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Posted

Hi.

 

I had a problem with accessing files that I made outside of XP (DOS

bootable CD with old Norton Ghost 2003 for DOS [not Windows]).

 

H:\Images\C-07142008>dir

Volume in drive H is AFA64-H

 

Directory of H:\Images\C-07142008

 

07/19/2008 08:51 AM <DIR> .

07/19/2008 08:51 AM <DIR> ..

07/14/2008 05:41 PM 2,147,464,817 C-071001.GHS

07/14/2008 05:42 PM 598,245,376 C-071002.GHS

07/14/2008 05:46 PM 349,705,127 C-071003.GHS

07/14/2008 05:46 PM 2,147,466,450 C-07152008.GHO

07/19/2008 08:35 AM 106 readme.txt

5 File(s) 5,242,881,876 bytes

2 Dir(s) 11,520,425,984 bytes free

 

H:\Images\C-07142008>dir

Volume in drive H is AFA64-H

 

Directory of H:\Images\C-07142008

 

07/19/2008 08:51 AM <DIR> .

07/19/2008 08:51 AM <DIR> ..

07/14/2008 05:41 PM 2,147,464,817 C-071001.GHS

07/14/2008 05:42 PM 598,245,376 C-071002.GHS

07/14/2008 05:46 PM 349,705,127 C-071003.GHS

07/14/2008 05:46 PM 2,147,466,450 C-07152008.GHO

07/19/2008 08:35 AM 106 readme.txt

5 File(s) 5,242,881,876 bytes

2 Dir(s) 11,520,425,984 bytes free

 

H:\Images\C-07142008>attrib

A H:\Images\C-07142008\C-071001.GHS

A H:\Images\C-07142008\C-071002.GHS

A H:\Images\C-07142008\C-071003.GHS

A H:\Images\C-07142008\C-07152008.GHO

H:\Images\C-07142008\readme.txt

 

I can create, delete, rename, edit, etc. with the readme.txt I added

earlier today, but not the *.GHS and *.GHO files. I even made a new

folder/directory in H:\Images\C-07142008\ without any problems. I ran

chkdsk h: and had no errors and problems. I used Unlocker tool to see if

any files were used, nope. I tried logging off from my "Ant"

administrator account and logged in as "administrator" and I cannot eevn

access H:\Images\C-07142008\ directory\folder at all ("access is denied").

 

I rebooted and went to safe mode with my "administrator" account based

on http://support.microsoft.com/kb/823306 ... I also got the error, but

it said I could take over the ownership, audits, etc. (with

Administrators) since XP didn't know who owned these files. I applied to

Administrators and now I can access, rename, move, etc.

 

I made these *.ghs and *.gho files from a Norton 2003 (12/24/2003) DOS

version [not the Windows version since I don't trust Windows]. I backed

up my C: drive before upgrading XP Pro. SP2 to SP3 in case anything goes

wrong.

 

Any ideas why this happened? I don't recall this happening in the past

(2006 and earlier). Was there a change in XP SP3 or some KB updates to

cause this in NTFS? I used the same exact Ghost DOS and method many

times from the past. Is there a fix or this?

 

Thank you in advance. :)

--

"I love ants. Do they have uncles? Ha Ha!" --Elmo from Sesame Street

(unknown episode)

/\___/\

/ /\ /\ \ Phil/Ant @ http://antfarm.home.dhs.org (Personal Web Site)

| |o o| | Ant's Quality Foraged Links (AQFL): http://aqfl.net

\ _ / Remove ANT from e-mail address: philpi@earthlink.netANT

( ) or ANTant@zimage.com

Ant is currently not listening to any songs on his home computer.

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Guest Shenan Stanley
Posted

Re: Unable to access files that I created outside of Windows XP...

 

Ant wrote:

> I had a problem with accessing files that I made outside of XP (DOS

> bootable CD with old Norton Ghost 2003 for DOS [not Windows]).

>

> H:\Images\C-07142008>dir

> Volume in drive H is AFA64-H

>

> Directory of H:\Images\C-07142008

>

> 07/19/2008 08:51 AM <DIR> .

> 07/19/2008 08:51 AM <DIR> ..

