My dear lemmings,

I discovered Clonezilla a while ago and it still is my main tool to backup and restore the partitions I care about on my computers.

I cannot help but wonder if there are now better, more efficient alternatives or is it still a solid choice? There’s nothing wrong with it, I’m just curious about others’ practices and habits — and if there was newer tools or solutions available.

Thank you for your feedback, and keep your drives safe!

  • @[email protected]
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    9 months ago

    Generally I just don’t take clones of disk partitions anymore. They tend to take up too much disk space to keep more than one or two backups and typically require the disk to be unmounted which means it’s a mostly manual process. That all but guarantees that any backup I take will be out of date when I need it most.

    Instead I’ve found it better to take regular automated file level backups and automate the way I configure my environment so that I can quickly restore and rebuild if something goes wrong.

    If I just want to be able to quickly revert a drive to a previous state or have easy point-in-time restore I manage the disk with ZFS. ZFS has a snapshotting feature which is great for this sort of thing and you can even restore snapshots to another zfs pool the same way you might restore a partition to another disk but without all the hassle of resizing things.

  • @loie
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    149 months ago

    Second for Rescuezilla, it’s a Clonezilla front end with sane defaults you’d probably pick anyways.

  • @[email protected]
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    129 months ago

    It’s difficult to use with some odd defaults as I remember, and you have to boot into it which is annoying.

    Rescuezilla seems like a good open source option, but you do still have to boot into it.

    My go-to is the free Veeam Endpoint, as it just installs on the system and does full system images without needing to reboot. I’m not sure if there is a good easy to use open source equivalent to it, so far I have not found one.

    • @[email protected]
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      39 months ago

      I also use Veeam at home for this. It’s not FOSS, but it is still free, and works really well.

      • Nix
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        49 months ago

        I hate that it requires a phone to download unless you already have a download link

    • @[email protected]
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      19 months ago

      Is the “restore media” universal or do you have to create a new USB drive for each computer you want to restore?

  • @[email protected]
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    129 months ago

    I use clonezilla at work for imaging and deploying laptops. It works like a charm. Great piece of software. It’s not normal backup software though.

  • @mvirts
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    69 months ago

    Idk… but im sure you can use pretty much any live distro with partclone

    • strax
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      49 months ago

      yeah, partclone is the tool that clonezilla uses under the hood. i find that using partclone directly is easier.

  • WalrusDragonOnABike [they/them]
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    9 months ago

    Used it for cloning some laptops recently without much issue. Cloned one laptop’s primary partition onto an SD card and then imaged the others no problem. Laptops were 256GBs capacity (but only like 30-60 GBs used) and the SD card was 64 GBs. Seemed pretty simple to me.

    There’s a lot of options for those who want to do things like deploy over a network, but I haven’t messed with them seriously (I didn’t have the ethernet cables to do it - wasted a bit of time trying before realizing they weren’t connect to a network; maybe there’s a way to connect via wifi, but I didn’t see it)

  • @[email protected]
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    59 months ago

    I never really had a need for the features provided by Clonezilla. I’ve always just used dd since it’s available on any Linux live disk. Unless I’m making an image for data recovery, I zero the free space and pipe the dd output through gzip to avoid wasting space.

  • @[email protected]
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    59 months ago

    The main thing about Clonezilla is that you can always rely on it working, no matter the system. The bad thing is that proprietary solutions have a lot more creature comforts.

  • @[email protected]
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    39 months ago

    I’ve used Clonezilla recently to clone my main 1tb drive aswell as a 4tb backup drive to an external HDD and both times worked fine.

    It is painfully slow however but I’m not sure I could do anything about that outside of buying faster drives.

  • @[email protected]
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    9 months ago

    Yes, works great! Used it to clone some windows users stuff, he thought having a dozen partitions makes sense, still no problem at all. Copied everything from HDD to bigger SSD, just worked.

    You download the ISO, flash it to a usb stick (we used rufus, but dd, impression (udisks2 frontent in gtk&rust) or balena etcher should also work). The TUI is usable, has some options but the defaults seem good.

  • @[email protected]
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    29 months ago

    I’d recommend just scripting with rsync commands and run with cron or whatever scheduling automation. Backup locally to an external drive or orchestrate with cloud provider cli tools for something like S3.

    There are some tools that probably assist with this, but it’s just very few moving parts to roll your own. Clonezilla seems overkill and harder to automate, but I will admit I’m not an expert with it.

  • @[email protected]
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    29 months ago

    Clonezilla or dd. if you are on GNOME you can use gnome disks and it has a create diak image, restore disk image option, if you want an img file

  • @PainInTheAES
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    29 months ago

    I use kopia, it’s more automated and deduplicates snapshot.

  • Max-P
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    29 months ago

    The big advantage of Clonezilla or using dd is you make a perfect 1:1 copy of the disk so you’re pretty confident it will restore perfectly, but you need a disk of at least the same size and so on. Also perfect if you’re trying to do file recovery and so on, because even corrupted or entirely unreachable data is still technically on the disk.

