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Norton Ghost 15 Usb Boot Disk: How to Create and Use It for Recovery

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Norton Ghost is one of the best tools that can help us create disk image, backup selected partitions or any important file. And you can boot into the Norton Ghost recovery environment with a recovery disk to restore image backup or troubleshoot other problems.




Norton Ghost 15 Usb Boot Disk



To create Norton Ghost bootable USB, first, you should format the USB flash drive to NTFS and then copy the contents of the Norton Ghost recovery disk to the USB. Here we take make Norton Ghost 15 bootable USB as an example.


Insert the recovery CD and copy of its files to the bootable USB flash drive. Or if the recovery disk is an ISO image file, you can mount the ISO with a virtual drive program and then copy the files to the USB driver.


I have a disk image (ghost) of the disk need to be restored, and believe the ghost.exe should run from bootable USB with DOS, but I can't seem to create it. My laptop does not have a a cd-rom or floppy drive.I managed to find a Ghost utility that I could load from a bootable USB drive. Unfortunately, when I plug in my NTFS external drive (USB), it is not detected.


Ghost 6.0, released in 2000, includes a management console for managing large numbers of machines. The console communicates with client software on managed computers and allows a system administrator to refresh the disk of a machine remotely. As a DOS-based program, Ghost requires machines running Windows to reboot to DOS to run it. Ghost 6.0 requires a separate DOS partition when used with the console.[6]


The off-line version of Ghost, which runs from bootable media in place of the installed operating system, originally faced a number of driver support difficulties due to limitations of the increasingly obsolete 16-bit DOS environment. Driver selection and configuration within DOS was non-trivial from the beginning, and the limited space available on floppy disks made disk cloning of several different disk controllers a difficult task, where different SCSI, USB, and CD-ROM drives were involved. Mouse support was possible but often left out due to the limited space for drivers on a floppy disk. Some devices such as USB often did not work using newer features such as USB 2.0, instead only operating at 1.0 speeds and taking hours to do what should have taken only a few minutes. As widespread support for DOS went into decline, it became increasingly difficult to get hardware drivers for DOS for the newer hardware.


Norton Ghost 2003, a consumer edition of Ghost, was released on September 6, 2002. Available as an independent product, Norton Ghost 2003 was also included as a component of Norton SystemWorks 2003 Professional. A simpler, non-corporate version of Ghost, Norton Ghost 2003 does not include the console but has a Windows front-end to script Ghost operations and create a bootable Ghost diskette. The machine still needs to reboot to the virtual partition, but the user does not need to interact with DOS. Symantec deprecated LiveUpdate support for Norton Ghost 2003 in early 2006.


Ghost Solution Suite 1.1 is a bundle of an updated version of Ghost, Symantec Client Migration (a user data and settings migration tool) and the former PowerQuest equivalent, DeployCenter (using PQI images). Ghost Solution Suite 1.1 was released in December 2005. It can create an image file that is larger than 2 GB. (In Ghost 8.2 or earlier, such image files are automatically split into two or more segments, so that each segment has a maximum size of 2 GB.) Other new features include more comprehensive manufacturing tools, and the ability to create a "universal boot disk".[further explanation needed]


This version provides a "LightsOut Restore" feature, which restores a system from an on-disk software recovery environment similar to Windows RE, thereby allowing recovery without a bootable CD. Upon system startup, a menu asks whether start the operating system or the LightsOut recovery environment. LightsOut restore would augment the ISO image, which comes with Ghost. The latter contains a recovery environment that can recover a system without a working operating system.


Ghost is marketed as an OS deployment solution. Its capture and deployment environment requires booting to a Windows PE environment. This can be accomplished by creating an ISO (to burn to a DVD) or a USB bootable disk, installed to a client as an automation folder or delivered by a pxe server. This provides an environment to perform offline system recovery or image creation. Ghost can mount a backup volume to recover individual files.


As it needs to understand the filesystem structure Ghost perform much more complex operations the DD (for example the restore on a partition of smaller size). But there is no free lunch and versatility and simplicity of dd are gone. Each new version of filesystem requires new version of ghost. Also ghost can't backup deleted files like DD can: it backs up only disk blocks that contain "valid" files as reflected in filesystem directories. That means that generally it is less tolerant for the errors. And its ability to backup damaged filesystems is really inferior in comparison with DD. Also typically it does not have good recovery methods for damaged archive. Acronis true image is very bad in the respect and you really find yourself in a very difficult position due to a minor error in archive.


There are several ways to run Ghost, but the classic way is to using it after booting from the DOS boot disk (I recommend using Windows 98 boot disk). You need to launch ghost.exe (ghospe.exe in older versions) to create a backup or restore the partition or drive.


Ghost 2003 was the last version of the original product line. It is a DOS executable and all cloning operation are performed after reboot to DOS. Earlier versions of Ghost (until version 8, or Ghost 2003, see below) required direct manual rebooting of the computer using DOS bootable disk or CD. Ghost 2003 can boot from virtual partition or boot remotely using a network boot (using 3Com Boot Services). This is a more convenient operation but rebooting might create problem in docked laptops as DOS might not see the drives present in dock after the reboot.


Ghost 2003 provides the Ghost Boot Wizard to help automatically create a bootable floppy disk. It make sense to create several of them just in case, write the code that is used on the floppy label and attach one to the computer.


Ghost 2003 hides classic, simple way of using the program by booting into DOS by creating a virtual DOS partition (which is very convenient for laptops that does not have floppy drive), but you should not forget about the basic fact: ghost still is a DOS-based command line utility. Ghost 2003 obnoxiously installs itself into the windows tray but you can remove it from the tray by using configuration option (disable tray option).


Actually the Ghost 2003 Virtual Partition and is a rather slick idea: when you start the cloning operation from within Windows, Ghost automatically restarts your computer into a DOS environment, performs the cloning operation, and then boots the computer back into Windows. To create DOS environment Ghost uses a Virtual Partition with IBM PC DOS. The Virtual Partition is a file stored on the hard disk. When Ghost restarts the computer, the computer uses the information from that file to load DOS and other required files, and to run Ghost.exe. As I mentioned before this way in a laptop environment you do not need a floppy drive to create an image, which is important for many laptop users. 2ff7e9595c


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