
102 Copyright © Acronis International GmbH, 2002-2012
GRUB), you might consider installing them to a Linux root (or boot) partition boot record instead of
an MBR before activating Acronis Startup Recovery Manager.
If a failure occurs, turn on the computer and press F11 when you see the "Press F11 for Acronis
Startup Recovery Manager" message. This will start a standalone version of True Image 2013 that
differs only slightly from the complete version. Browse for a backup containing an image of your
system partition and recover your system.
Disk letters in standalone True Image 2013 might sometimes differ from the way Windows identifies drives.
For example, the D: disk identified in the standalone True Image 2013 might correspond to the E: disk in
Windows. The disk labels and information on partition sizes, file systems, drive capacities, their manufacturers,
and model numbers can help in correctly identifying the disks and partitions.
You won't be able to use the previously activated Acronis Startup Recovery Manager if the Try&Decide is turned
on. Rebooting the computer in the Try mode will allow you to use Acronis Startup Recovery Manager again.
4.11 About recovery of dynamic/GPT disks and volumes
1. True Image 2013 supports recovery of dynamic volumes to the following locations on the local
hard drives:
To the original location (to the same dynamic volume).
To another dynamic disk or volume.
To unallocated space of the dynamic group.
To a basic disk.
If a dynamic volume is recovered to an unallocated space of the dynamic group, the recovered
volume type will be the same as it was in the backup.
Manual resizing of dynamic volumes during recovery to dynamic disks is not supported. If you need
to resize a dynamic volume during recovery, it should be recovered to a basic disk.
When performing a so called "bare-metal recovery" of dynamic volume(s) to a new unformatted disk,
the recovered volumes become basic. If you want the recovered volumes to remain dynamic, the
target disk(s) should be prepared as dynamic (partitioned and formatted). This can be done using
third-party tools, for example, Windows Disk Management snap-in.
2. The target disk's partition style after recovery. It depends on whether your computer supports
UEFI and on whether your system is BIOS-booted or UEFI-booted. See the following table:
My system is BIOS-booted (Windows or
Acronis Bootable Media)
My system is UEFI-booted (Windows or
Acronis Bootable Media)
My source disk is MBR
and my OS does not
support UEFI
The operation will not affect neither
partition layout nor bootability of
the disk: partition style will remain
MBR, the destination disk will be
bootable in BIOS.
After operation completion, the
partition style will remain MBR, but
the operating system will fail booting
from UEFI, since your operating
system does not support it.
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