PC Review


Reply
Thread Tools Rate Thread

Backups to USB Mass Storage Really, Really Slow

 
 
Frank J. Lhota
Guest
Posts: n/a
 
      18th Mar 2006
I have an 200GB external hard drive, which is more than large enough to back
up my whole internal hard drive. Using a USB 2.0 connection, I do back up my
internal hard drive once a week, but due to some weird problem, the back-up
cannot be done under XP in a reasonable amount of time. I have been doing
the back-ups by booting from a boot CD with disk copying software, i.e.
without bringing up Windows XP. When booting from this CD, backing up
everything on my internal hard drive takes about 80 minutes.

Now I know that under a multi-tasking OS like XP, you should expect a
back-up to run a little slower. In my case, however, a back-up of my hard
drive would take an order of magnitude longer. I just tried Norton Ghost
(one of many XP back-up programs I've tried), and Ghost reported that it
would take 14 hours to back up my hard drive! (BTW the backup program that
comes with XP is even worse: it reports that more than a day would be
required to do a full backup).

Clearly, the problem is not the hardware, since I can back up my hard drive
in a jiffy if I boot from CD. I suspect that some driver or *.inf file got
corrupted, but I don't know how to figure out which one. Can anyone advise
me as to how to diagnose and fix this problem?

--
"All things extant in this world,
Gods of Heaven, gods of Earth,
Let everything be as it should be;
Thus shall it be!"
- Magical chant from "Magical Shopping Arcade Abenobashi"

"Drizzle, Drazzle, Drozzle, Drome,
Time for this one to come home!"
- Mr. Lizard from "Tooter Turtle"


 
Reply With Quote
 
 
 
 
John A
Guest
Posts: n/a
 
      18th Mar 2006
A few suggestions

- Do a Disk Cleanup
- Defrag your source drive
- Check for viruses & spyware
- Temporarily disable antivirus / anti spyware programs while doing
the backup
- Temporarily disable all startup programs using MSConfig
- Try doing the backup in Safe Mode

John Allen

On Sat, 18 Mar 2006 13:35:14 -0500, "Frank J. Lhota"
<(E-Mail Removed)> wrote:

>I have an 200GB external hard drive, which is more than large enough to back
>up my whole internal hard drive. Using a USB 2.0 connection, I do back up my
>internal hard drive once a week, but due to some weird problem, the back-up
>cannot be done under XP in a reasonable amount of time. I have been doing
>the back-ups by booting from a boot CD with disk copying software, i.e.
>without bringing up Windows XP. When booting from this CD, backing up
>everything on my internal hard drive takes about 80 minutes.
>
>Now I know that under a multi-tasking OS like XP, you should expect a
>back-up to run a little slower. In my case, however, a back-up of my hard
>drive would take an order of magnitude longer. I just tried Norton Ghost
>(one of many XP back-up programs I've tried), and Ghost reported that it
>would take 14 hours to back up my hard drive! (BTW the backup program that
>comes with XP is even worse: it reports that more than a day would be
>required to do a full backup).
>
>Clearly, the problem is not the hardware, since I can back up my hard drive
>in a jiffy if I boot from CD. I suspect that some driver or *.inf file got
>corrupted, but I don't know how to figure out which one. Can anyone advise
>me as to how to diagnose and fix this problem?


 
Reply With Quote
 
Frank J. Lhota
Guest
Posts: n/a
 
      19th Mar 2006
"John A" <(E-Mail Removed)> wrote in message
news:(E-Mail Removed)...
>A few suggestions


First of all, thanks for the suggestions. I've now got a good lead onto what
the problem is.

> - Do a Disk Cleanup
> - Defrag your source drive
> - Check for viruses & spyware
> - Temporarily disable antivirus / anti spyware programs while doing
> the backup
> - Temporarily disable all startup programs using MSConfig


I tried all of these. They helped somewhat, but even after doing these
steps, I'm looking at a 10 hour backup.

> - Try doing the backup in Safe Mode


I had problems running my backup software in safe mode.

The real problem was exposed when I ran the Performance Manager program that
comes with Norton Utilities. It showed that the biggest performance
bottleneck on my family computer is the speed of the hard drive. Looking
into the matter further, I found that for whatever reason, XP is *not* using
DMA to transfer data to and from my hard drive. That slows things down in
general, and has a particularly bad effect on backups.

So now I have to figure out how to get XP to talk to my hard drive using
DMA. But that topic (how to get XP to use DMA) should have its own thread,
which I will start shortly.

--
"All things extant in this world,
Gods of Heaven, gods of Earth,
Let everything be as it should be;
Thus shall it be!"
- Magical chant from "Magical Shopping Arcade Abenobashi"

"Drizzle, Drazzle, Drozzle, Drome,
Time for this one to come home!"
- Mr. Lizard from "Tooter Turtle"


 
Reply With Quote
 
John A
Guest
Posts: n/a
 
      20th Mar 2006
Very interesting - I will follow that thread.

John Allen
On Sun, 19 Mar 2006 18:21:37 -0500, "Frank J. Lhota"
<(E-Mail Removed)> wrote:

>"John A" <(E-Mail Removed)> wrote in message
>news:(E-Mail Removed)...
>>A few suggestions

>
>First of all, thanks for the suggestions. I've now got a good lead onto what
>the problem is.
>
>> - Do a Disk Cleanup
>> - Defrag your source drive
>> - Check for viruses & spyware
>> - Temporarily disable antivirus / anti spyware programs while doing
>> the backup
>> - Temporarily disable all startup programs using MSConfig

>
>I tried all of these. They helped somewhat, but even after doing these
>steps, I'm looking at a 10 hour backup.
>
>> - Try doing the backup in Safe Mode

>
>I had problems running my backup software in safe mode.
>
>The real problem was exposed when I ran the Performance Manager program that
>comes with Norton Utilities. It showed that the biggest performance
>bottleneck on my family computer is the speed of the hard drive. Looking
>into the matter further, I found that for whatever reason, XP is *not* using
>DMA to transfer data to and from my hard drive. That slows things down in
>general, and has a particularly bad effect on backups.
>
>So now I have to figure out how to get XP to talk to my hard drive using
>DMA. But that topic (how to get XP to use DMA) should have its own thread,
>which I will start shortly.


 
Reply With Quote
 
 
 
Reply

Thread Tools
Rate This Thread
Rate This Thread:

Posting Rules
You may not post new threads
You may not post replies
You may not post attachments
You may not edit your posts

BB code is On
Smilies are On
[IMG] code is On
HTML code is Off
Trackbacks are On
Pingbacks are On
Refbacks are Off


Similar Threads
Thread Thread Starter Forum Replies Last Post
Backups to Network Storage G''Jim c):{- Windows XP Hardware 2 12th Oct 2009 12:03 AM
Which storage media appropriate for small PC backups ? =?Utf-8?B?aWFu?= Windows XP Hardware 4 5th Oct 2006 09:05 PM
USB mass storage - please help Mark G. Windows XP General 1 9th Jan 2005 01:54 PM
XP-Storage-Data and backups BlissCat Windows XP Help 1 1st Sep 2004 04:47 PM
Re: XP Pro-USB mass storage Bob Windows XP Help 1 2nd Mar 2004 12:06 AM


Features
 

Advertising
 

Newsgroups
 


All times are GMT +1. The time now is 04:30 AM.