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NTFSCLONE(8)		    System Manager's Manual		  NTFSCLONE(8)

NAME
       ntfsclone - Efficiently clone, image, restore or	rescue an NTFS

SYNOPSIS
       ntfsclone [OPTIONS] SOURCE
       ntfsclone --save-image [OPTIONS]	SOURCE
       ntfsclone --restore-image [OPTIONS] SOURCE
       ntfsclone --metadata [OPTIONS] SOURCE

DESCRIPTION
       ntfsclone  will efficiently clone (copy,	save, backup, restore) or res-
       cue an NTFS filesystem to a sparse file,	image, device  (partition)  or
       standard	 output.   It  works  at disk sector level and copies only the
       used data. Unused disk space becomes zero (cloning to sparse file), en-
       coded with control codes	(saving	in special  image  format),  left  un-
       changed	(cloning to a disk/partition) or filled	with zeros (cloning to
       standard	output).

       ntfsclone can be	useful to make backups,	an exact snapshot of  an  NTFS
       filesystem  and	restore	 it  later  on,	or for developers to test NTFS
       read/write functionality, troubleshoot/investigate users' issues	 using
       the clone without the risk of destroying	the original filesystem.

       The  clone,  if not using the special image format, is an exact copy of
       the original NTFS filesystem from sector	to sector thus it can be  also
       mounted	just  like  the	 original NTFS filesystem.  For	example	if you
       clone to	a file and the kernel has loopback  device  and	 NTFS  support
       then the	file can be mounted as

	      mount -t ntfs -o loop ntfsclone.img /mnt/ntfsclone

   Windows Cloning
       If  you want to copy, move or restore a system or boot partition	to an-
       other computer, or to a different disk or partition  (e.g.  hda1->hda2,
       hda1->hdb1  or to a different disk sector offset) then you will need to
       take extra care.

       Usually,	Windows	will not be able to boot, unless you copy, move	or re-
       store NTFS to the same partition	which starts at	the same sector	on the
       same type of disk having	the same BIOS legacy cylinder setting  as  the
       original	partition and disk had.

       The  ntfsclone  utility guarantees to make an exact copy	of NTFS	but it
       won't deal with booting issues. This  is	 by  design:  ntfsclone	 is  a
       filesystem,  not	system utility.	Its aim	is only	NTFS cloning, not Win-
       dows cloning. Hereby ntfsclone can be used as a very fast and  reliable
       build block for Windows cloning but itself it's not enough.

   Sparse Files
       A  file	is  sparse  if it has unallocated blocks (holes). The reported
       size of such files are always higher than the disk  space  consumed  by
       them.   The  du	command	 can tell the real disk	space used by a	sparse
       file.  The holes	are always read	as zeros. All major  Linux  filesystem
       like, ext2, ext3, reiserfs, Reiser4, JFS	and XFS, supports sparse files
       but for example the ISO 9600 CD-ROM filesystem doesn't.

   Handling Large Sparse Files
       As  of  today  Linux provides inadequate	support	for managing (tar, cp,
       gzip, gunzip, bzip2, bunzip2, cat, etc) large sparse files.   The  only
       main Linux filesystem having support for	efficient sparse file handling
       is  XFS	by  the	XFS_IOC_GETBMAPX ioctl(2).  However none of the	common
       utilities supports it.  This means when you tar,	cp, gzip, bzip2, etc a
       large sparse file they will always read the entire file,	 even  if  you
       use the "sparse support"	options.

       bzip2(1)	 compresses large sparse files much better than	gzip(1)	but it
       does so also much slower. Moreover neither of them handles large	sparse
       files efficiently during	uncompression from disk	space usage  point  of
       view.

       At  present  the	most efficient way, both speed and space-wise, to com-
       press and uncompress large sparse files by common tools would be	 using
       tar(1)  with  the options -S (handle sparse files "efficiently")	and -j
       (filter the archive through bzip2). Although tar	still reads and	analy-
       ses the entire file, it doesn't pass on the large  data	blocks	having
       only  zeros to filters and it also avoids writing large amount of zeros
       to the disk needlessly. But since tar can't create an archive from  the
       standard	 input,	 you  can't do this in-place by	just reading ntfsclone
       standard	output.	Even more sadly, using the -S option  results  serious
       data  loss since	the end	of 2004	and the	GNU tar	maintainers didn't re-
       lease fixed versions until the present day.