> 07/14/2008 05:41 PM 2,147,464,817 C-071001.GHS

> 07/14/2008 05:42 PM 598,245,376 C-071002.GHS

> 07/14/2008 05:46 PM 349,705,127 C-071003.GHS

> 07/14/2008 05:46 PM 2,147,466,450 C-07152008.GHO

> 07/19/2008 08:35 AM 106 readme.txt

> 5 File(s) 5,242,881,876 bytes

> 2 Dir(s) 11,520,425,984 bytes free

>

> H:\Images\C-07142008>dir

> Volume in drive H is AFA64-H

>

> Directory of H:\Images\C-07142008

>

> 07/19/2008 08:51 AM <DIR> .

> 07/19/2008 08:51 AM <DIR> ..

> 07/14/2008 05:41 PM 2,147,464,817 C-071001.GHS

> 07/14/2008 05:42 PM 598,245,376 C-071002.GHS

> 07/14/2008 05:46 PM 349,705,127 C-071003.GHS

> 07/14/2008 05:46 PM 2,147,466,450 C-07152008.GHO

> 07/19/2008 08:35 AM 106 readme.txt

> 5 File(s) 5,242,881,876 bytes

> 2 Dir(s) 11,520,425,984 bytes free

>

> H:\Images\C-07142008>attrib

> A H:\Images\C-07142008\C-071001.GHS

> A H:\Images\C-07142008\C-071002.GHS

> A H:\Images\C-07142008\C-071003.GHS

> A H:\Images\C-07142008\C-07152008.GHO

> H:\Images\C-07142008\readme.txt

>

> I can create, delete, rename, edit, etc. with the readme.txt I added

> earlier today, but not the *.GHS and *.GHO files. I even made a new

> folder/directory in H:\Images\C-07142008\ without any problems. I

> ran chkdsk h: and had no errors and problems. I used Unlocker tool

> to see if any files were used, nope. I tried logging off from my

> "Ant" administrator account and logged in as "administrator" and I

> cannot eevn access H:\Images\C-07142008\ directory\folder at all

> ("access is denied").

> I rebooted and went to safe mode with my "administrator" account

> based on http://support.microsoft.com/kb/823306 ... I also got the error,

> but it said I could take over the ownership, audits, etc. (with

> Administrators) since XP didn't know who owned these files. I

> applied to Administrators and now I can access, rename, move, etc.

>

> I made these *.ghs and *.gho files from a Norton 2003 (12/24/2003)

> DOS version [not the Windows version since I don't trust Windows].

> I backed up my C: drive before upgrading XP Pro. SP2 to SP3 in case

> anything goes wrong.

>

> Any ideas why this happened? I don't recall this happening in the

> past (2006 and earlier). Was there a change in XP SP3 or some KB

> updates to cause this in NTFS? I used the same exact Ghost DOS and

> method many times from the past. Is there a fix or this?

>

> Thank you in advance. :)

 

You didn't own the files and/or have permissions to them. Why you did not

own them - I cannot say with 100% certainty. Especially since you probably

did not originally write these GHO files onto an NTFS directory - unless you

did it over a network share?

 

--

Shenan Stanley

MS-MVP

--

How To Ask Questions The Smart Way

http://www.catb.org/~esr/faqs/smart-questions.html

Posted

Re: Unable to access files that I created outside of Windows XP...

 

On 7/19/2008 11:14 AM PT, Shenan Stanley typed:

>> I had a problem with accessing files that I made outside of XP (DOS

>> bootable CD with old Norton Ghost 2003 for DOS [not Windows]).

>>

>> H:\Images\C-07142008>dir

>> Volume in drive H is AFA64-H

>>

>> Directory of H:\Images\C-07142008

>>

>> 07/19/2008 08:51 AM <DIR> .

>> 07/19/2008 08:51 AM <DIR> ..

>> 07/14/2008 05:41 PM 2,147,464,817 C-071001.GHS

>> 07/14/2008 05:42 PM 598,245,376 C-071002.GHS

>> 07/14/2008 05:46 PM 349,705,127 C-071003.GHS

>> 07/14/2008 05:46 PM 2,147,466,450 C-07152008.GHO

>> 07/19/2008 08:35 AM 106 readme.txt

>> 5 File(s) 5,242,881,876 bytes

>> 2 Dir(s) 11,520,425,984 bytes free

>>

>> H:\Images\C-07142008>dir

>> Volume in drive H is AFA64-H

>>

>> Directory of H:\Images\C-07142008

>>

>> 07/19/2008 08:51 AM <DIR> .

