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What app to clone Tiger?
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Mac Elite
Join Date: Feb 2002
Status:
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Looks like Carbon copy Cloner is not yet ready to copy Tiger. Can anybody suggest a good app to clone Tiger with?
(My situation deems that I clone a fresh install Tiger disk from a 10.3.9 disk to a hardware array)
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Mac Elite
Join Date: Nov 2001
Status:
Offline
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ASR, which is built in to Tiger, and was built into Panther, and which CCC actually uses under the hood?
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Mac Elite
Join Date: Feb 2002
Status:
Offline
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Can it be accessed by the disk utlity? Or is it command line? I need a bootable copy (obviuosly) of one disk /volumes/Untitled 2 to another /volumes/Tiger2
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Addicted to MacNN
Join Date: Jun 1999
Location: Las Vegas, NV, USA
Status:
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It's in Disk Utility under the Restore tab. I think the name is weird, but all you have to do is drag the source volume into the Source field, and the destination volume into the Destination field, then click Restore.
Chris
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Professional Poster
Join Date: Apr 2001
Location: Asheville, NC
Status:
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Originally Posted by CatOne
ASR, which is built in to Tiger, and was built into Panther, and which CCC actually uses under the hood?
CCC uses ditto, not asr. You can use either command to accomplish the same task.
ditto will look something like this: ditto --rsrc /Volumes/source /Volumes/target
asr will look something like this: asr -source /Volumes/source -target /Volumes/target
Check the man pages to make sure. You could use Disk Utility as well--it uses asr.
BTW, make sure you enable privileges in the Get Info window before doing either of these.
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ACSA 10.4/10.3, ACTC 10.3, ACHDS 10.3
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Grizzled Veteran
Join Date: Sep 2000
Location: Menands, NY
Status:
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CCC works fine with Tiger as long as it runs as root. The easiest way to do this is to download a little app called Pseudo and drag CCC onto it.
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Mac Elite
Join Date: Feb 2002
Status:
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Thanks fellas... I ended up using CCC as root to clone the disk... one strange thing though... when I'm on 10.3.9 and I take a look at my Tiger disk, i can see all the hidden files like /var... andbody know why?
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Senior User
Join Date: Dec 2001
Status:
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Originally Posted by Tyler McAdams
Thanks fellas... I ended up using CCC as root to clone the disk... one strange thing though... when I'm on 10.3.9 and I take a look at my Tiger disk, i can see all the hidden files like /var... andbody know why?
There is a file called .hidden at the root of every Mac OS X boot volume. This file contains the names (not paths!) of folders to hide from the Finder. For some reason, Mac OS X only looks at this file when it is at the very top root of your filesystem, hence only the top level of your current boot volume. If you have a burning desire for consistency, you can set the HFS invisible flag on those folders for your Tiger and Panther drives without ill effects, but you'll need to do it as root.
Anybody know of any other ways to hide files in Mac OS X?
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"Think Different. Like The Rest Of Us."
iBook G4/1.2GHz | 1.25GB | 60GB | Mac OS X 10.4.2
Athlon XP 2500+/1.83GHz | 1GB PC3200 | 120GB | Windows XP
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Mac Elite
Join Date: Feb 2002
Status:
Offline
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It's strange that it only does it in 10.3.9... and only for Tiger volumes... other 10.3.9 volume are not affected. Tinker Tool is what I usually use to expose or hide files personally.
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Grizzled Veteran
Join Date: Sep 1999
Status:
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Tiger has a new structure and Panther is confused - maybe 10.3.10 will patch it so users don't trash those essential files and links. I thought I must have done something wrong also. I use DU Restore for system cloning and TriBackup to synchronize.
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