Acronis True Image

Acronis True Image

Acronis True Image Home 2009
Original author(s) Acronis
Stable release 2012 / August 23, 2011; 5 months ago (2011-08-23)[1]
Development status Active
Operating system Windows XP, Windows Vista and Windows 7[2]
Platform IA-32 and x86-64
Available in English, French and German[3]
Type Disk cloning
License Proprietary Commercial software
Website www.acronis.com/homecomputing/products/trueimage/
Acronis True Image Home running from the Live CD

Acronis True Image is disk imaging software, (see "Disk image") developed by Acronis, that creates backups and recovers PC systems. The software allows a user to create an image of a disk while it is running Microsoft Windows or offline by booting from CD/DVD, USB flash drives, PXE, or other bootable media. As a disk imaging software, True Image can restore the previously captured image to another disk, replicating the structure and contents to the new disk, also allowing disk cloning and partition resizing, as well if the new disk is of different capacity. The backups are in a proprietary and non-documented file format which uses a .tib filename extension.

Contents

History

True Image has a wizard driven interface,[4] and received positive and mixed reviews from both editors and users alike.[5]

The first version of True Image was launched into the market of drive backup software in 2002 and could create a drive image that was running without shutting down to DOS mode.

The other features were an ability to write an image to DVDs, a drive image creation within Windows and support for a wide range of storage options.

Acronis True Image 2010, added a new option of online backup that saves user’s backups to a secure remote location.

Operation

True Image can restore data and create a drive image without rebooting the system. In case of operating system error or hard disk failure, the PC can be booted to the Acronis Startup Recovery Manager, which returns the system to a previous point in time. True Image creates exact backups of a hard drive sector-by-sector, therefore providing faster restore of user’s operating systems, data, settings, applications, etc. The program can back up a system hard drive while the OS is running. It recovers a computer after the system crash and boots it by pressing the F11 key. Acronis True Image offers several different options for system recovery, including the retrieval of lost files or other chunks of data, as well as entire system recovery due to corruption or failure. The following is a quick list of methods:

File format

Acronis states that True Image provides backward compatibility for image files (with the .tib extension) created with a single previous version, that is, images created with an immediate previous version can be successfully restored. Backups are compatible between different editions of True Image; e.g., between True Image Echo Workstation and True Image Echo Enterprise Server, or between Linux and Windows versions.[6] Third-party support include software by VMware, VMware Converter, which can convert .tib files into files to use in a Virtual Machine.[7][8]

Versions

Acronis has published their Version Comparison and an OEM comparison.

Problems

For some users, the "Nonstop Backup" feature in version 2010 and 2011 intermittently pauses, turns off or crashes. Acronis states that the feature is working now. Users disagree.[10]

Supported storage media and systems

Operating systems
Storage media

Supported filesystems

File systems supported by software:[2]

In addition to the officially supported filesystems, Acronis True Image also provides raw sector backup and restore options for all other filesystems. 'Raw' mode provides support for a file system that is corrupt, or that isn't officially supported, by capturing a complete image of all sectors on the disk. This method results in a larger image file as it isn't able to compress, resize, or selectively restore files on the unrecognized filesystem.

See also

References

External links