14.0
Table Of Contents
- Norton Ghost™
- Technical Support
- Contents
- 1. Introducing Norton Ghost™
- 2. Installing Norton Ghost
- 3. Ensuring the recovery of your computer
- 4. Getting Started
- Key product components
- How you use Norton Ghost
- Starting Norton Ghost
- Configuring Norton Ghost default options
- Selecting a default backup destination
- Adjusting the effects of a backup on computer performance
- Adjusting default tray icon settings
- Managing file types
- Using aliases for external drives
- Configuring FTP settings for use with Offsite Copy
- Logging Norton Ghost messages
- Enabling email notifications for product (event) messages
- 5. Best practices for backing up your data
- 6. Backing up entire drives
- 7. Backing up files and folders
- 8. Running and managing backup jobs
- Running an existing backup job immediately
- Adjusting the speed of a backup
- Stopping a backup or recovery task
- Verifying that a backup is successful
- Editing backup settings
- Enabling event-triggered backups
- Editing a backup schedule
- Turning off a backup job
- Deleting backup jobs
- Adding users who can back up your computer
- 9. Backing up remote computers from your computer
- 10. Monitoring the status of your backups
- About monitoring backups
- Monitoring backup protection from the Home page
- Monitoring backup protection from the Status page
- Configuring Norton Ghost to send SNMP traps
- Customize status reporting
- Viewing drive details
- Improving the protection level of a drive
- Using event log information to troubleshoot problems
- 11. Exploring the contents of a recovery point
- 12. Managing backup destinations
- 13. Recovering files, folders, or entire drives
- 14. Recovering a computer
- About recovering a computer
- Starting a computer by using the recovery environment
- Preparing to recover a computer
- Recovering a computer
- Restoring multiple drives by using a system index file
- Recovering files and folders from the recovery environment
- Using the networking tools in the recovery environment
- Viewing properties of recovery points and drives
- About the Support Utilities
- 15. Copying a drive
- A. Using a search engine to search recovery points
- Index
If the power or the hardware fails while you copy the data, no data is lost from
the source drive. However, you must restart the copying process.
Note: This feature is not available in the evaluation version of the product.
To copy one hard drive to another hard drive
1
On the Tools page, click Copy My Hard Drive.
2
Complete the steps in the wizard to copy the drive.
The wizard steps you through the process of selecting the right drive to copy,
selecting the destination drive, and selecting the options for copying the data
from one drive to another.
Drive-to-drive copying options
When you copy a drive from one hard drive to another, you can use the
drive-to-drive copying options.
Table 15-1 describes the options for copying from one hard drive to another.
Table 15-1
Drive-to-drive copying options
DescriptionOption
Check the source drive for errors before you copy it. The
source drive is the original drive.
Check source for file system
errors
Check the destination drive for errors after you copy the
drive. The destination drive is the new drive.
Check destination for file
system errors
This option automatically expands the drive to occupy the
destination drive's remaining unallocated space.
Resize drive to fill
unallocated space.
Make the destination drive the active partition (the drive
from which the computer starts). Only one drive can be
active at a time. To boot the computer, it must be on the
first physical hard disk, and it must contain an operating
system. When the computer boots, it reads the partition
table of the first physical hard disk to find out which drive
is active. It then boots from that location. If the drive is not
bootable or you are not certain if it is, have a boot disk ready.
You can use the Symantec Recovery Disk.
The Set drive active option is valid for basic disks only (not
dynamic disks).
Set drive active (for booting
OS)
173Copying a drive
Copying one hard drive to another hard drive










