62Image file options

About Norton Ghost image files

About Norton Ghost image files

The image files created with Norton Ghost have a .gho or .ghs extension by default. They contain the entire disk or partitions of the disk. Image files support the following:

Various levels of compression

CRC32 data integrity checking

Splitting of media files

Spanning across volumes

Norton Ghost images contain only the actual data on a disk. If you have a 9 GB drive with only 600 MB of data, the Norton Ghost image is approximately 600 MB, and is smaller if you use compression.

If you also use the Ghost Explorer application, an image file companion utility, you can recover individual files selectively from these image files without restoring the complete disk or partition.

Image files and compression

Image files created in Norton Ghost support several levels of data compression. When Norton Ghost is in interactive mode, three compression options are available: none, fast, and high. The Norton Ghost command-line switch -z provides access to nine levels of compression.

See “Command-line switches” on page 153.

As a rule, the more compression you use, the slower Norton Ghost operates. However, compression can improve speed when there is a data transfer bottleneck. There is a big difference in speed between high compression and no compression when creating an image file on a local disk. Over a network connection, fast compression is often as fast as, or faster than, no compression. Over a parallel cable, high compression is often faster than no compression because fewer bytes are sent over the cable. Decompression of high-compressed images is much faster than the original compression. The level of compression that you select depends on your individual requirements.

Page 62
Image 62
Symantec 10024709 manual About Norton Ghost image files, Image files and compression, See Command-line switches on