Re-instating the graphical boot sequence after imaging
- From: Liam Proven <lproven@xxxxxxxxx>
- Date: Fri, 4 Dec 2009 18:34:58 +0000
I'm experimenting with different ways of duplicating an installed
system. For now, it's 9.04 & I will probably skip 9.10 & the whole
scary business with GRUB2 and so on and go straight to 10.04LTS next
year.
If I copy the whole disk with G4L and "Click'n'clone", it works fine -
but this copies all the blocks, even empty ones, so it takes 45min-1hr
to copy an 80GB disk with 5GB of data on it. Not ideal.
If I use Gparted, it still copies empty space. If I resize the
partitions to minimum size, copy them, then expand them, it only takes
10min to duplicate a disk, but then, the graphical bootloader stops
working. I get the initial "bouncing bar" animation as the kernel
boots, then all the Linux text messages display as the machine goes
through init and so on. The same happens if I copy from Windows using
Acronis.
I tried making an image with Partimage but it seems unable to store &
restore swap partitions, making restoration a more complex, 2-step
process.
If I use Clonezilla, even Grub's graphical menu disappears and I get
the ugly old text-mode menu.
Is there a quick efficient way to clone an Ubuntu system & preserve
the graphical boot sequence? If not, how does one re-install the
graphical bootloader after imaging?
--
Liam Proven • Profile: http://www.linkedin.com/in/liamproven
Email: lproven@xxxxxxxxx • GMail/GoogleTalk/Orkut: lproven@xxxxxxxxx
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MSN: lproven@xxxxxxxxxxx • ICQ: 73187508
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