If you use Acronis True Image 2017 or earlier version and you are going to do system disk cloning, we recommend that you do it using Acronis Bootable Media. Cloning of a hardware RAID will work if a reboot is not required: after reboot, the operation continues in standalone version of Acronis True Image, where support of all hardware RAID configurations is not guaranteed and thus the cloning operation may fail after reboot. Acronis development team is working on improving hardware RAID support in bootable environment. operating system) supports them, as Acronis True Image gets the information about RAID configuration from the environment. Hardware RAIDs and storage spaces can be cloned provided the environment where Acronis product is running (e.g. Acronis True Image cannot clone RAIDs set up as LVM or LDM. Cloning RAID disksĬloning is supported only for simple disk partitioning systems, such as MBR and GPT. It is recommended not to format the source hard disk after the cloning until you are sure that the cloned target disk boots fine.
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E.g., you can clone a 512 bytes/sector disk to 512 bytes/sector disk you can clone a 4096 bytes/sector disk to 4096 bytes/sector disk but you cannot clone a disk with logical sector size 512 bytes to disk with logical sector size 4096 bytes.Ĭlick here to learn how to check disk's sector size: Cloning to a disk with different logical sector size is not supported. Source and target disks must have equal logical sector size. Please note that in some cases Acronis True Image will still ask for reboot, disk will be cloned offline, and then computer will reboot back into Windows. The term "Active Cloning" refers to a disk cloning operation that does not require you to reboot the computer to complete the operation.
Acronis True Image 2018: Active Cloning.Acronis True Image: How to clone a disk on Mac.