    That’s very inefficient when you have say, 5GB used of a 1TB disk, although compression will help a bit. But that’s where more specialized tools comes in: what if we could only backup the actual data, and end up with a 5GB backup before compression.

    That’s useful and nice, but can’t possibly deal with corrupted or deleted files since it’ll just skip over them. The backup is only as good as all the filesystem features the archiver can encode. On Linux, tar has us pretty well covered as long as you only need relatively standard features like owners, groups. If you zip your root Linux partition you’ll end up with broken ownership and permissions, because it doesn’t encode ACLs and xattrs and hardlinks and whatever else. On NTFS, since it’s proprietary, undocumented and a fairly complex filesystem, it’s much riskier. If you backup your game library, you’re probably fine, but if you want Windows to boot after a restore, you need a much more complete backup and if you don’t want to take risks, whole partition backups are much safer. ntfsclone exists but I just don’t trust it like I would trust tar to backup my ext4 partitions correctly.

    So it’s all a tradeoff. Do you want efficiency, or do you want reliability? How much of the information can you lose? Like, if you backup your C: drive on Windows but only care about your files and documents but not the Windows install itself, then it makes sense to just archive the files rather than a block copy.

    So, what do you expect from your backups? The answer to that question also answers this thread.

    • @[email protected]
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      19 months ago

      for a large drive with only partial data you can make dd quicker by reducing partition size. Then fdisk to list byte size of (cylinders x bytes) in header output, and units listed for end of partition. you then use dd with bs=(cyl x bytes) count=(units+1) so dd stops at the last block of partition. once copied you can resize partition. it is how I fit a duplicate of my nas OS img on a 4 gig USB stick img for redeploy. DD is faster and then resize partitions after

      • Max-P
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        19 months ago

        That… seems pretty unsafe. If I’m taking a backup, I definitely would avoid resizing it or making any modifications to it during the backup process. What if the resize fails and is the reason you need to restore from backup in the first place?

        I guess it’s a handy hack in use cases like yours, or if the backup is a convenience, but it’s important to understand the risks and whether you’re better off with filesystem level tools.

        • @[email protected]
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          19 months ago

          I’m sure there is potential risk, It just hasn’t been a problem on my end. Just putting out as an option if you don’t want to clone a 16TB drive and want to fit it on a drive that suits it.

      • @[email protected]
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        19 months ago

        You’d probably be better off with dd if=/dev/zero of=file.zero to zero out empty space, dd copy the whole drive, then compress the copy. I wouldn’t fuck around with partitions on something I want to back up

        • @[email protected]
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          19 months ago

          For sure, but in my case I didn’t want a copressed copy, I wanted a working fully functional drive image

          • @[email protected]
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            19 months ago

            Probably safer to image the whole partition then shrink the image, then. Not sure exactly how I’d go about it, but I’m sure it’s not too bad, probably three arcane shell commands

            • @[email protected]
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              19 months ago

              Yes, zero spacing and compress. In my case I was building a direct clone backup for when nas might fail and I can swap drive innediately, but did not want to wait hours to dd the empty drive to an image file.

      • @[email protected]
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        9 months ago

        Reposted from a server fault thread , author plasmapotential. note fdisk -l -u=cylinders /dev/sdX will output cylinder info if it doesnt by default.

        Use dd, with the count option.

        In your case you were using fdisk so I will take that approach. Your "sudo fdisk -l "produced:

        Disk /dev/sda: 64.0 GB, 64023257088 bytes
        255 heads, 63 sectors/track, 7783 cylinders
        Units = cylinders of 16065 * 512 = 8225280 bytes
        Sector size (logical/physical): 512 bytes / 512 bytes
        I/O size (minimum/optimal): 512 bytes / 512 bytes
        Disk identifier: 0x0000e4b5
        
        Device Boot      Start         End      Blocks   Id  System
        /dev/sda1   *           1          27      209920   83  Linux
        Partition 1 does not end on cylinder boundary.
        /dev/sda2              27         525     4000768    5  Extended
        Partition 2 does not end on cylinder boundary.
        /dev/sda5              27         353     2621440   83  Linux
        /dev/sda6             353         405      416768   83  Linux
        /dev/sda7             405         490      675840   83  Linux
        /dev/sda8             490         525      282624   83  Linux
        

        The two things you should take note of are 1) the unit size, and 2) the “End” column. In your case you have cylinders that are equal to 8225280 Bytes. In the “End” column sda8 terminates at 525 (which is 525[units]16065512 = ~4.3GB)

        dd can do a lot of things, such as starting after an offset, or stopping after a specific number of blocks. We will do the latter using the count option in dd. The command would appear as follows:

        sudo dd if=/dev/sda of=/your_directory/image_name.iso bs=8225280 count=526
        

        Where -bs is the block size (it is easiest to use the unit that fdisk uses, but any unit will do so long as the count option is declared in these units), and count is the number of units we want to copy (note that we increment the count by 1 to capture the last block).