Clonezilla disk to image speed decreasing over time
I am actually backing my whole 2tb disk using Clonezilla disk-to-image option.
I don't use any encryption or anything that I know that could slow down the process, and yet, Clonezilla tells me that there is 72 hours remaining at a speed of 400MB/min.
When I started it, Clonezilla told me that it would take 8 hours at 3gb/min but that speed just kept decreasing over time. Now one hour after the start of the copy, I am at 400mb/min and it keep decreasing. Is it normal ?
I am using Clonezilla on a bootable USB Key and the external hard drive receiving the copy image is new and healthy (using usb3 too). The only bad point I can think of is that the disk I am copying is usually a bit slow on my Windows (something is wrong with it, I don't know what) but still it shouldn't be THAT slow (and doesn't explain why it started at 3gb/min).
Is there anything I can do to speed up the process? Is it safe to reboot my computer during the copy and try again? Should I even bother trying again?
Edit:
Ok, 10 minutes after my question it is now at 84 hours. I just want to know if it is safe to shut it down because I am not going to wait the whole week for that.
hard-drive performance clonezilla
|
show 1 more comment
I am actually backing my whole 2tb disk using Clonezilla disk-to-image option.
I don't use any encryption or anything that I know that could slow down the process, and yet, Clonezilla tells me that there is 72 hours remaining at a speed of 400MB/min.
When I started it, Clonezilla told me that it would take 8 hours at 3gb/min but that speed just kept decreasing over time. Now one hour after the start of the copy, I am at 400mb/min and it keep decreasing. Is it normal ?
I am using Clonezilla on a bootable USB Key and the external hard drive receiving the copy image is new and healthy (using usb3 too). The only bad point I can think of is that the disk I am copying is usually a bit slow on my Windows (something is wrong with it, I don't know what) but still it shouldn't be THAT slow (and doesn't explain why it started at 3gb/min).
Is there anything I can do to speed up the process? Is it safe to reboot my computer during the copy and try again? Should I even bother trying again?
Edit:
Ok, 10 minutes after my question it is now at 84 hours. I just want to know if it is safe to shut it down because I am not going to wait the whole week for that.
hard-drive performance clonezilla
1
Compression makes a big difference pgzip vs pbzip. pbzip can be way faster. You need to use a type starting with p for multi-core compression. The compressible of the data plays a big factor in speed.
– cybernard
Apr 24 '16 at 15:10
1
bad/weak sectors also significantly slow the drive down when it needs to ECC a lot of sectors.
– cybernard
Apr 24 '16 at 15:41
1
those are estimated times and can change at any point during the clone process, I agree with cybernard, the drive you are cloning from may have bad sectors or other performance issues.
– Moab
Apr 24 '16 at 16:19
1
You can press CTRL + C to cancel the current copy process. Just keep doing that until the cloning stops. After that you can just shut down normally.
– chue x
Apr 24 '16 at 16:53
I have exactly the same behavior, have you found a solution for your issue so could actually clone the disk?
– Thomas
Aug 22 '16 at 20:42
|
show 1 more comment
I am actually backing my whole 2tb disk using Clonezilla disk-to-image option.
I don't use any encryption or anything that I know that could slow down the process, and yet, Clonezilla tells me that there is 72 hours remaining at a speed of 400MB/min.
When I started it, Clonezilla told me that it would take 8 hours at 3gb/min but that speed just kept decreasing over time. Now one hour after the start of the copy, I am at 400mb/min and it keep decreasing. Is it normal ?
I am using Clonezilla on a bootable USB Key and the external hard drive receiving the copy image is new and healthy (using usb3 too). The only bad point I can think of is that the disk I am copying is usually a bit slow on my Windows (something is wrong with it, I don't know what) but still it shouldn't be THAT slow (and doesn't explain why it started at 3gb/min).
Is there anything I can do to speed up the process? Is it safe to reboot my computer during the copy and try again? Should I even bother trying again?
Edit:
Ok, 10 minutes after my question it is now at 84 hours. I just want to know if it is safe to shut it down because I am not going to wait the whole week for that.
hard-drive performance clonezilla
I am actually backing my whole 2tb disk using Clonezilla disk-to-image option.
I don't use any encryption or anything that I know that could slow down the process, and yet, Clonezilla tells me that there is 72 hours remaining at a speed of 400MB/min.
When I started it, Clonezilla told me that it would take 8 hours at 3gb/min but that speed just kept decreasing over time. Now one hour after the start of the copy, I am at 400mb/min and it keep decreasing. Is it normal ?
I am using Clonezilla on a bootable USB Key and the external hard drive receiving the copy image is new and healthy (using usb3 too). The only bad point I can think of is that the disk I am copying is usually a bit slow on my Windows (something is wrong with it, I don't know what) but still it shouldn't be THAT slow (and doesn't explain why it started at 3gb/min).
Is there anything I can do to speed up the process? Is it safe to reboot my computer during the copy and try again? Should I even bother trying again?
