BD2@todoo.biz>

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On Wed, 15 Dec 2010, bsd wrote:

> Is there a way to dd to a file to create an iso image and then restore (still using dd from this image).
> I only have one IDE <--> USB cable so this is the reason why It'd more simple for me to create an iso image of the disk and then restore.

Use dd's of= parameter to send output to a file.  If it really has to be 
an ISO, pipe it to mkisofs.  Using dd like that makes big files with 
lots of wasted space.  The article I posted earlier shows how to save 
some of that by filling the disk's empty space with zeros.  Then gzip 
can do some useful compression.

> Using dump won't be very useful because I won't be able to get the first 63 segments where boot info are written, I need something of lower level (obviously dd will be my friend).

A hybrid approach would be to save the first 63 blocks with dd, then use 
dump for the UFS filesystems.

dd if=/dev/ad0 of=mbr.bin count=63

PS: top-posting bad, inline with trimmed irrelevancies good.



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