   The Special Image Format
       It's also possible, actually it's recommended, to save an NTFS filesys-
       tem to a	special	image format.	Instead	 of  representing  unallocated
       blocks  as holes, they are encoded using	control	codes. Thus, the image
       saves space without requiring sparse file support. The image format  is
       ideal for streaming filesystem images over the network and similar, and
       can be used as a	replacement for	Ghost or Partition Image if it is com-
       bined  with other tools.	The downside is	that you can't mount the image
       directly, you need to restore it	first.

       To save an image	using the special image	format,	 use  the  -s  or  the
       --save-image  option.  To  restore  an  image,  use the -r or the --re-
       store-image option. Note	that you can restore images from standard  in-
       put by using '-'	as the SOURCE file.

   Metadata-only Cloning
       One  of	the  features  of ntfsclone is that, it	can also save only the
       NTFS metadata using the option -m or --metadata	and  the  clone	 still
       will  be	 mountable. In this case all non-metadata file content will be
       lost and	reading	them back will result always zeros.

       The metadata-only image can be compressed very  well,  usually  to  not
       more  than  1-8	MB thus	it's easy to transfer for investigation, trou-
       bleshooting.

       In this mode of ntfsclone, NONE of the user's data is saved,  including
       the resident user's data	embedded into metadata.	All is filled with ze-
       ros.   Moreover	all the	file timestamps, deleted and unused spaces in-
       side the	metadata are filled with zeros.	Thus this mode is  inappropri-
       ate  for	example	for forensic analyses.	This mode may be combined with
       --save-image to create a	special	image format file instead of a	sparse
       file.

       Please  note, filenames are not wiped out. They might contain sensitive
       information, so think twice before sending such an image	to anybody.

OPTIONS
       Below is	a summary of all the options that ntfsclone  accepts.	Nearly
       all options have	two equivalent names.  The short name is preceded by -
       and  the	long name is preceded by -- .  Any single letter options, that
       don't take an argument, can be combined into  a	single	command,  e.g.
       -fv  is equivalent to -f	-v .  Long named options can be	abbreviated to
       any unique prefix of their name.

       -o, --output FILE
	      Clone NTFS to the	non-existent FILE.  If FILE is '-' then	 clone
	      to  the standard output. This option cannot be used for creating
	      a	partition, use --overwrite for an existing partition.

       -O, --overwrite FILE
	      Clone NTFS to FILE, which	can be an existing partition or	a reg-
	      ular file	which will be overwritten if it	exists.

       -s, --save-image
	      Save to the special image	format.	This is	the most efficient way
	      space and	speed-wise if imaging is done to the standard  output,
	      e.g.  for	 image	compression, encryption	or streaming through a
	      network.

       -r, --restore-image
	      Restore from the special image format specified by SOURCE	 argu-
	      ment. If the SOURCE is '-' then the image	is read	from the stan-
	      dard input.

       -n, --no-action
	      Test  the	consistency of a saved image by	simulating its restor-
	      ing without writing anything. The	NTFS data contained in the im-
	      age is not tested.  The  option  --restore-image	must  also  be
	      present,	and the	options	--output and --overwrite must be omit-
	      ted.

       --rescue
	      Ignore disk read errors so disks having bad sectors, e.g.	 dying
	      disks,  can  be  rescued	the most efficiently way, with minimal
	      stress on	them. Ntfsclone	works at the lowest, sector  level  in
	      this  mode  too  thus more data can be rescued.  The contents of
	      the unreadable sectors are filled	by character '?' and  the  be-
	      ginning of such sectors are marked by "BadSectoR\0".

       -m, --metadata
	      Clone  ONLY  METADATA  (for  NTFS	 experts).  Only  cloning to a
	      (sparse) file is allowed,	unless used the	option --save-image is
	      also used.  You can't metadata-only clone	to a device.

       --ignore-fs-check
	      Ignore the result	of the filesystem consistency check. This  op-
	      tion  is allowed to be used only with the	--metadata option, for
	      the safety of user's data. The clusters which cause  the	incon-
	      sistency are saved too.

       -t, --preserve-timestamps
	      Do  not wipe the timestamps, to be used only with	the --metadata
	      option.

       --full-logfile
	      Include the Windows log file in the copy.	This  is  only	useful
	      for  extracting  metadata, saving	or cloning a file system which
	      was not properly unmounted from Windows.

