If you’re concerned that the size of the destination volume might be to small, click on the Calculate button you can then compare the Partition Size to the Image Size to see if you’ve got enough room. On the Restore tab, click on Select Image and navigate to the Winclone image to be used, and then choose the destination volume from the Destination pop-up menu. Restoring your Boot Camp image is even easier. The process is actually quite fast granted, my Boot Camp partition isn’t very big-only a few GB-but Winclone worked its magic in just under five minutes.
Add generic BCD (Vista Only): If you’re using Winclone for a Windows Vista volume, and you’ll be restoring the image to a different partition, you need to enable this option.Ĭlick on the Image button and choose a location to save the resulting disk image, and Winclone goes to work, unmounting the Boot Camp partition and copying it to the new, compressed Winclone archive.Remove pagefile.sys before imaging: The pagefile.sys file is essentially a virtual-memory cache file that will be recreated by Windows automatically, so deleting it will reduce the size of your clone.Make self extracting (for ARD restoring): This will include, in the resulting image, command-line tools that let you restore the image using Apple Remote Desktop.Such a disaster is unlikely, but it’s worth knowing that the risk exists in fact, when you enable this option, Winclone will pop up a warning before the process starts. However, note that when using this option, Winclone actually modifies the existing NTFS filesystem on your Boot Camp partition if the process is interrupted-for example, if the power goes out or your computer crashes-you could lose data on the Boot Camp partition. Omit this option only if you’ll be restoring to the same partition (in other words, if you’re using the clone as a backup). Prepare for restoring on a different partition: If you’re using Winclone to move a Boot Camp partition to a different volume, check this.The developer does a good job describing these options in Winclone’s documentation, but here’s the short explanation of each: You then choose a few options for the copy. A nice touch would be if Winclone displayed the difference between the two numbers, as that’s approximately how much is actually going to be copied and, therefore, how much room you’ll need to store the clone image.
(Note that Winclone works only with NTFS volumes if for some reason you formatted your Boot Camp volume as FAT32, you’re out of luck.) Winclone will show you the total size of the volume and the free space on it.
Now that you’re sufficiently frightened-and in all seriousness, it’s a good warning if you have mission-critical data on your Boot Camp volume, you might consider having a good Windows-based backup solution in place-you can get down to business.įirst, you choose your Windows volume from the Source pop-up menu. When you first launch Winclone, it surveys all your mounted volumes for valid Boot Camp partitions (a process that can take a while if you’ve got many volumes), and then shows you a scary-looking warning about how you need to be very careful and that it’s possible you could lose all your data.