>> 07/19/2008 08:51 AM <DIR> ..

>> 07/14/2008 05:41 PM 2,147,464,817 C-071001.GHS

>> 07/14/2008 05:42 PM 598,245,376 C-071002.GHS

>> 07/14/2008 05:46 PM 349,705,127 C-071003.GHS

>> 07/14/2008 05:46 PM 2,147,466,450 C-07152008.GHO

>> 07/19/2008 08:35 AM 106 readme.txt

>> 5 File(s) 5,242,881,876 bytes

>> 2 Dir(s) 11,520,425,984 bytes free

>>

>> H:\Images\C-07142008>attrib

>> A H:\Images\C-07142008\C-071001.GHS

>> A H:\Images\C-07142008\C-071002.GHS

>> A H:\Images\C-07142008\C-071003.GHS

>> A H:\Images\C-07142008\C-07152008.GHO

>> H:\Images\C-07142008\readme.txt

>>

>> I can create, delete, rename, edit, etc. with the readme.txt I added

>> earlier today, but not the *.GHS and *.GHO files. I even made a new

>> folder/directory in H:\Images\C-07142008\ without any problems. I

>> ran chkdsk h: and had no errors and problems. I used Unlocker tool

>> to see if any files were used, nope. I tried logging off from my

>> "Ant" administrator account and logged in as "administrator" and I

>> cannot eevn access H:\Images\C-07142008\ directory\folder at all

>> ("access is denied").

>> I rebooted and went to safe mode with my "administrator" account

>> based on http://support.microsoft.com/kb/823306 ... I also got the error,

>> but it said I could take over the ownership, audits, etc. (with

>> Administrators) since XP didn't know who owned these files. I

>> applied to Administrators and now I can access, rename, move, etc.

>>

>> I made these *.ghs and *.gho files from a Norton 2003 (12/24/2003)

>> DOS version [not the Windows version since I don't trust Windows].

>> I backed up my C: drive before upgrading XP Pro. SP2 to SP3 in case

>> anything goes wrong.

>>

>> Any ideas why this happened? I don't recall this happening in the

>> past (2006 and earlier). Was there a change in XP SP3 or some KB

>> updates to cause this in NTFS? I used the same exact Ghost DOS and

>> method many times from the past. Is there a fix or this?

>

> You didn't own the files and/or have permissions to them. Why you did not

> own them - I cannot say with 100% certainty. Especially since you probably

> did not originally write these GHO files onto an NTFS directory - unless you

> did it over a network share?

 

Norton Ghost created them via a DOS bootable CD. Ghost can handle NTFS.

I never had this problem before. Maybe it's a new thing in SP3 or KB

updates? Now, that I think about it. I don't remember it doing this in

SP2 before I upgraded to SP3.

--

"I once heard the survivors of a colony of ants that had been partially

obliterated by a cow's foot seriously debating the intention of the gods

towards their civilization" --Archy the Cockroach from Don Marquis'

"Archy and Mehitabel" book ("Certain Maxims of Archy" poem)

/\___/\

/ /\ /\ \ Phil/Ant @ http://antfarm.home.dhs.org (Personal Web Site)

| |o o| | Ant's Quality Foraged Links (AQFL): http://aqfl.net

\ _ / Remove ANT from e-mail address: philpi@earthlink.netANT

( ) or ANTant@zimage.com

Ant is currently not listening to any songs on his home computer.

Guest Shenan Stanley
Posted

Re: Unable to access files that I created outside of Windows XP...

 

Ant wrote:

> Norton Ghost created them via a DOS bootable CD. Ghost can handle

> NTFS. I never had this problem before. Maybe it's a new thing in

> SP3 or KB updates? Now, that I think about it. I don't remember it

> doing this in SP2 before I upgraded to SP3.

 

Ghost cannot 'write' to NTFS - or read from NTFS. Ghost is an application

used for making images. There are DOS and Windows (and so on) versions of

Ghost. You can create a bootable media for Ghost - but what that bootable

media can do depends on your choice of what to make it out of. If you did

it using a DOS boot disk/image - then it cannot natively read/write from/to

NTFS. There are other products that make this possible - but it cannot do

it directly.

