- #Paragon recovery media builder error code11 install#
- #Paragon recovery media builder error code11 64 Bit#
- #Paragon recovery media builder error code11 drivers#
- #Paragon recovery media builder error code11 full#
- #Paragon recovery media builder error code11 iso#
#Paragon recovery media builder error code11 drivers#
Of course, I ran into the "Unable to lock the disk" error, but building a Linux based Rescue Disk with Linux RAID drivers is a problem, as I don't know which flavor of Linux the Rescue Disk is based on & frankly, I sick & tired of effing with Acronis.
#Paragon recovery media builder error code11 install#
I performed a dry run on a fresh install of WinServer 2016 & everything worked well, using the WinPE version of the Rescue Disk (USB) + Windows drivers for the RAID card. The RAID card requires drivers for a bootable volume. I was trying to clone WinServer 2016 from mechanical HD to SSD based RAID array. I've run into this problem numerous times using the WinPE Rescue Disk, so always used the Linux based disk with no problems.
#Paragon recovery media builder error code11 iso#
Thanks to Steve for the suggestion of downloading the CD iso which is Linux based and which worked perfectly. This seems to be a problem of the experts assuming that everyone else has the same knowledge and understanding of the underlying technology.
You must use a LINUX based boot media and the documentation should be specific about this - it would have saved me (and others no doubt) hours of grief. I had been using an Acronis boot CD that I created previously and successfully used to clone a new HD. I was having the same problem as many on this thread and the problem is that the Acronis documentation is just not specific enough. ISO CD image from your account pages and use this to create either a bootable CD or copy to a USB stick using a utility program such as either Rufus or ISOtoUSB.
If you have registered ATI to an Acronis Account, then you can also download an. There is no need to install anything unless you don't have the main ATI application installed which in turn provides the Rescue Media Builder tool. Mark, just use the Advanced method of the Acronis Rescue Media builder tool to create a Linux USB stick which will have both the 32-bit and 64-bit versions of the ATI offline application. There are still some budget laptops and tablets that are 32bit uefi only (they typically have less than 4GB of memory installed or supported).
#Paragon recovery media builder error code11 64 Bit#
Or whatever type you made if using the MVP custom media builder or default Acronis builder which lists the architecture as 32 bit or 64 bit when using the advanced option. The winpe/WinRE typically only has uefi bootability for the type of system it was built on. The Linux rescue media (check your flash drive) has efi/boot and both the ability to boot 32 bit and 64 bit as it contains bootia32 and boot圆4. Uefi 64 bit can only boot on 64 bit bios architecture. Uefi 32 bit can only boot on 32 bit bios hardware. The last time I had an issue booting rescue media in UEFI mode was on an Acer laptop which would not allow me to do so if Secure Boot was enabled.Īlso, uefi booting is specific to the architecture at build. Scott, all recent Acronis USB rescue media can boot in either UEFI or Legacy modes but whether this does so on your computer can depend on how the BIOS is implemented. Or in rescue media, use add new disk feature to initialize the destination disk first. In windows, delete the volume and then initialize correctly first. likely, you either need to format the destination disk and make sure it's initialized as the same as the source image (MBR or GPT), or the destination disk already has windows on it and should be formatted anyway so an existing OS (which also could be locked by fast start hibernation) is not present.
#Paragon recovery media builder error code11 full#
Unlock the disk by doing a full shutdown so windows does not using a locked hibernation file and fastboot. Fastboot on windows 8, 8.1, 10 locks a drive with a protected hibernation file that windows will recognize on the source disk and winpe or WinRE rescue media is windows and will see it too. You need to boot full Windows and do a full shutdown before anything. Really hard to provide a random "guess" to answer your question, which is the best you'll get without some information from your end.Īssuming a clone or a full disk restore is being tried.ġ.
Andry, when are you seeing this? Are you using rescue media or is this from windows? Are you cloning or restoring a backup? If a backup restore, is it an entire disk or files/folders? If files, are you attempting to restore to the original location with existing permissions?