Several other new packages have been included in the new release, namely atop, bashtop, glances, iperf3, ipv6calc, python3-psutil, usbtop, and vnstat, which the developers think they might come in handy when using Clonezilla Live to clone partitions or disks.Īmong other noteworthy changes, Clonezilla Live now supports Samba server schemes with version assigned as smb1, smb1.0, smb2, smb2.0, smb2.1, smb3, smb3.0, smb3.11, and smb3.1.1, allows language setting for en_US (English United States) in grub.cfg, and shows the size of the file system and partition in the terminal-based UI when listing partitions in restoreparts.
Softraid linux full#
As expected, this should provide users with better exFAT support.Ĭlonezilla Live 2.7.1 saw improved Linux software RAID, the inclusion of the f3 package for testing the full capacity of a flash card, received persistence support in the live-boot, and received support for more time-related format for “autoname-” and customized auto-gen image names for the ocs-sr program, whose -rescue parameter was updated to work with ocs-onthefly.
Softraid linux series#
The new stable release of Clonezilla Live comes three months after version 2.7.0, it’s synced with the upstream software repositories of Debian Sid (Unstable) as of January 27th, 2021, and it’s powered by the latest and greatest Linux 5.10 LTS kernel series for the best possible hardware support.Īnother important change in Clonezilla Live 2.7.1 is the replacement of the exfat-utils program for supporting the exFAT file system on Unix-like systems with exfatprogs, a program providing more modern userspace utilities for the new exFAT file system implementation introduced in Linux kernel 5.7 and later. Mdadm is used for managing Linux software MD RAID arrays.ĭownloads and more details on MDADM 4.2 over on Shiau announced today the release of Clonezilla Live 2.7.1-22, a Debian Sid-based live Linux system built around the powerful Clonezilla open-source disk imaging and cloning program.
Softraid linux code#
The updated compiler support is long overdue, there is lot of work on clustered RAID handling, there is now support for displaying sizes in Tebibytes, udev support for starting the mdadm-grow-continue service, NVMe multi-path support, and an assortment of other code cleaning and fixes. Highlights include enhancements and bug fixes including for IMSM RAID, Partial Parity Log, clustered RAID support, improved testing, and gcc-9 support." Jes summed up v4.2 as, " The release includes more than two years of development and bugfixes, so it is difficult to remember everything. Meta's Jes Sorensen released MDADM 4.2 just before the new year. As such with MDADM 4.2 now available, it's a rather big update.
MDADM 4.1 was released long before the pandemic even got started. The mdadm utility for managing Linux software RAID arrays is out with a new release - its first in more than three years.