Volume Operations - ACRONIS BACKUP AND RECOVERY 10 ADVANCED SERVER - UPDATE 3 User Manual

Hide thumbs Also See for BACKUP AND RECOVERY 10 ADVANCED SERVER - UPDATE 3:
Table of Contents

Advertisement

the following Microsoft knowledge base article: http://technet.microsoft.com/en-
us/library/cc732026.aspx.

6.11.6 Volume operations

Acronis Disk Director Lite includes the following operations that can be performed on volumes:
Create Volume (p. 287) - Creates a new volume with the help of the Create Volume Wizard.
Delete Volume (p. 291) - Deletes the selected volume.
Set Active (p. 291) - Sets the selected volume Active so that the machine will be able to boot with
the OS installed there.
Change Letter (p. 292) - Changes the selected volume letter
Change Label (p. 292) - Changes the selected volume label
Format Volume (p. 292) - Formats a volume giving it the necessary file system
The full version of Acronis Disk Director will provide more tools and utilities for working with
volumes.
Acronis Disk Director Lite must obtain exclusive access to the target volume. This means no other disk
management utilities (like Windows Disk Management utility) can access it at that time. If you receive a
message stating that the volume cannot be blocked, close the disk management applications that use this
volume and start again. If you can not determine which applications use the volume, close them all.
6.11.6.1
Creating a volume
You might need a new volume to:
Recover a previously saved backup copy in the "exactly as was" configuration;
Store collections of similar files separately — for example, an MP3 collection or video files on a
separate volume;
Store backups (images) of other volumes/disks on a special volume;
Install a new operating system (or swap file) on a new volume;
Add new hardware to a machine.
In Acronis Disk Director Lite the tool for creating volumes is the Create volume Wizard.
Types of dynamic volumes
Simple Volume
A volume created from free space on a single physical disk. It can consist of one region on the
disk or several regions, virtually united by the Logical Disk Manager (LDM). It provides no
additional reliability, no speed improvement, nor extra size.
Spanned Volume
A volume created from free disk space virtually linked together by the LDM from several physical
disks. Up to 32 disks can be included into one volume, thus overcoming the hardware size
limitations, but if at least one disk fails, all data will be lost, and no part of a spanned volume may
be removed without destroying the entire volume. So, a spanned volume provides no additional
reliability, nor a better I/O rate.
Striped Volume
287
Copyright © Acronis, Inc., 2000-2010

Advertisement

Table of Contents
loading

This manual is also suitable for:

Backup & recovery 10 advanced server

Table of Contents