 

Now - if you wrote to an NTFS formatted disk (locally connected when you

made the image) and you did it from DOS - then you either have one of those

products installed or what you are saying is not entirely accurate (it is

not a DOS bootable CD - but something else.) If you wrote to the NTFS

formatted media over the network - then it doesn't matter what you boot with

as long as your networking works. The file format is irrelevant if writing

to it over the network.

 

So - when you made these images - did you map a network drive after booting

and write these images to a network shared area or did you write to a

direct-connect area (CD, DVD, external USB/Firewire drive, internal hard

disk drive, etc.)?

 

I make ghost images practically a half-dozen times every week and apply them

to many different machines as well. I have not had any trouble with

permissions.

 

--

Shenan Stanley

MS-MVP

--

How To Ask Questions The Smart Way

http://www.catb.org/~esr/faqs/smart-questions.html

Guest Galen Somerville
Posted

Re: Unable to access files that I created outside of Windows XP...

 

 

"Shenan Stanley" <newshelper@gmail.com> wrote in message

news:eHYWyXd6IHA.2060@TK2MSFTNGP02.phx.gbl...

> Ant wrote:

>> Norton Ghost created them via a DOS bootable CD. Ghost can handle

>> NTFS. I never had this problem before. Maybe it's a new thing in

>> SP3 or KB updates? Now, that I think about it. I don't remember it

>> doing this in SP2 before I upgraded to SP3.

>

> Ghost cannot 'write' to NTFS - or read from NTFS. Ghost is an application

> used for making images. There are DOS and Windows (and so on) versions of

> Ghost. You can create a bootable media for Ghost - but what that bootable

> media can do depends on your choice of what to make it out of. If you did

> it using a DOS boot disk/image - then it cannot natively read/write

> from/to NTFS. There are other products that make this possible - but it

> cannot do it directly.

>

> Now - if you wrote to an NTFS formatted disk (locally connected when you

> made the image) and you did it from DOS - then you either have one of

> those products installed or what you are saying is not entirely accurate

> (it is not a DOS bootable CD - but something else.) If you wrote to the

> NTFS formatted media over the network - then it doesn't matter what you

> boot with as long as your networking works. The file format is irrelevant

> if writing to it over the network.

>

> So - when you made these images - did you map a network drive after

> booting and write these images to a network shared area or did you write

> to a direct-connect area (CD, DVD, external USB/Firewire drive, internal

> hard disk drive, etc.)?

>

> I make ghost images practically a half-dozen times every week and apply

> them to many different machines as well. I have not had any trouble with

> permissions.

>

> --

> Shenan Stanley

> MS-MVP

> --

> How To Ask Questions The Smart Way

> http://www.catb.org/~esr/faqs/smart-questions.html

>

I have backed up and restored NTFS partitions with Ghost 2003 many times.

This was done by booting up on a DOS disk and running Ghost. Also, by

running Ghost Explorer in WindowsXP, you can retrieve individual files.

 

But I went to Acronis because Ghost caused a lot of disk swapping if NTFS.

 

Galen

Guest Shenan Stanley
Posted

Re: Unable to access files that I created outside of Windows XP...

 

Galen Somerville wrote:

> I have backed up and restored NTFS partitions with Ghost 2003 many

> times. This was done by booting up on a DOS disk and running Ghost.

> Also, by running Ghost Explorer in WindowsXP, you can retrieve

> individual files.

> But I went to Acronis because Ghost caused a lot of disk swapping

> if NTFS.

 

Galen,

 

No one said anything about being able to backup NTFS partitions with Ghost

(we all know one can do that.)

 

I was talking about saving those GHO and GHS files to an NTFS formatted

partition as you created them using a DOS boot media. A purely DOS boot CD

will not allow you to READ/WRITE from/to an NTFS partition directly.

 

--

Shenan Stanley

MS-MVP

--

How To Ask Questions The Smart Way

http://www.catb.org/~esr/faqs/smart-questions.html

Guest Galen Somerville
Posted

Re: Unable to access files that I created outside of Windows XP...

