Quote from winter:
Wow, that is nice and clean.
I believed you by the way (before the screenshot), I'm just surprised that it would work that way when doing an image backup/restore.
Actually I thought that the built-in compression on the image would result in the small image size (e.g. free space compress quite well).Quote from spike500:
The disk has a capacity of 39Gb. There is about 2GB of data on the disk. The image was about 2Gb also. So to me this means that only the data is taken in the image and the empty spaces are not.
The filesystem includes pointers to the files, so you cant just relocate a random data block without also changing other things. In order to move/compress files the program must understand them at the file level. I thought that image backup/restore programs treat the whole partition as one big binary blob without any real attempt to understand the filesystem structure within, thus the restored image would look identical to the original, fragments and all. I've never actually used Acronis to do a full image restore myself though, only backups (knock on wood). As long as it works.Quote from spike500:
If then you restore the image, all the data will be written as 1 block and all the previous open spaces will be gone. That is the only reasonable explanation i can find. But i still don't understand that systemfiles were displaced. I always thought that moving systemfiles would end up in a corrupt system. I think Diskeeper leaves the systemfiles untouched.
Agreed.Quote from spike500:
Acronis is a superb product.
I'm not sure how Acronis works now that Spike500 related his experience with restoring an image (which I have never done with that product) however regardless I would personally never do what you are suggesting as a defragmentation technique because it increases the chances of major data loss (e.g. half way through the restore you get an error reading the backup image - now you are screwed).Quote from igum:
So what if you have a highly fragmented disk partition c:drive. You create an image of that partition. Do a quick re-format. Then restore the image. Would you now have a defragmented partition?
Not sure exactly how Acronis works. That might even be a faster and better way to defragment your hard drive if your partition is highly fragmented.
Quote from igum:
So what if you have a highly fragmented disk partition c:drive. You create an image of that partition. Do a quick re-format. Then restore the image. Would you now have a defragmented partition?
Not sure exactly how Acronis works. That might even be a faster and better way to defragment your hard drive if your partition is highly fragmented.