The problem described below was solved by using the most recent update of the most appropriate iso-file of Clonezilla. Choosing the most "appropriate" version is not straightforward. The download page is confusing. What worked for me was "stable Debian-based" rather than Ubuntu, (Ubuntu was for Maveric). There were two alternative isos for "stable Debian-based". I needed the amd64 because I am using a 64-bit system. And it worked like a charm. See my last post below.
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Clonezilla is really most fantastically useful, to the extent it works, that is.
I find I can clone a whole harddisk with only Lucid installed on a single partition, GRUB2 and all, which is really a relief, as the person I am trying to train to use Kubuntu makes quite a few mistakes, being 60 years old and not used to non-windows. (And I am not geek enough to be able to retrace his moves and undo damage.)
However, my own laptop is more complicated, and Clonezilla gives me «buffer i/o on device» and subsequently hangs, though a ctrl+alt+del awakens it so that it goes through the motions of closing down properly.
On my laptop, I have a windows 7 OEM on the first two partitions, Lucid on SDA3, and stored stuff on SDA5.
The first two windows partitions go smoothly, but the whole process stops somewhere on SDA3.
I suspect that is because I have virtualBox there hosting windows XP.
I have tried cloning the entire disk and cloning just the partition SDA3.
No go either way! I do not understand sufficiently well the "advanced" options given by Clonezilla. Maybe one of them would have solved the problem for me.
I realise now, that advice from Dibl in another post, to clone the OEM partitions is a very good idea! I shall do that. But I would also like to have a clone of my Lucid partition, which is where most of my work goes.
Does anybody know how to do that without dismantling the virtual XP?
I have googled the matter, and searched in the Clonezilla forums, and I see there is a question there that would seem to be similar to mine, but can find no reply.
BTW: I went through the same process on a 32 bit installation, and there it seemed to work (though I never tried the «restore»). Now I am on a 64 bit laptop.
NB: fsck returned no bad blocks, and there is plenty of space on the recipient drive.
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Clonezilla is really most fantastically useful, to the extent it works, that is.
I find I can clone a whole harddisk with only Lucid installed on a single partition, GRUB2 and all, which is really a relief, as the person I am trying to train to use Kubuntu makes quite a few mistakes, being 60 years old and not used to non-windows. (And I am not geek enough to be able to retrace his moves and undo damage.)
However, my own laptop is more complicated, and Clonezilla gives me «buffer i/o on device» and subsequently hangs, though a ctrl+alt+del awakens it so that it goes through the motions of closing down properly.
On my laptop, I have a windows 7 OEM on the first two partitions, Lucid on SDA3, and stored stuff on SDA5.
The first two windows partitions go smoothly, but the whole process stops somewhere on SDA3.
I suspect that is because I have virtualBox there hosting windows XP.
I have tried cloning the entire disk and cloning just the partition SDA3.
No go either way! I do not understand sufficiently well the "advanced" options given by Clonezilla. Maybe one of them would have solved the problem for me.
I realise now, that advice from Dibl in another post, to clone the OEM partitions is a very good idea! I shall do that. But I would also like to have a clone of my Lucid partition, which is where most of my work goes.
Does anybody know how to do that without dismantling the virtual XP?
I have googled the matter, and searched in the Clonezilla forums, and I see there is a question there that would seem to be similar to mine, but can find no reply.
BTW: I went through the same process on a 32 bit installation, and there it seemed to work (though I never tried the «restore»). Now I am on a 64 bit laptop.
NB: fsck returned no bad blocks, and there is plenty of space on the recipient drive.
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