this post was submitted on 30 Jan 2024
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Ok, thanks. That sounds pretty good.
If i want to compress it and save it as a backup can I do
cat /dev/sda3 | gzip -9 > drive.img.gz
?
fill up the remaining space on the drive completely with 0s with a dummy file you delete then, before gzipping
Yes, but like @kuneho said, since "deleted" stuff only is marked as deleted (not wiped), there's always a bunch of random on the "empty" space part of a disk, which compresses badly.
Do
cat /dev/zero > /path/to/mounted/partition/zeroes
and delete it after cat errored out because no space, to fill the "empty" space with zeroes.That worked really well! I got a 50gb partition with about 30gb free space into a 10gb zipped image. Is there any way to show progress during the operation like with dd's status=progress?
I often use pv instead of cat for this. And there's some 'hack' where a specific tool looks at some kernel feature to guess progress of cp & co. But i forgot it's name.