![]() After that the rest of the process was straightforward. All the necessaries are there, but the first time I tried to restore a partition from an image stored on an external hard drive it took a little spelunking to find the backup store. When booting from the rescue medium, the program's menu/window layout is a little different from the installed version. I seem to recall that if Reflect encounters a file system it doesn't understand it automagically reverts to creating a straight bit copy of the entire partition, but that is slow and an inefficient use of space on the storage medium. I don't know if Reflect can work with with LVM or encrypted partitions, or other file systems like BTRFS or XFS. ![]() ![]() Do you mean the rescue boot media created by an installed version of Reflect? If that's what you are referring to, then yes, it works fine with straight, unencrypted EXT4 partitions (and the FAT ESP if you have a UEFI machine). IDG, I didn't know Macrium Reflect had a live CD.
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