6.0
Table Of Contents
- Introduction
- Installing Acronis TrueImage and Getting Started
- Creating Disk/Partition Images
- Restoring a Disk/Partition from an Image
- Selecting an Archive File
- Selecting a Partition to Be Restored
- Selecting a Destination Partition
- Selecting the Restored Partition Type and File System
- Resizing a Partition
- Selecting a Partition Letter
- Selecting the Next Partition to Be Restored
- Partition Restoration Script Window
- Partition Restoration Peculiarities
- Peculiarities of Restoration from Removable Media
- Restoring Individual Files
- Appendix A. Partitions and File Systems
Splitting an archive file into separate fixed size volumes makes sense when storin
g
it
on a hard disk as well, as you’ll be able to move archive volumes to CD-R/RW,
DVD+RW disks in the future. Creating an archive file directly on a to CD-R/RW,
DVD+RW disk would have taken much longer time then in case of a hard disk.
2.5 Protecting an Archive File with a Password
An archive file with a partition (disk) image can be protected with a
password. If you think a partition (disk), you create an image of, shouldn’t
be restored by anybody except you, enter a password and its confirmation
into the text fields of the next Image Archive Protection window. A password
should consist of at least 8 symbols and contain both letters (in the upper
and lower cases desirably), and numbers. (So it would be harder to hack it.)
Protecting an archive file with a password
When you try to restore a password protected partition (disk) from an image,
stored in an archive file, Acronis TrueImage will prompt you to enter it into
the appropriate window and won’t allow restoring it by a person without this
password.
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