Prakash Sawarkar: Kernel 3.8 Released, how to Compile in Redhat, CenOS and Fedora..

Kernel 3.8 Released, how to Compile in Redhat, CentOS and Fedora.

Sunday, 18 August 2013

Redo Backup, Recovery Tool to Backup and Restore Systems

Redo Backup and Recovery is so simple that anyone can use it. It is the easiest, most complete disaster recovery solution available. It allows bare-metal restore. Bare metal restore is not only the best solution for hardware failure, it is also the ultimate antivirus: Even if your hard drive melts or gets completely erased by a virus, you can have a completely-functional system back up and running in as little as 10 minutes.

All your documents and settings will be restored to the exact same state they were in when the last snapshot was taken. Redo Backup and Recovery is a live CD, so it does not matter if you use Windows or Linux. You can use the same tool to backup and restore every machine. And because it is open source released under the GPL, it is completely free for personal and commercial use.
Requirements : USB External Storage Device / Hard Drive  or shared network drive.

Download the latest version of the Redo Backup live CD.http 
http://sourceforge.net/projects/redobackup/   or   http://redobackup.org/

After creating ISO CD image, put the CD in and reboot your computer to use Redo Backup. While system is starting you may need to press F8 or F12 keys to boot from the CD-ROM drive.
Click on "Start Redo Backup"














Welcome screen of  "Redo Backup" interface






















This is the Redo main menu interface. Connect your USB external storage device to your system and then click on the 'Backup or Restore' option.





















Click on the 'Backup' button.





















Select which parts of the drive to create backup of. Leave all parts selected if you are unsure. Click on "Next".





















Select Destination Drive it could be local drive connected to your computer USB storage device or shared network drive. or shared network drive.





















Select Backup Destination Drive





















Next it will ask you to give unique name for this backup image, such as the “date“. Today’s date is automatically entered for you like “20130950“.
Next it will backing up your system to the location you selected. This may take an hour or more depending on the speed of your computer and the amount of data you have.

That’s it, you successfully created backup image for your computer. If you would like to Restore this image on any other computer follow the same procedure and select “Restore“, then follow on-screen instructions.





















When the process has completed, click on the 'OK' button then reboot or power off your system by clicking on the 'Power Off' option.

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