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![]() But for the purpose of this tutorial, I will show you how to create and use Clonezilla live USB. If you have a Debian, Ubuntu, or Arch Linux live USB, you can install Clonezilla on your current live USB, then launch Clonezilla from the live USB ( sudo clonezilla). The partition to be imaged or cloned has to be unmounted. A hard drive that you want to make a backup ofĬlonezilla is included in the repository of many Linux distributions, such as Debian, Ubuntu, Arch Linux, so why do we need to create a Clonezilla live USB? Can’t we just install Clonezilla on the operating system? This is because Clonezilla currently doesn’t support online imaging/cloning.A thumb drive to create a Clonezilla live USB.Unattended mode: Almost all steps can be done via commands and options.Clonezilla Server Edition allows you to do massive system deployment over the network.Supports lots of file systems like ext4, XFS, Btrfs, F2FS, FAT32, NTFS, HFS+, UFS.The disk image can be compressed with GZIP or ZSTD algorithm. ![]() The disk image can be encrypted with ecryptfs, and saved to or read from local disk, SSH server, Samba server, NFS server, WebDAV server or AWS S3 storage.Allows you to clone directly between two disks ( disk cloning), without creating a disk image.You can create an image of the current disk or partition ( disk imaging), and restore the image to disk at any time.Clonezilla is a free open-source and reliable tool for bare metal backup and recovery of disk drives. This tutorial is going to show you how to use Clonezilla Live to back up your hard drive. ![]()
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