NO LONGER SUPPORTED. It might still work - I don't know. I don't run Windows any more. Sorry! I supported it for years but hopefully there's a fork somewhere out there. If you make one and maintain it I will be happy to post a link here.
ShadowSpawn is a tool for working with shadow copies. Shadow copies are read-only snapshots of your disk. Working with shadow copies instead of the actual files allows you to do things like work with in-use (locked) files.
ShadowSpawn works by making a shadow copy of your disk, making it available at a drive letter, then launching (spawning) another program that you specify.
Probably the most common way to use ShadowSpawn is to use Robocopy make a copy of files that are currently in use.
Most users can simply unzip the appropriate zip file from the download page. ShadowSpawn.exe can then just be run - there is no installer. However, ShadowSpawn uses the Visual C++ runtime, which may not be present on some machines. If ShadowSpawn does not work for you, run the vcredist executable available from the same download page.
ShadowSpawn is a command-line tool: there is no GUI.
ShadowSpawn take three arguments:
- The directory that contains the files you want to snapshot.
- An available drive letter where the snapshot will become visible.
- A command to run.
Let's say that you wanted to use robocopy to copy files from the
C:\foo
directory to the C:\bar
directory. You could do that with
the following command:
shadowspawn C:\foo Q: robocopy Q:\ C:\bar /s
That would cause shadowspawn to
- Make a shadow copy of the C: drive.
- Mount the shadowed version of the C:\foo directory at Q:.
- Launch
robocopy Q:\ C:\bar /s
- Wait for Robocopy to finish.
- Clean up the shadow copy and remove it from Q:
You can use any drive letter you want (it doesn't have to be Q:
),
but it does have to be a drive letter that's not currently being used
for anything else.
You can run any command you want. So if you just wanted to use notepad
to look at a shadow copy of C:\foo\blah.txt
, you'd run
shadowspawn C:\foo Q: notepad Q:\blah.txt
Just remember that shadowspawn will remove the Q: drive as soon as the command you specify exits.
ShadowSpawn is derived from the same source code as HoboCopy and is intended to replace it. The evolution was driven by the fact that although the shadow copy part of HoboCopy works well enough, the copying part was nowhere near as robust as tools like RoboCopy. By providing a tool that just takes care of the shadow copy, ShadowSpawn allows users to work with locked and in-use files using any other tool, not just the limited copy features provided by HoboCopy.
ShadowSpawn is currently at version 0.1.0, which is meant to indicate that it is an initial version. While it largely consists of fairly mature code taken from HoboCopy, there are bound to be a few issues as early adopters identify opportunities for improvement.
Please report bugs and request features using either the project issue tracking system or the project mailing list at [email protected] (website).
Usage: shadowspawn [ /verbosity=LEVEL ] <src> <drive:> <command> [ <arg> ... ] Creates a shadow copy of <src>, mounts it at <drive:> and runs <command>. /verbosity - Specifies how much information ShadowSpawn will emit during execution. Legal values are: 0 - almost no information will be emitted. 1 - Only error information will be emitted. 2 - Errors and warnings will be emitted. 3 - Errors, warnings, and some status information will be emitted. 4 - Lots of diagnostic information will be emitted. The default level is 2. <src> - The directory to shadow copy (the source directory). <drive:> - Where to mount the shadow copy. Must be a single letter followed by a colon. E.g. 'X:'. The drive letter must be available (i.e. nothing else mounted there). <command> - A command to run. ShadowSpawn will ensure that <src> is mounted at <drive:> before starting <command>, and will wait for <command> to finish before unmounting <drive:> Exit Status: If there is an error while processing (e.g. ShadowSpawn fails to create the shadow copy), ShadowSpawn exits with status 1. If there is an error in usage (i.e. the user specifies an unknown option), ShadowSpawn exits with status 2. If everything else executes as expected and <command> exits with status zero, ShadowSpawn also exits with status 0. If everything else executes as expected and <command> exits with a nonzero status code n, ShadowSpawn exits with status n logically OR'ed with 32768 (0x8000). For example, robocopy exits with status 1 when one or more files are Scopied. So, when executing shadowspawn C:\foo X: robocopy X:\ C:\path\to\backup /mir the exit code of ShadowSpawn would be 32769 (0x8000 | 0x1).