A disk image is a single file or storage device containing the complete contents and structure representing a data storage medium or device, such as a hard drive, tape drives, floppy disk, CD/DVD/BD and key drive, although an image of an optical disc may be referred to as an optical disc image. A disk image is usually created by creating a complete sector-by-sector copy of the source medium and thereby perfectly replicating the structure and contents of a storage device.
Some disk imaging utilities omit unused file space from source media, or compress the disk they represent to reduce storage requirements, though these are typically referred to as archive files, as they are not literally disk images.
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Disk images were originally used for backup and disk cloning of floppy disk media, where replication or storage of an exact structure was necessary and efficient.
On Macintosh computers running Mac OS X, disk images are now ubiquitous for software downloads. Typically, when a user initiates a download of a software package (often an application or printer/scanner driver), the web browser will download a disk image file (.dmg suffix), which is saved automatically to the user's Downloads folder. Usually the disk image file will then automatically open, creating a mounted volume which appears on the user's Desktop - this volume contains the desired installer or other software. (If the disk image does not automatically open and mount, this can be initiated by double-clicking the disk image file.) Finally, the installer on the mounted volume will often (but not always) auto-launch, and take the user to the start of the installation script, at which point the OS prompts for an administrator password before proceeding with the installation. Once the installation is done, the mounted volume can be "ejected". The disk image file itself can then be deleted, or retained in the Downloads folder (or elsewhere) for future use.
Some backup programs only back up user files; boot information and files locked by the operating system, such as those in use at the time of the backup, may not be saved on some operating systems. A disk image contains all files, faithfully replicating all data. For this reason, it is also used for backing up CDs and DVDs.
Large enterprises often need to buy or replace new computer systems in large numbers. Installing operating system and programs in to each of them one by one requires a lot of time and effort and has a significant possibility of human error. Therefore, system administrators use disk imaging to quickly clone the fully-prepared software environment of a reference system. This method saves time and effort and allows administrators to focus on unique distinctions that each system must bear.
Creating a disk image is achieved with a suitable program. Different disk imaging programs have varying capabilities, and may focus on hard drive imaging (including hard drive backup, restore and rollout), or optical media imaging (CD/DVD images).
Hard drive imaging is used in several major application areas:
| Name | Description |
|---|---|
| Mac OS Standard | The normal Mac OS disk type. |
| Mac OS Extended | The normal Mac OS disk type, but with a few added features. |
| Mac OS Extended (Journaled) | Like Mac OS Extended, but all file operations are recorded. This is the disk type of most Mac OS X boot disks. |
| Mac OS Extended (Case-sensitive) | Like Mac OS Extended, but the disk name is case-sensitive. |
| MS-DOS (FAT) | Common MS-DOS disk type. Also used as the disk type for many CF and SD cards. |
In most cases, a file format is tied to a particular software package. The software defines and uses its own, often proprietary, image format, though some formats are widely supported by competing products. An exception to proprietary image formats is the ISO image for optical discs, which collectively includes the ISO 9660 and Universal Disk Format (UDF) formats, both defined by open standards. These formats are supported by nearly all optical disc software packages.
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A disk image is a single computer file containing the complete contents of a device that contains data, such as a hard drive, tape drives, floppy disk, CD/DVD/BD/ and key drive.
A disk image file (or simply a disk image) is an exact binary copy of an entire disk or drive. Disk image files contain ALL the data stored on the source drive including not only its files and folders but also its boot sectors, file allocation tables, volume attributes and any other system-specific data. Actually, a disk image is not a collection of files or folders but is an exact duplicate of the raw data of the original disk, sector by sector.
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