Sep 11, 2010 G4L ISO to Bootable USB Disk Saturday, September 11, 2010 at 4:27 PM Posted by Jared Valentine I have a friend whose laptop screen is in the process of dying. Anime bakugan battle brawlers new vestroia sub indo. Install G4l On Usb' title='Install G4l On Usb' /You can find the available boot parameters for GParted live here. Included Packages. Berne And Levy Physiology 6Th Edition Pdf Free. Tally erp 9 release 6.0 crack patch free download. GParted Live includes additional packages, such as Graphical Utilities. Ldap query tool for mac. John the ripper distributed password cracking dictionaries. Right click on the desktop to access a pop up menu. Jbl vtx a8 price.
- G4l (G4L) is a linux based utility that can make either a RAW (bare metal) or file-based backup. The documentation is here. Latest version is here. The RAW backup will be compressed so that if taking a backup of an 8GB drive or partition, it is saved as a compressed file. All bytes will be saved including unused areas of the disk.
- The disk image is an exact copy of a physical disk (floppy, CD-ROM, hard disk, USB, VHD disk, etc.) or a partition that preserves the original structure. With WinImage in place, you can recreate the disk image on the hard drive or other media, view its content, extract image-based files, add new files and directories, change the format,.
here is a very good solution:
http://radified.com/cgi-bin/yabb2/Ya.num=1224777260
Bootable USB stick with G4L
Oct 23rd, 2008, 10:54am
I figured this might be usefull for some, this can be done in windows or linux
- I asume we have an empty usb stick, if not, we need about 55mb
- I asume under windows the usb stick is drive F:
- I asume under linux the usb stick is sdd1
- If your usb stick is another drive or device then adjust the guide below
- download G4L ISO from http://sourceforge.net/projects/g4l
- download latest syslinux-X.XX.zip from http://www.kernel.org/pub/linux/utils/boot/syslinux/
- insert your usb stick
- make a directory 'boot' on the usb stick
- extract all the files from downloaded G4L ISO and place them into the 'boot' directory on the usb stick:
--- windows user can d/l and use http://www.magiciso.com/ to do this
--- linux users simply mount the iso using mount -o loop g4l-v0.27.iso iso and cp the files over
- in the 'boot' directory delete syslinux.cfg
- in the 'boot' directory rename isolinux.cfg to syslinux.cfg
- from the 'boot' directory copy syslinux.cfg to the root of the usb stick (F: or /)
- edit syslinux.cfg in the root directory, you now need to add 'boot/' before each line that points to a file:
--- DEFAULT vesamenu.c32 to DEFAULT boot/vesamenu.c32
--- MENU BACKGROUND test.png to MENU BACKGROUND boot/test.png
--- KERNEL bzImage6 to KERNEL boot/bzImage6
--- APPEND initrd=ramdisk.gz. to APPEND initrd=boot/ramdisk.gz.
------- do this for all KERNEL lines and all APPEND lines just add boot/ dont change what is there already, till you reach the last line
--- ONTIMEOUT bz26.5 and change that to ONTIMEOUT boot/bz26.5
- extract the syslinux-X.XX.zip you downloaded
- windows users go into the win32 directory of the extracted file
--- do syslinux.exe -m -a -d /boot F:
- linux users go into the linux directory of the extraced file
--- do ./syslinux /dev/sdd1
and that is it, you now have a bootable USB stick with G4L on it, and with todays huge sticks and usb drives you got it all in one, bootup with it and backup to it or restore from it.
note: If you rather not edit the syslinux.cfg then instead of making a 'boot' directory, simply put everything in the root, but this way its a bit cleaner.
