There is a free ghost based tool floating around based on netbsd. It's
been years since I used it though. I'll see if I can find the link.

On 5/29/09, chris (fool) mccraw <[email protected]> wrote:
> On Fri, May 29, 2009 at 00:23, Keith Lofstrom <[email protected]> wrote:
>
> I'm that jerk who questions your methods instead of answering your question.
>
>>  D.S.Linux runs dd to clone the main hard
>> drive to an identical hard drive in an external SATA cradle, then
>> shuts down.
>
> dd is hardly the fastest way to copy data.  i see what you're going
> for, though--obviously rsync or similar "don't copy already-same
> areas" tool won't necessarily create a bootable copy of windows.  i
> didn't find any tools like dd+xdelta out there but there must be a
> more efficient tool...does something like ghost (non free, but if
> you're dealing with windows anyway...) do that?  i can't imagine that
> 95% of the disk changes each usage, so it seems like an area of this
> process rich for optimization.  i wonder if you have already optimized
> partition size down to the bare minimum and just dd that partition?
> seems like optimizing boot time when it must be such a tiny part of
> the time taken to make the copy is ignoring amdahl's argument that one
> should optimize the slowest thing first rather than the easiest...
>
> sorry i don't have an actual answer for you :(
>
> luck++;
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