Server for Linux
Table Of Contents
- Chapter 1. Introduction
- Chapter 2. Acronis True Image Echo Server installation and startup
- Chapter 3. General information and proprietary Acronis technologies
- 3.1 The difference between file archives and disk/partition images
- 3.2 Full, incremental and differential backups
- 3.3 Acronis Secure Zone®
- 3.4 Working from a rescue CD
- 3.5 Working from a remote terminal
- 3.6 Backing up software and hardware RAID arrays
- 3.7 Support for LVM volumes
- 3.8 Backing up to tape drive
- Chapter 4. The program interface under X Window System
- Chapter 5. Creating backup archives
- Chapter 6. Restoring the backup data under X Window system
- 6.1 Considerations before recovery
- 6.2 Restoring files and folders from file archives
- 6.3 Restoring disks/partitions or files from images
- 6.3.1 Starting the Restore Data Wizard
- 6.3.2 Archive selection
- 6.3.3 Restoration type selection
- 6.3.4 Selecting a disk/partition to restore
- 6.3.5 Selecting a target disk/partition
- 6.3.6 Changing the restored partition type
- 6.3.7 Changing the restored partition file system
- 6.3.8 Changing the restored partition size and location
- 6.3.9 Restoring several disks or partitions at once
- 6.3.10 Setting restore options
- 6.3.11 Restoration summary and executing restoration
- 6.4 Restoring data with a rescue CD
- 6.5 Setting restore options
- Chapter 7. Scheduling tasks
- Chapter 8. Managing Acronis Secure Zone
- Chapter 9. Creating bootable media
- Chapter 10. Operations with archives
- Chapter 11. Notifications and event tracing
- Chapter 12. Console mode
- Chapter 13. Transferring the system to a new disk
- 13.1 General information
- 13.2 Security
- 13.3 Executing transfers
- 13.3.1 Selecting Clone mode
- 13.3.2 Selecting source disk
- 13.3.3 Selecting destination disk
- 13.3.4 Partitioned destination disk
- 13.3.5 Old and new disk partition layout
- 13.3.6 Old disk data
- 14.3.7 Destroying the old disk data
- 13.3.8 Selecting partition transfer method
- 13.3.9 Partitioning the old disk
- 13.3.10 Old and new disk partition layouts
- 13.3.11 Cloning summary
- 13.4 Cloning with manual partitioning
- Chapter 14. Adding a new hard disk
trueimagemnt -m /mnt/md1 -f nfs://dhcp6-
223.acronis.com/sdb3/nfs_root:/mike/md1.tib -i 2
mounts /mike/md1.tib archive, located on dhcp6-223.acronis.com node in /sdb3/nfs_root
directory exported by NFS.
To get Samba network access, specify the image file name as follows:
smb://hostname/share name/remote filename
Hostname may be specified with username and password as:
username:password@hostname
For example:
trueimagemnt -m /mnt/md1 -f smb://dhcp6-
223.acronis.com/sdb3/mike/md1.tib -i 2
mounts /mike/md1.tib archive, located on dhcp6-223.acronis.com node in /sdb3 directory
exported by Samba.
-p|--password password
Specifies the password to explore password protected images.
-t|--fstype filesystem type
Specifies explicit filesytem type to be passed to the standard "mount" command. This
option is useful if the standard "mount" command can't guess filesystem type by some
reason.
-i|--index partition index
Index of the partition.
-w|--read-write
Opens the image in read-write mode. After umount all changed data will be saved into
the archive with a new index.
-d|--description archive description
If an image is mounted in read-write mode, the program assumes that the image will
be modified, and creates an incremental archive file to capture the changes. The option
enables you to list the forthcoming changes in the comment to this file.
-k|--keepdev
Keeps kernel space block device and user space daemon if an error occurs while
mounting. This option may be used to get raw access to imaged partition data.
12.3.2 Trueimagemnt usage examples
• This will list the mounted archives:
trueimagemnt --list
• This will mount the archive backup.tib of partition with index 2, to /mnt/backup:
trueimagemnt --mount /mnt/backup --filename backup.tib --index 2
• This will unmount a partition mounted at /mnt/backup:
trueimagemnt --umount /mnt/backup