Edit:
Ok, 10 minutes after my question it is now at 84 hours. I just want to know if it is safe to shut it down because I am not going to wait the whole week for that.
hard-drive performance clonezilla
hard-drive performance clonezilla
edited Apr 24 '16 at 15:01
Roger
asked Apr 24 '16 at 14:50
RogerRoger
13615
13615
1
Compression makes a big difference pgzip vs pbzip. pbzip can be way faster. You need to use a type starting with p for multi-core compression. The compressible of the data plays a big factor in speed.
– cybernard
Apr 24 '16 at 15:10
1
bad/weak sectors also significantly slow the drive down when it needs to ECC a lot of sectors.
– cybernard
Apr 24 '16 at 15:41
1
those are estimated times and can change at any point during the clone process, I agree with cybernard, the drive you are cloning from may have bad sectors or other performance issues.
– Moab
Apr 24 '16 at 16:19
1
You can press CTRL + C to cancel the current copy process. Just keep doing that until the cloning stops. After that you can just shut down normally.
– chue x
Apr 24 '16 at 16:53
I have exactly the same behavior, have you found a solution for your issue so could actually clone the disk?
– Thomas
Aug 22 '16 at 20:42
|
show 1 more comment
1
Compression makes a big difference pgzip vs pbzip. pbzip can be way faster. You need to use a type starting with p for multi-core compression. The compressible of the data plays a big factor in speed.
– cybernard
Apr 24 '16 at 15:10
1
bad/weak sectors also significantly slow the drive down when it needs to ECC a lot of sectors.
– cybernard
Apr 24 '16 at 15:41
1
those are estimated times and can change at any point during the clone process, I agree with cybernard, the drive you are cloning from may have bad sectors or other performance issues.
– Moab
Apr 24 '16 at 16:19
1
You can press CTRL + C to cancel the current copy process. Just keep doing that until the cloning stops. After that you can just shut down normally.
– chue x
Apr 24 '16 at 16:53
I have exactly the same behavior, have you found a solution for your issue so could actually clone the disk?
– Thomas
Aug 22 '16 at 20:42
1
1
Compression makes a big difference pgzip vs pbzip. pbzip can be way faster. You need to use a type starting with p for multi-core compression. The compressible of the data plays a big factor in speed.
– cybernard
Apr 24 '16 at 15:10
Compression makes a big difference pgzip vs pbzip. pbzip can be way faster. You need to use a type starting with p for multi-core compression. The compressible of the data plays a big factor in speed.
– cybernard
Apr 24 '16 at 15:10
1
1
bad/weak sectors also significantly slow the drive down when it needs to ECC a lot of sectors.
– cybernard
Apr 24 '16 at 15:41
bad/weak sectors also significantly slow the drive down when it needs to ECC a lot of sectors.
– cybernard
Apr 24 '16 at 15:41
1
1
those are estimated times and can change at any point during the clone process, I agree with cybernard, the drive you are cloning from may have bad sectors or other performance issues.
– Moab
Apr 24 '16 at 16:19
those are estimated times and can change at any point during the clone process, I agree with cybernard, the drive you are cloning from may have bad sectors or other performance issues.
– Moab
Apr 24 '16 at 16:19
1
1
You can press CTRL + C to cancel the current copy process. Just keep doing that until the cloning stops. After that you can just shut down normally.
– chue x
Apr 24 '16 at 16:53
You can press CTRL + C to cancel the current copy process. Just keep doing that until the cloning stops. After that you can just shut down normally.
– chue x
Apr 24 '16 at 16:53
I have exactly the same behavior, have you found a solution for your issue so could actually clone the disk?
– Thomas
Aug 22 '16 at 20:42
I have exactly the same behavior, have you found a solution for your issue so could actually clone the disk?
– Thomas
Aug 22 '16 at 20:42
|
show 1 more comment
2 Answers
2
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oldest
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i had the same issue , i was using Clonezilla from Parted.Magic 2017-06-12 to clone SSD->SSD sata3 , the speed was starting at 12GB/min but after 1min was droping to 5 and later to 1, after i boot it in 64bit mode (at parted magic select Default 64 instead of 32) the issue was gone, i got 9GB/min average at cloning 60GB.
add a comment |
I experienced this speed degradation many times on different setups. It usually happen when recovering data from failing(but somehow still working) HDD.
This solution helped me in one of such cases:
- while still in Clonezilla, notice what is your source and target
partitions and disks (for example source:/dev/sda1 target:/dev/sdb1) It is very important, otherwise you will rewrite your data. - cancel Clonezilla cloning process (Ctrl+C) and enter command line prompt
- $sudo ddrescue -n --force /dev/{your source partition} /dev/{your target partition} myrecoverylog.txt
-n options postpone recovery of most hard to read blocks until the end of the process, so you may even skip recovery of them with Ctrl+C.