I have a friend whose laptop screen is in the process of dying. She's going to get it replaced, but they told her all of her data will be lost and that she should backup first.http://radified.com/cgi-bin/yabb2/Ya.num=1224777260
Bootable USB stick with G4L
Oct 23rd, 2008, 10:54am
I figured this might be usefull for some, this can be done in windows or linux
- I asume we have an empty usb stick, if not, we need about 55mb
- I asume under windows the usb stick is drive F:
- I asume under linux the usb stick is sdd1
- If your usb stick is another drive or device then adjust the guide below
- download G4L ISO from http://sourceforge.net/projects/g4l
- download latest syslinux-X.XX.zip from http://www.kernel.org/pub/linux/utils/boot/syslinux/
- insert your usb stick
- make a directory 'boot' on the usb stick
- extract all the files from downloaded G4L ISO and place them into the 'boot' directory on the usb stick:
--- windows user can d/l and use http://www.magiciso.com/ to do this
--- linux users simply mount the iso using mount -o loop g4l-v0.27.iso iso and cp the files over
- in the 'boot' directory delete syslinux.cfg
- in the 'boot' directory rename isolinux.cfg to syslinux.cfg
- from the 'boot' directory copy syslinux.cfg to the root of the usb stick (F: or /)
- edit syslinux.cfg in the root directory, you now need to add 'boot/' before each line that points to a file:
--- DEFAULT vesamenu.c32 to DEFAULT boot/vesamenu.c32
--- MENU BACKGROUND test.png to MENU BACKGROUND boot/test.png
--- KERNEL bzImage6 to KERNEL boot/bzImage6
--- APPEND initrd=ramdisk.gz. to APPEND initrd=boot/ramdisk.gz.
------- do this for all KERNEL lines and all APPEND lines just add boot/ dont change what is there already, till you reach the last line
--- ONTIMEOUT bz26.5 and change that to ONTIMEOUT boot/bz26.5
- extract the syslinux-X.XX.zip you downloaded
- windows users go into the win32 directory of the extracted file
--- do syslinux.exe -m -a -d /boot F:
- linux users go into the linux directory of the extraced file
--- do ./syslinux /dev/sdd1
and that is it, you now have a bootable USB stick with G4L on it, and with todays huge sticks and usb drives you got it all in one, bootup with it and backup to it or restore from it.
note: If you rather not edit the syslinux.cfg then instead of making a 'boot' directory, simply put everything in the root, but this way its a bit cleaner.
I really like G4L for something like this. It's a bootable CD image that loads a lightweight version of linux and lets you take the entire hard drive partition and dump it on an FTP server. (It offers more than that with NFS, etc., but I use the FTP mostly).
It only comes in a CD-ROM ISO download, though. I was able to find some instructions on how to make the ISO bootable from a USB memory stick at this website: Look at the 3RD post, though - the first one is way too involved:
http://radified.com/cgi-bin/yabb2/YaBB.pl?num=1224777260
![Install gsl on ubuntu Install gsl on ubuntu](https://www.libe.net/image/Macrium-Reflect-Free_latest_Version.php-10-800.jpg)
To summarize:
1. Download the G4L ISO from http://sourceforge.net/projects/g4l
2. Download syslinux from http://www.kernel.org/pub/linux/utils/boot/syslinux/ (I used 4.02 at the time)
3. Extract the G4L ISO to the root of your memory stick. You can use http://7-zip.org/)
![Install g4l on usb drive Install g4l on usb drive](https://news.softpedia.com/images/extra/LINUX/small/softpedialinuxweeklyissue111-small_003.png)
4. Delete syslinux.cfg from the root of the USB stick
5. Rename isolinux.cfg to syslinux.cfg on the USB stick
6. Extract syslinux-X.XX.zip to somewhere on your harddrive (make it somewhere you can get a DOS prompt to easily) e.g. c:syslinux
7. Start a command prompt and change to the directory where you unzipped syslinux (e.g. cd c:syslinux) and then go to the win32 subdirectory (e.g. c:syslinuxwin32)
8. Type: syslinux.exe -m -a -d /boot F: (where 'F' is the drive letter of the USB stick).