Clonezilla Clone Software Raid
Are there any plans, or is it possible to get Clonezilla to recognize a Software RAID 1 installation? We switched from a hardware RAID to a Intel software system, and. Why Clonezilla doesn't recognize RAID0 drives. It's Linux software RAID, no, Clonezilla does not. To unplug one drive and then restore a clone from a. What is Clonezilla? Nes Zelda on this page. Clonezilla is a partition and disk imaging/cloning program similar to True Image® or Norton Ghost®. It helps you to do system deployment, bare.
If you try to clone under mdadm, you are just asking for trouble if you ever mix up the cloned pairs. In other words, if one of these machines has a problem and you plug the drive into the other to try and recover the data from it, mdadm will be mighty confused by seeing three drives that all appear to be part of the same two drive array.
Best to create a new array on each machine, and then rsync, or if you must, partclone your filesystem over. Also with grub2 you can skip the /boot partition and just install it on both MBRs directly.
I have a not-so-recent HP desktop PC (model# m9510f, Q8200 CPU - I think it was manufactured in early 2009 sometime, because it still had Vista 64-bit). I've set it up with a pair of 500GB drives that I want to run in RAID0 striped mode (for higher performance and lower reliability). I've successfully setup the RAID in the BIOS, and it is recognized at boot time. Only problem is, Clonezilla won't recognize the RAID0, so I can't very well restore the OS. I could just reinstall from the recovery disks, but then I suppose I also won't be able to make Clonezilla backups either.
Clonezilla only sees the individual drives. What's the best way to get around this issue? Clonezilla doesn't support software-based or firmware-based (aka 'FakeRAID') arrays. From what I understand your HP system has an Asus-made MB in it with an Intel ICH9R chipset. If you used that to make your RAID 0 then Clonezilla can't do anything with it. From their (under 'Limitations'): Software RAID/fake RAID is not supported by default. From their: Q: Does Clonezilla support RAID?
A: Clonezilla does support hardware RAID, if your RAID device is seen as /dev/sda, /dev/sdb, /dev/hda, /dev/hdb, /dev/cciss/c0d0. Allegretto Kotoko Rar. On GNU/Linux. Clonezilla does support this.
On the other hand, if it's Linux software RAID, no, Clonezilla does not support that. See for a recent Clonezilla forum thread about using it (or rather, NOT using it) with firmware-based arrays.
Can't help you with Clonezilla as it appears from the previous poster that it simply will not work. If that's the case, use something else. Want free (as in no license fee)? Then you can use Microsoft's ImageX program. Image your old system with that to an external drive, then restore it. ImageX is a command line tool that is freely available within the Windows Automated Installation Kit. Using that kit, you can (if necessary) create a WinPE boot DVD that includes imagex and the drivers for your RAID controller.
If windows can see the drive as you want it, you can deploy the image (note: if your Vista install (or whatever version of Windows you use) doesn't have the appropriate drivers for the RAID controller IN windows, then it may not boot at all - it would be wise to install the drivers BEFORE making the image). There could still be other issues - a possible need to make the drive partition 'active'. But the imaging part of the problem should be solved with this solution. During my Google search for this problem, I saw a post that I thought was interesting, and worked for me when I tried it. (Caution: this only works for RAID 1 and possibly RAID 10). Unplug one of the drives. Then boot clonezilla.
The RAID array will be 'degraded'. Then restore the image to the active drive, shutdown, plug the drive back in, and the array will rebuild.
I'm currently watching a copy I just made this way and it seems to have worked great. The trick is that, since this is software RAID, the RAID info is stored on the drive.