       --new-serial, or

       --new-half-serial
	      Set a new	random serial number to	the clone. The	serial	number
	      is a 64 bit number used to identify the device during the	mount-
	      ing process, so it has to	be changed to enable the original file
	      system  and the clone to be mounted at the same time on the same
	      computer.

	      The option --new-half-serial only	changes	the upper part of  the
	      serial  number,  keeping the lower part which is used by Windows
	      unchanged.

	      The options --new-serial and --new-half-serial can only be  used
	      when cloning a file system of restoring from an image.

	      The  serial number is not	the volume UUID	used by	Windows	to lo-
	      cate files which have been moved to another volume.

       -f, --force
	      Forces ntfsclone to proceed if the filesystem is marked  "dirty"
	      for consistency check.

       -q, --quiet
	      Do not display any progress-bars during operation.

       -h, --help
	      Show a list of options with a brief description of each one.

EXIT CODES
       The exit	code is	0 on success, non-zero otherwise.

EXAMPLES
       Clone NTFS on /dev/hda1 to /dev/hdc1:

	      ntfsclone	--overwrite /dev/hdc1 /dev/hda1

       Save an NTFS to a file in the special image format:

	      ntfsclone	--save-image --output backup.img /dev/hda1

       Restore an NTFS from a special image file to its	original partition:

	      ntfsclone	--restore-image	--overwrite /dev/hda1 backup.img

       Save an NTFS into a compressed image file:

	      ntfsclone	--save-image -o	- /dev/hda1 | gzip -c >	backup.img.gz

       Restore an NTFS volume from a compressed	image file:

	      gunzip -c	backup.img.gz |	\
	      ntfsclone	--restore-image	--overwrite /dev/hda1 -

       Backup  an  NTFS	 volume	to a remote host, using	ssh. Please note, that
       ssh may ask for a password!

	      ntfsclone	--save-image --output -	/dev/hda1 | \
	      gzip -c |	ssh host 'cat >	backup.img.gz'

       Restore an NTFS volume from a remote host via ssh.  Please  note,  that
       ssh may ask for a password!

	      ssh host 'cat backup.img.gz' | gunzip -c | \
	      ntfsclone	--restore-image	--overwrite /dev/hda1 -

       Stream an image file from a web server and restore it to	a partition:

	      wget -qO - http://server/backup.img | \
	      ntfsclone	--restore-image	--overwrite /dev/hda1 -

       Clone an	NTFS volume to a non-existent file:

	      ntfsclone	--output ntfs-clone.img	/dev/hda1

       Pack  NTFS  metadata for	NTFS experts. Please note that bzip2 runs very
       long but	results	usually	at least 10 times smaller archives  than  gzip
       on a sparse file.

	      ntfsclone	--metadata --output ntfsmeta.img /dev/hda1
	      bzip2 ntfsmeta.img

	      Or, outputting to	a compressed image :
	      ntfsclone	-mst --output -	/dev/hda1 | bzip2 > ntfsmeta.bz2

       Unpacking NTFS metadata into a sparse file:

	      bunzip2 -c ntfsmeta.img.bz2 | \
	      cp --sparse=always /proc/self/fd/0 ntfsmeta.img

KNOWN ISSUES
       There  are  no  known  problems	with ntfsclone.	 If you	think you have
       found a problem then please send	an email describing it to the develop-
       ment team: ntfs-3g-devel@lists.sf.net

       Sometimes it might appear ntfsclone froze if the	clone is  on  ReiserFS
       and  even CTRL-C	won't stop it. This is not a bug in ntfsclone, however
       it's due	to ReiserFS being extremely inefficient	creating large	sparse
       files  and  not	handling  signals during this operation. This ReiserFS
       problem was improved in kernel 2.4.22.  XFS, JFS	and  ext3  don't  have
       this problem.

AUTHORS
       ntfsclone  was  written	by Szabolcs Szakacsits with contributions from
       Per Olofsson (special image format support) and Anton Altaparmakov.  It
       was ported to ntfs-3g by	Erik Larsson and Jean-Pierre Andre.

AVAILABILITY
       ntfsclone is part of the	ntfs-3g	package	and is available at:
       https://github.com/tuxera/ntfs-3g/wiki/

SEE ALSO
       ntfsresize(8) ntfsprogs(8) xfs_copy(8) debugreiserfs(8) e2image(8)

ntfs-3g	2022.10.3		 February 2013			  NTFSCLONE(8)

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