The syntax is:dd if=/dev/input/DEVICE-HERE of=/dev/OUTPUT/DEVICE-HERE bs=64K conv=noerror,sync
To clone /dev/sdc (250G) to /dev/sdd (250G) in Linux, enter:# dd if=/dev/sdc of=/dev/sdd bs=64K conv=noerror,sync
To clone /dev/ada0 (250G) to /dev/adb0 (250G) in FreeBSD, enter:# dd if=/dev/ada0 of=/dev/adb0 bs=64K conv=noerror,sync
Where,html
if=/dev/file : Input device/file.linux
of=/dev/file : Output device/file.centos
bs=64k : Sets the block size to 64k. You can use 128k or any other value.ssh
conv=noerror : Tell dd to continue operation, ignoring all read errors.ide
sync : Add input blocks with zeroes if there were any read errors, so data offsets stay in sync.this
To clone /dev/sdc1 to /dev/sdd1, enter:# dd if=/dev/sdc1 of=/dev/sdd1 bs=128K conv=noerror,sync
Sample outputs:spa
15874+0 records in 15873+0 records out 1040252928 bytes transferred in 3.805977 secs (273320858 bytes/sec)
You can boot from a live cd. Once booted, make sure no partitions are mounted from the source hard drive disk. You can store disk image on an external USB disk. The syntax is as followsdd if=/dev/INPUT/DEVICE-NAME-HERE conv=sync,noerror bs=64K | gzip -c > /path/to/my-disk.image.gz
In this example, create disk image for /dev/da0 i.e. cloning /dev/da0 and save in the current directory:# dd if=/dev/da0 conv=sync,noerror bs=128K | gzip -c > centos-core-7.gz
Sample outputs:
unix
Fig.01: dd command in action
The above command just cloned the entire hard disk, including the MBR, bootloader, all partitions, UUIDs, and data.rest
The syntax is:# gunzip -c IMAGE.HERE-GZ | dd of=/dev/OUTPUT/DEVICE-HERE
For example:# gunzip -c centos-core-7.gz | dd of=/dev/da0
code
You can send the image through ssh and save it on the remove box called server1.cyberciti.biz:# dd if=/dev/da0 conv=sync,noerror bs=128K | gzip -c | ssh vivek@server1.cyberciti.biz dd of=centos-core-7.gz
You need to use GNU dd with coreutils version 8.24 as follows (pass the status=progress to the dd):# dd if=/dev/sdc1 of=/dev/sdd1 bs=128K conv=noerror,sync status=progress
Sample outputs:
gdd (GNU DD) in action with progress bar running on MacOS X
Not a fan of dd? See top 6 open source disk cloning and imaging softwares.
Want to deal with corrupted disk? Try ddrescue command.