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amd64, for use on PCs with AMD64 or Intel 64 processors.
stable and testing ones, 3 CPU architectures are available: However, if you need uEFI secure boot, please use AMD64 version of Clonezilla live.
If you are not sure which one fits your machine, try i686 version first (slowest, but works for almost modern x86 CPUs). PAE (Physical Address Extension) is supported. It supports multi-core processor, and multiprocessor. alternative stable and alternative testing ones, 2 CPU architectures are available:
Once you have the Clonezilla live iso or zip file, please follow this Live CD/USB doc to put it on the boot media, and follow this Live Docs to use it. Therefore we do not release i386 Ubuntu-based Clonezilla live for Ubuntu >= 19.10, only amd64 (x86-64) arch is available. Ubuntu 19.10 (Eoan Ermine) has dropped the support for i386 architecture. 3.To download Clonezilla live, select the following CPU architecture, file type, repository, then click the download button: The CZ image is on a nas but can be moved to a USB.Ĭorrect me if im wrong 1. Ive never seen CZ images supported by VHD You can boot into windows using the VM or you can shut it down and mount the VM VHD file using disk management. Start up the vm do your normally clonezilla restore, and you should be done. Attached the USB drive to the VM and download and attached the ISO of clonezilla to the vm as well. And I don't think CloneZilla supports VHD files, maybe I am is the CloneZilla image located? If it is on a USB drive then it should be easy just create a new VM with a drive the same size as the original. You would need to run it from the boot disk. I can't think of a way to restore the image to the VHD, CloneZilla doesn't have a program you can run from within windows as far as I am aware.
And I don't think CloneZilla supports VHD files, maybe I am is the CloneZilla image located? If it is on a USB drive then it should be easy just create a new VM with a virtual drive the same size or bigger as the physical drive the clonezilla image is of (hopefully that makes sense). From there you could either mount the vhd in the VM and boot, or simply mount it in Win10 and browse to the files you need. You could create a new VHD in the windows 10 disk management (More actions -> Create VHD) then restore the image to there.