Cloning OS hard drive

Stickfigure

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So I'm getting a new hard drive for my OS today. I really don't feel like having to re install my os and all my apps and games so I'm looking at rather cloning it.

What's the best software to use to do this? I read that clonezilla is quite good. Is there anything better out there?
 
I use CloneZilla

You're probably familiar with the popular proprietary commercial package Norton Ghost®. The problem with these kind of software packages is that it takes a lot of time to massively clone systems to many computers. You've probably also heard of Symantec's solution to this problem, Symantec Ghost Corporate Edition® with multicasting. Well, now there is an OpenSource clone system (OCS) solution called Clonezilla with unicasting and multicasting!
 
Hmmm now for the next level of this question, I have a raid 0 array which is starting to annoy me as causes the PC to fall over. I wanna clone the array onto a single drive. Any idea how to do this? Clonezilla does not see the array as a single drive to clone
 
Hmmm now for the next level of this question, I have a raid 0 array which is starting to annoy me as causes the PC to fall over. I wanna clone the array onto a single drive. Any idea how to do this? Clonezilla does not see the array as a single drive to clone

:wtf: Why you running RAID0?

RAID 0 (block-level striping without parity or mirroring) has no (or zero) redundancy. It provides improved performance and additional storage but no fault tolerance. Hence simple stripe sets are normally referred to as RAID 0. Any disk failure destroys the array, and the likelihood of failure increases with more disks in the array (at a minimum, catastrophic data loss is almost twice as likely compared to single drives without RAID). A single disk failure destroys the entire array because when data is written to a RAID 0 volume, the data is broken into fragments called blocks. The number of blocks is dictated by the stripe size, which is a configuration parameter of the array. The blocks are written to their respective disks simultaneously on the same sector. This allows smaller sections of the entire chunk of data to be read off the drive in parallel, increasing bandwidth. RAID 0 does not implement error checking, so any error is uncorrectable. More disks in the array means higher bandwidth, but greater risk of data loss.

If you're running Windows, you could try a "hot" clone from within Windows with SelfImage
 
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RAID 0 on 2 raptors was my OS drive solution before i joined SSD land. Tis mucho fast :)
 
Just outta curiousity, how long should clonezilla take to clone a 200gig hard drive?

Its been calculating bitmap for 25 minutes now and is still on 0% progress :/
 
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