Have a live CD including mondo rescue. Reported by: bruno. Download in other formats. By Edgewall Software. The Mondo Rescue project is hosted.

Mondo Rescue Live Cd Download

Mondo it backs up your GNU/Linux server or workstation to tape, CD-R, CD-RW, NFS or hard disk partition. In the event of catastrophic data loss, you will be able to restore all of your data [or as much as you want], from bare metal if necessary. Mondo is in use by Lockheed-Martin, Nortel Networks, Siemens, HP (US and France), IBM, NASA's JPL, the US Dept of Agriculture, dozens of smaller companies, and tens of thousands of users. Mondo is comprehensive.

Mondo supports LVM, RAID, ext2, ext3, JFS, XFS, ReiserFS, VFAT, and can support additional filesystems easily: just e-mail the mailing list with your request. It supports adjustments in disk geometry, including migration from non-RAID to RAID. Mondo runs on all major Linux distributions and is getting better all the time. You may even use it to backup non-Linux partitions, such as NTFS.

Mondo is free! It has been published under the GPL (GNU Public License), partly to expose it to thousands of potential beta-testers but mostly as a contribution to the Linux community. I charge for 1-to-1 technical support to fund Mondo's development. New in Mondo Rescue 3.0.2: • This version correctly supports software RAID on RHEL 6, with re-creation of metadata and UUIDs. • It fixes restoration issues for Debian and Ubuntu, as well as on RHEL 5 (the tune2fs command wasn’t working for ext4; it required the use of tune4fs). • It supports out of tree kernel modules (such as hpsa from the PSP/SPP) and has improved support for latest HP ProLiant Blades.

• It fixes many small annoyances (like #616), especially thanks to new automated regression tests.

8 Linux Disk Cloning Tools Basically, the cloning software job is to take all disk data, convert them into a single.img file and give it to you, so you can copy it to another hard drive, and here we have the best 8 Open Source Cloning software to do the job for you. Clonezilla is a Live CD based on Ubuntu & Debian to clone all your hard drive data or to take a backup, licensed under GPL 3, it is similar to Norton Ghost on Windows but more effective. Features • Support for many filesystems like: ext2, ext3, ext4, btrfs, xfs, and many other filesystems. • Support for BIOS and UEFI. • Support for MPR and GPT partitions. • Ability to reinstall grub 1 and 2 on any attached hard drive. • Works on weak computers ( 200 MB of RAM is needed only).

• Many other features. Clonezilla for Linux Suggested Read: 2. Redo Backup also a Live CD tool to clone your drivers easily, Redo Backup is a free & Open Source Live System licensed under GPL 3 to do the job, Features are as the website says. • Easy GUI boots from CD in less than a minute. • No installation required; runs from a CD-ROM or a USB device. • Saves and restores Linux and Windows systems.

• Automatically locates local network shares. • Access files even without login. • Recover deleted files, documents, media files quickly. • Internet access with a Chromium browser to download drivers. • Small in size only 250MB Live CD. MondoRescue • 4.

Partimage is an open-source software backup, by default it works under Linux system and available to install from the package manager for most Linux distributions, if you don’t have a Linux system installed by default you can use “ SystemRescueCd” which is a Live CD that include Partimage by default to do the cloning process that you want. Partimage is very fast in cloning hard drivers, but the problem is that it doesn’t support ext4 or btrfs partitions, although that you can use it to clone other filesystems like ext3 and NTFS. Partimage Suggested Read: 5. FSArchiver is a continuation of Partimage, also a good tool to clone hard disks, it supports cloning Ext4 partitions and NTFS partitions, here’s a list of features: Features • Support for basic file attributes like owner, permissions, etc.

• Support for extended attributes like those used by SELinux. • Support the basic file­system attributes (label, uuid, block­size) for all Linux file­systems. • Support for NTFS partitions of Windows and Ext of Linux and Unix­Like. • Support for checksums which enables you to check for data corruption.

• Ability to restore corrupted archive by just skipping the corrupted file. • Ability to have more than one filesystem in an archive. • Ability to compress the archive in many formats like lzo, gzip, bzip2, lzma/xz. • Ability to split big files in size to a smaller one.

You can download FSArchiver and install it on your system, or you can download which also contains FSArchiver. Hi, I am a newbie, but have had a Ubuntu 14.04 install on a laptop for I do NOT want to have to try and set the whole thing up again, that was four years ago I don’t remember anything about it. I can’t get any of this to work.

All I get is error messages in terminal PLS. There has to be a way to do this. I have a new Dell gaming laptop. I don’t even want to fool around with trying to partition the hard drive (SSD) I would rather just run it in a virtual box. Vmware converter is not available for Ubuntu WTF!

As with trying to do anything with Linux I have been reading and reading boards and articles. I even tried the Ubuntu forums (ask Ubuntu) they ask you why are you so stupid and don’t know anything.

Boyka 4 Film Download. It’s so exasperating! I tried systembak and can’t shrink the file size down to make it less than 4 GB and besides the new laptop has no DVD player.!!! Sorry but it’s really frustrating.

Is there Mac software I can use to easily create an exact duplicate backup of an external hard drive? Basically, I put all my photos from jobs on an external hard drive for archiving that I keep in my office next to my computer. Then I have a duplicate external I keep in a fireproof box at another location. I only copy everything over to my duplicate drive every month or so.

Bachata Loops And Samples Free. But sometimes I’ve changed files on my main archive drive within folders I’ve already on the backup duplicate drive. Usually, I end up rewriting the entire drive overnight, which is a pain and takes forever. So my question is if there is a software I could use that would recognize the changes I’ve made to the archive drive and then apply just those changes to the backup drive so they match exactly? *side note* I can’t use cloud or an online backup b/c it’s too many files and they are too large to upload.

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