Here, on ddrescue page are details:
https://www.gnu.org/software/ddrescue/manual/ddrescue_manual.html
add a comment |
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2 Answers
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i had the same issue , i was using Clonezilla from Parted.Magic 2017-06-12 to clone SSD->SSD sata3 , the speed was starting at 12GB/min but after 1min was droping to 5 and later to 1, after i boot it in 64bit mode (at parted magic select Default 64 instead of 32) the issue was gone, i got 9GB/min average at cloning 60GB.
add a comment |
i had the same issue , i was using Clonezilla from Parted.Magic 2017-06-12 to clone SSD->SSD sata3 , the speed was starting at 12GB/min but after 1min was droping to 5 and later to 1, after i boot it in 64bit mode (at parted magic select Default 64 instead of 32) the issue was gone, i got 9GB/min average at cloning 60GB.
add a comment |
i had the same issue , i was using Clonezilla from Parted.Magic 2017-06-12 to clone SSD->SSD sata3 , the speed was starting at 12GB/min but after 1min was droping to 5 and later to 1, after i boot it in 64bit mode (at parted magic select Default 64 instead of 32) the issue was gone, i got 9GB/min average at cloning 60GB.
i had the same issue , i was using Clonezilla from Parted.Magic 2017-06-12 to clone SSD->SSD sata3 , the speed was starting at 12GB/min but after 1min was droping to 5 and later to 1, after i boot it in 64bit mode (at parted magic select Default 64 instead of 32) the issue was gone, i got 9GB/min average at cloning 60GB.
answered Aug 7 '17 at 0:38
George DimaGeorge Dima
30819
30819
add a comment |
add a comment |
I experienced this speed degradation many times on different setups. It usually happen when recovering data from failing(but somehow still working) HDD.
This solution helped me in one of such cases:
- while still in Clonezilla, notice what is your source and target
partitions and disks (for example source:/dev/sda1 target:/dev/sdb1) It is very important, otherwise you will rewrite your data. - cancel Clonezilla cloning process (Ctrl+C) and enter command line prompt
- $sudo ddrescue -n --force /dev/{your source partition} /dev/{your target partition} myrecoverylog.txt
-n options postpone recovery of most hard to read blocks until the end of the process, so you may even skip recovery of them with Ctrl+C.
Here, on ddrescue page are details:
https://www.gnu.org/software/ddrescue/manual/ddrescue_manual.html
add a comment |
I experienced this speed degradation many times on different setups. It usually happen when recovering data from failing(but somehow still working) HDD.
This solution helped me in one of such cases:
- while still in Clonezilla, notice what is your source and target
partitions and disks (for example source:/dev/sda1 target:/dev/sdb1) It is very important, otherwise you will rewrite your data. - cancel Clonezilla cloning process (Ctrl+C) and enter command line prompt
- $sudo ddrescue -n --force /dev/{your source partition} /dev/{your target partition} myrecoverylog.txt
-n options postpone recovery of most hard to read blocks until the end of the process, so you may even skip recovery of them with Ctrl+C.
Here, on ddrescue page are details:
https://www.gnu.org/software/ddrescue/manual/ddrescue_manual.html
add a comment |
I experienced this speed degradation many times on different setups. It usually happen when recovering data from failing(but somehow still working) HDD.
This solution helped me in one of such cases:
- while still in Clonezilla, notice what is your source and target
partitions and disks (for example source:/dev/sda1 target:/dev/sdb1) It is very important, otherwise you will rewrite your data. - cancel Clonezilla cloning process (Ctrl+C) and enter command line prompt
- $sudo ddrescue -n --force /dev/{your source partition} /dev/{your target partition} myrecoverylog.txt
-n options postpone recovery of most hard to read blocks until the end of the process, so you may even skip recovery of them with Ctrl+C.
Here, on ddrescue page are details:
https://www.gnu.org/software/ddrescue/manual/ddrescue_manual.html
I experienced this speed degradation many times on different setups. It usually happen when recovering data from failing(but somehow still working) HDD.
This solution helped me in one of such cases:
- while still in Clonezilla, notice what is your source and target
partitions and disks (for example source:/dev/sda1 target:/dev/sdb1) It is very important, otherwise you will rewrite your data. - cancel Clonezilla cloning process (Ctrl+C) and enter command line prompt
- $sudo ddrescue -n --force /dev/{your source partition} /dev/{your target partition} myrecoverylog.txt
-n options postpone recovery of most hard to read blocks until the end of the process, so you may even skip recovery of them with Ctrl+C.
Here, on ddrescue page are details:
https://www.gnu.org/software/ddrescue/manual/ddrescue_manual.html
answered Aug 17 '18 at 8:22
AndreiAndrei
1456
1456
add a comment |
add a comment |
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1
Compression makes a big difference pgzip vs pbzip. pbzip can be way faster. You need to use a type starting with p for multi-core compression. The compressible of the data plays a big factor in speed.
– cybernard
Apr 24 '16 at 15:10
1
bad/weak sectors also significantly slow the drive down when it needs to ECC a lot of sectors.
– cybernard
Apr 24 '16 at 15:41
1
those are estimated times and can change at any point during the clone process, I agree with cybernard, the drive you are cloning from may have bad sectors or other performance issues.
– Moab
Apr 24 '16 at 16:19
1
You can press CTRL + C to cancel the current copy process. Just keep doing that until the cloning stops. After that you can just shut down normally.
– chue x
Apr 24 '16 at 16:53
I have exactly the same behavior, have you found a solution for your issue so could actually clone the disk?
– Thomas
Aug 22 '16 at 20:42