![]() ![]() If you make an image of FAT USB key it will work even on bigger size keys. It does a great job PERFECTLY! I don’t understand why people ask all those questions before they do some homework first. Hi Alex, thanks for sharing your work you do in your free time with everyone. Additionally there already exist tools, that can exactly do this (WinImage). To add the feature would be a bigger task. I did some parsing of the FAT12 file system for my DiskXS tool (you can find it on my page, too). This could be anything from FAT to NTFS and various Linux file systems. October 27th, 2008 at 8:02 An image explorer tool would need to manually parse the file system in an image file. What do you think about an image explorer tool that will let explore the *.img file and give the posibility to extract files from that image? The main thing is I can use your great tool without. I only miss a progress state while create a backup or restoring a backup. Ok, I tried out the command line utility and wrote a little GUI for the usbitcmd.exe. net, you can try out the command line utility. If you have suggestions for making the current interface more easy to use, you can of course post them. I just don’t have the time to support a development API for the usbit32.dll. I’m working as a software delevoper and doing this in my free time. ![]() The reason is, that it’s not documented in a way to use it without further explanation and support from my side. Thanks for your interest in developing an alternative GUI for USB Image Tool, but I don’t want to release the header file for usbit32.dll at the moment. But is it possible to get a short description of the usbit32.dll? I would like to write a really simple and small gui without net framework. Really a usefull tool- thx for your great job. I will take it into consideration for future versions. Splitting images would be a good feature to add, regardless the target partition. This currently results in a write error and is caused by the FAT32 limitation in file size. How does the tool work for saving USB-Sticks greater than 2 GB on FAT32 volumes? Is there a splitting mechanism?įiles greater than 4GB (32bit) won’t work on a FAT32 partition. Thx very much for this pretty neat program – very easy to use for making a bckup of bootable USB stick ! No frills, no thrills, it simply does what it needs to do □ You can leave a response, or trackback from your own site.Ģ9 Responses to “USB Image Tool 1.31 released” You can follow any responses to this entry through the RSS 2.0 feed. On Sunday, October 12th, 2008 at 6:43 pm and is filed under Software. Also its copyright should allow usage in closed-source freeware application. Requirements are either a static library (no DLL) with support for cancelletion and progress reporting, or a modifiable source code. Any recommendations for an easy-to-use zlib wrapper or any other PKZIP compatible compression library are welcome. If you encounter this problem, I recommend to backup your USB device as a raw image and manually compress/decompress it with the compression tool of your choice.īecause XZip is not being maintained frequently anymore, I think I have to switch to new compression routines. Raw images are not affected by this problem. I’m assuming it has to be connected with the compressed image exceeding the 2GB limit. ![]() When creating a compressed backup, USB Image Tool now checks the compressed image to ensure it is not corrupted. The zip compression routines, used by USB Image Tool (XZip based on Info-ZIP/zlib 1.1.3), may lead to corrupted images. Version 1.31 includes bugfixes for the user interface and compression routines.
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