Hi everybody.
This is not a question specifically about Kubuntu, if there is a more appropriate forum for it, LMK.
I used "partimage" to backup and restore both my ext3 Linux install partition and a ntfs windows partition. The idea is to lower fragmentation by saving the files, formatting the partition and getting them back.
It's well known that Linux partitions don't fragment as often as Windows, but since I cannot see how it is, I just saved the main partition to a USB disk, formatted and restored everything (by saving the partition, I mean the files in it, since partimage doesn't save stuff like dd). For boot, I don't know if it is a psychological effect, but it looks, looks faster... I may be wrong.
As for Windows, partimage says the NTFS support is experimental, but I had no problem backing up and restoring the files, with a format between. All was done with GParted in a LiveUSB pendrive.
When I opened PerfectDisk (the tool I use to defragment NTFS under XP x64) and analysed the disk, the files in the NTFS partition were in the very same place as before the backup and restore, while they should have been moved towards the beginning of the partition.
If I had backed it up with "dd", then it would be acceptable, since it would just copy the entire partition "as is", but partimage just copies the used space and doesn't seem to store any information about where the files are in the disk, physically.
If it happened to Windows, then it probably happened to the Linux partition too, so the files were restored to the very same place of the disk as before, thus, not helping with the fragmentation.
Am I making any wrong assumption? Any wrong procedure? What do you think?
This is not a question specifically about Kubuntu, if there is a more appropriate forum for it, LMK.
I used "partimage" to backup and restore both my ext3 Linux install partition and a ntfs windows partition. The idea is to lower fragmentation by saving the files, formatting the partition and getting them back.
It's well known that Linux partitions don't fragment as often as Windows, but since I cannot see how it is, I just saved the main partition to a USB disk, formatted and restored everything (by saving the partition, I mean the files in it, since partimage doesn't save stuff like dd). For boot, I don't know if it is a psychological effect, but it looks, looks faster... I may be wrong.
As for Windows, partimage says the NTFS support is experimental, but I had no problem backing up and restoring the files, with a format between. All was done with GParted in a LiveUSB pendrive.
When I opened PerfectDisk (the tool I use to defragment NTFS under XP x64) and analysed the disk, the files in the NTFS partition were in the very same place as before the backup and restore, while they should have been moved towards the beginning of the partition.
If I had backed it up with "dd", then it would be acceptable, since it would just copy the entire partition "as is", but partimage just copies the used space and doesn't seem to store any information about where the files are in the disk, physically.
If it happened to Windows, then it probably happened to the Linux partition too, so the files were restored to the very same place of the disk as before, thus, not helping with the fragmentation.
Am I making any wrong assumption? Any wrong procedure? What do you think?
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