 

 

"Shenan Stanley" <newshelper@gmail.com> wrote in message

news:OB826Be6IHA.4468@TK2MSFTNGP02.phx.gbl...

> Galen Somerville wrote:

>> I have backed up and restored NTFS partitions with Ghost 2003 many

>> times. This was done by booting up on a DOS disk and running Ghost.

>> Also, by running Ghost Explorer in WindowsXP, you can retrieve

>> individual files.

>> But I went to Acronis because Ghost caused a lot of disk swapping

>> if NTFS.

>

> Galen,

>

> No one said anything about being able to backup NTFS partitions with Ghost

> (we all know one can do that.)

>

> I was talking about saving those GHO and GHS files to an NTFS formatted

> partition as you created them using a DOS boot media. A purely DOS boot

> CD will not allow you to READ/WRITE from/to an NTFS partition directly.

>

> --

> Shenan Stanley

> MS-MVP

> --

> How To Ask Questions The Smart Way

> http://www.catb.org/~esr/faqs/smart-questions.html

>

I just reread the original, (slaps forehead) sorry.

 

Galen

Posted

Re: Unable to access files that I created outside of Windows XP...

 

On 7/19/2008 12:30 PM PT, Shenan Stanley typed:

>> Norton Ghost created them via a DOS bootable CD. Ghost can handle

>> NTFS. I never had this problem before. Maybe it's a new thing in

>> SP3 or KB updates? Now, that I think about it. I don't remember it

>> doing this in SP2 before I upgraded to SP3.

>

> Ghost cannot 'write' to NTFS - or read from NTFS. Ghost is an application

> used for making images. There are DOS and Windows (and so on) versions of

> Ghost. You can create a bootable media for Ghost - but what that bootable

> media can do depends on your choice of what to make it out of. If you did

> it using a DOS boot disk/image - then it cannot natively read/write from/to

> NTFS. There are other products that make this possible - but it cannot do

> it directly.

>

> Now - if you wrote to an NTFS formatted disk (locally connected when you

> made the image) and you did it from DOS - then you either have one of those

> products installed or what you are saying is not entirely accurate (it is

> not a DOS bootable CD - but something else.) If you wrote to the NTFS

> formatted media over the network - then it doesn't matter what you boot with

> as long as your networking works. The file format is irrelevant if writing

> to it over the network.

>

> So - when you made these images - did you map a network drive after booting

> and write these images to a network shared area or did you write to a

> direct-connect area (CD, DVD, external USB/Firewire drive, internal hard

> disk drive, etc.)?

 

No, I did not use any networks. Just three interl HDDs. I went from one

partition (C:; first physical drive) of a HDD to another HDD (H:; third

physical drive). All drives/partitions are using NTFS. AFAIK, Norton

Ghost DOS can read and write from/to NTFS drives. Here is PowerQuest's

PartitionMagic v8.0 information:

 

===========================================================================================================

Partition Information for Disk 1: 114,471.0 Megabytes

Volume PartType Status Size MB PartSect # StartSect

TotalSects

===========================================================================================================

H: NTFS Pri 17,241.6 0 0 63

35,310,807

I: NTFS Pri 97,229.3 0 1 35,310,870

199,125,675

 

 

===========================================================================================================

Partition Information for Disk 2: 76,316.6 Megabytes

Volume PartType Status Size MB PartSect # StartSect

TotalSects

===========================================================================================================

D: NTFS Pri,Boot 19,908.6 0 0 63

40,772,907

ExtendedX Pri 56,407.9 0 1 40,772,970

115,523,415

EPBR Log 56,407.9 None -- 40,772,970

115,523,415

G: NTFS Log 56,407.9 40,772,970 0 40,773,033

115,523,352

 

 

===========================================================================================================

Partition Information for Disk 3: 305,242.8 Megabytes

Volume PartType Status Size MB PartSect # StartSect

TotalSects

===========================================================================================================

Unallocated Pri 47.0 None -- 63

96,327

C: NTFS Pri,Boot 107,003.3 0 0 96,390

219,142,665

E: NTFS Pri 99,002.1 0 1 219,239,055

202,756,365

F: NTFS Pri 99,190.4 0 2 421,995,420

203,141,925

 

 

===========================================================================================================

