Acronis true image echo マニュアル

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77                                                                                 Copyright © Acronis, Inc., 2000-2009 
 
6.3.8  Archive splitting 
Sizeable backups can be split into several files that together make the original backup. A 
backup file can be split for burning to removable media or saving on an FTP server (data 
recovery directly from an FTP server requires the archive to be split into files no more 
than 2GB in size). 
The preset is Automatic. With this setting, Acronis True Image Echo Enterprise Server 
will act as follows:  
When backing up to the hard disk:
 The program will create a single archive file if the 
selected disk has enough space and its file system allows the estimated file size.  
The program will automatically split the backup into several files if the storage disk has 
enough space, but its file system does not allow the estimated file size. 
 
FAT16 and FAT32 file systems have a 4GB file size limit. However, the existing hard 
drive’s capacity can reach as much as 2TB. Therefore, an archive file might easily exceed 
this limit if you are going to back up the entire disk. 
If you do not have enough space to store the backup on your hard disk, the program will 
warn you and wait for your decision as to how you plan to fix the problem. You can try to 
free some additional space and continue or click Back and select another disk.  
When backing up to a diskette, CD-R/RW or DVD+R/RW:
 Acronis True Image Echo 
Enterprise Server will ask you to insert a new disk when the previous one is full. 
Alternatively, you can select Fixed size and enter the desired file size or select it from 
the drop-down list. The backup will then be split into multiple files of the specified size. 
That comes in handy when backing up to a hard disk with a view to burning the archive 
to CD-R/RW or DVD+R/RW later on. 
 
Creating a backup directly on CD-R/RW or DVD+R/RW generally will take considerably 
more time than it would on a hard disk. 
6.3.9  File-level security settings 
Preserve files’ security settings in archives 
By default, files and folders are saved in the archive with their original Windows security 
settings (i.e. permissions for read, write, execute and so on for each user or user group, 
set in file Properties -> Security). If you restore a secured file/folder on a computer 
without the user account, specified in the permissions, you may not be able to read or 
modify this file. 
You can disable preserving the files’ security settings in archives to completely eliminate 
this kind of problem. Then the restored files/folders will always inherit the permissions 
from the folder to which they are restored (parent folder or disk, if restored to the root). 
Alternatively, you can disable files’ security settings during restoration, even if they are 
available in the archive (see 
 below). The result will be 
the same - the files will inherit the permissions from the parent folder. 
In archives, store encrypted files in decrypted state 
The preset is disabled
Simply ignore this option if you do not use the encryption feature available in Windows 
2003 Server and Windows XP operating systems. (Files/folders encryption is set in