![]() ![]() R-Drive Image also supports hardware RAID (as single volumes) and software RAID: Windows, Apple, and Linux mdadm. Other file systems are supported on a byte-by-byte (all sectors are backed up-containing data or not) basis with no preview or file-level access from within the program. It understands Microsoft’s FAT (16/32), NTFS, and exFAT formats Apple’s HFS/HFS+, and APFS as well as the Little and Big Endian variants of UFS1/UFS2 and Ext2/Ext3/Ext4 FS (Linux), and ReFS. It will also verify them, copy disk-to-disk (cloning), and mount images as virtual disks that you can browse and recover individual files and folders from. ![]() R-Drive Image will create full (all data), incremental (all data changed since the last image), or differential (all data changed since the original full image) images. But, hey, R-Tools, if you’re ever bored…. Honestly, I can’t be too sore about the omission, as porting it to the older DOS-like GUI would likely be a lot of work. Alas, the new partitioning facilities are only available from the modern GUI. Clockwise from upper left: R-Drive Image’s old Windows/Linux boot interface, the still existent character-based interface from the Linux boot disk, and the latest Windows/Linux boot GUI.īoth the new GUI and DOS-like interfaces are available from the Linux boot disc, however the WinPE version features the new GUI only. ![]()
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