Boot Record for drive H: (Drive: 1, Starting sector: 63, Type: NTFS)

===========================================================================================================

1. Jump: EB 52 90

2. OEM Name: NTFS

3. Bytes per Sector: 512

4. Sectors per Cluster: 8

5. Reserved Sectors: 0

6. Number of FATs: 0

7. Root Dir Entries: 0

8. Total Sectors: 0

9. Media Descriptor: 0xF8

10. Sectors per FAT: 0

11. Sectors per Track: 63 (0x3F)

12. Number of Heads: 255 (0xFF)

13. Hidden Sectors: 63 (0x3F)

14. Total Sectors (>32MB): 0 (0x0)

15. Unused: 0x80008000

16. Total NTFS Sectors: 35310806

17. MFT Start Cluster: 1471283

18. MFT Mirror Start Clust: 2206925

19. Clusters per FRS: 246

20. Clusters per Index Blk: 1

21. Serial Number: 0xFCBC11F2BC11A862

22. Checksum: 0 (0x0)

23. Boot Signature: 0xAA55

 

===========================================================================================================

Boot Record for drive I: (Drive: 1, Starting sector: 35,310,870, Type:

NTFS)

===========================================================================================================

1. Jump: EB 52 90

2. OEM Name: NTFS

3. Bytes per Sector: 512

4. Sectors per Cluster: 8

5. Reserved Sectors: 0

6. Number of FATs: 0

7. Root Dir Entries: 0

8. Total Sectors: 0

9. Media Descriptor: 0xF8

10. Sectors per FAT: 0

11. Sectors per Track: 63 (0x3F)

12. Number of Heads: 255 (0xFF)

13. Hidden Sectors: 35310870 (0x21ACD16)

14. Total Sectors (>32MB): 0 (0x0)

15. Unused: 0x80008000

16. Total NTFS Sectors: 199125674

17. MFT Start Cluster: 8296903

18. MFT Mirror Start Clust: 12445354

19. Clusters per FRS: 246

20. Clusters per Index Blk: 1

21. Serial Number: 0x3A60C7FA60C7BAC1

22. Checksum: 0 (0x0)

23. Boot Signature: 0xAA55

 

===========================================================================================================

Boot Record for drive D: (Drive: 2, Starting sector: 63, Type: NTFS)

===========================================================================================================

1. Jump: EB 5B 90

2. OEM Name: NTFS

3. Bytes per Sector: 512

4. Sectors per Cluster: 8

5. Reserved Sectors: 0

6. Number of FATs: 0

7. Root Dir Entries: 0

8. Total Sectors: 0

9. Media Descriptor: 0xF8

10. Sectors per FAT: 0

11. Sectors per Track: 63 (0x3F)

12. Number of Heads: 255 (0xFF)

13. Hidden Sectors: 63 (0x3F)

14. Total Sectors (>32MB): 0 (0x0)

15. Unused: 0x80008000

16. Total NTFS Sectors: 40772906

17. MFT Start Cluster: 786432

18. MFT Mirror Start Clust: 16

19. Clusters per FRS: 246

20. Clusters per Index Blk: 1

21. Serial Number: 0xE32AD896AA0DE590

22. Checksum: 0 (0x0)

23. Boot Signature: 0xAA55

 

===========================================================================================================

Boot Record for drive G: (Drive: 2, Starting sector: 40,773,033, Type:

NTFS)

===========================================================================================================

1. Jump: EB 5B 90

2. OEM Name: NTFS

3. Bytes per Sector: 512

4. Sectors per Cluster: 8

5. Reserved Sectors: 0

6. Number of FATs: 0

7. Root Dir Entries: 0

8. Total Sectors: 0

9. Media Descriptor: 0xF8

10. Sectors per FAT: 0

11. Sectors per Track: 63 (0x3F)

12. Number of Heads: 255 (0xFF)

13. Hidden Sectors: 63 (0x3F)

14. Total Sectors (>32MB): 0 (0x0)

15. Unused: 0x80008000

16. Total NTFS Sectors: 115523351

17. MFT Start Cluster: 786432

18. MFT Mirror Start Clust: 16

19. Clusters per FRS: 246

20. Clusters per Index Blk: 1

21. Serial Number: 0x0810ECE0F689EEA1

22. Checksum: 0 (0x0)

23. Boot Signature: 0xAA55

 

