
/cdn.vox-cdn.com/uploads/chorus_image/image/71465381/usa_today_19095475.0.jpg)
Ability to restore an archive which is corrupt (it will just skip the current file).Checksumming of everything which is written in the archive (headers, data blocks, whole files).Support for NTFS filesystem (ability to create flexible clones of Windows partitions).Support the basic file system attributes (label, uuid, block-size) for all Linux file systems.Support for extended attributes (they are used by SELinux).Support for multiple file systems per archive.Support for basic file attributes (permissions, owner, …).

FSArchiver - A safe and flexible file-system backup and deployment tool.Number Start End Size File system Name Flagsġ 1049kB 274MB 273MB fat32 EFI system partition boot, espĢ 274MB 290MB 16.8MB Microsoft reserved partition msftresģ 290MB 124GB 124GB Basic data partition msftdataĤ 256GB 256GB 540MB ntfs Basic data partition hidden, diagĪs long as the filesystem, etc is supported … note the list on the wiki Sector size (logical/physical): 512B/512B In case it helps, here is the result of parted -l Model: WDC PC SN730 SDBPNTY-256G-1006 (nvme) I find it difficult to understand because Linux installation is stored in disk, if this disk is removed out of the laptop, the new disk won’t know the content of the old one. I read some article on reddit that says that you don’t need to reinstall Linux when replacing SSD for a reason that has to do with OFC something. The laptop I am using dual boots on Manjaro KDE and Windows 10. For disclosure, I have never replaced internal storage device before.