===========================================================================================================

Boot Record for drive C: (Drive: 3, Starting sector: 96,390, Type: NTFS)

===========================================================================================================

1. Jump: EB 52 90

2. OEM Name: NTFS

3. Bytes per Sector: 512

4. Sectors per Cluster: 8

5. Reserved Sectors: 0

6. Number of FATs: 0

7. Root Dir Entries: 0

8. Total Sectors: 0

9. Media Descriptor: 0xF8

10. Sectors per FAT: 0

11. Sectors per Track: 63 (0x3F)

12. Number of Heads: 255 (0xFF)

13. Hidden Sectors: 96390 (0x17886)

14. Total Sectors (>32MB): 0 (0x0)

15. Unused: 0x80008000

16. Total NTFS Sectors: 219142664

17. MFT Start Cluster: 9130944

18. MFT Mirror Start Clust: 13958560

19. Clusters per FRS: 246

20. Clusters per Index Blk: 1

21. Serial Number: 0x1014DDA214DD8B5C

22. Checksum: 0 (0x0)

23. Boot Signature: 0xAA55

 

===========================================================================================================

Boot Record for drive E: (Drive: 3, Starting sector: 219,239,055,

Type: NTFS)

===========================================================================================================

1. Jump: EB 5B 90

2. OEM Name: NTFS

3. Bytes per Sector: 512

4. Sectors per Cluster: 8

5. Reserved Sectors: 0

6. Number of FATs: 0

7. Root Dir Entries: 0

8. Total Sectors: 0

9. Media Descriptor: 0xF8

10. Sectors per FAT: 0

11. Sectors per Track: 63 (0x3F)

12. Number of Heads: 255 (0xFF)

13. Hidden Sectors: 219239055 (0xD11528F)

14. Total Sectors (>32MB): 0 (0x0)

15. Unused: 0x80008000

16. Total NTFS Sectors: 202756364

17. MFT Start Cluster: 8448181

18. MFT Mirror Start Clust: 12672272

19. Clusters per FRS: 246

20. Clusters per Index Blk: 1

21. Serial Number: 0x7FC819D4BFA7D121

22. Checksum: 0 (0x0)

23. Boot Signature: 0xAA55

 

===========================================================================================================

Boot Record for drive F: (Drive: 3, Starting sector: 421,995,420,

Type: NTFS)

===========================================================================================================

1. Jump: EB 5B 90

2. OEM Name: NTFS

3. Bytes per Sector: 512

4. Sectors per Cluster: 8

5. Reserved Sectors: 0

6. Number of FATs: 0

7. Root Dir Entries: 0

8. Total Sectors: 0

9. Media Descriptor: 0xF8

10. Sectors per FAT: 0

11. Sectors per Track: 63 (0x3F)

12. Number of Heads: 255 (0xFF)

13. Hidden Sectors: 421995420 (0x1927239C)

14. Total Sectors (>32MB): 0 (0x0)

15. Unused: 0x80008000

16. Total NTFS Sectors: 203141924

17. MFT Start Cluster: 8464246

18. MFT Mirror Start Clust: 12696382

19. Clusters per FRS: 246

20. Clusters per Index Blk: 1

21. Serial Number: 0x38CAB625AA837964

22. Checksum: 0 (0x0)

23. Boot Signature: 0xAA55

 

 

> I make ghost images practically a half-dozen times every week and apply them

> to many different machines as well. I have not had any trouble with

> permissions.

 

Weird. I wonder what happened for me. This was my first time ever.

However, I haven't used Ghost to back up drives since end of 2006. :(

--

"The life of an ant and that of my child should be granted equal

consideration." --Michael W. Fox, Vice President, The Human Society of

the United States, The Inhumane Society, New York, 1990.

/\___/\

/ /\ /\ \ Phil/Ant @ http://antfarm.home.dhs.org (Personal Web Site)

| |o o| | Ant's Quality Foraged Links (AQFL): http://aqfl.net

\ _ / Remove ANT from e-mail address: philpi@earthlink.netANT

( ) or ANTant@zimage.com

Ant is currently not listening to any songs on his home computer.


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