Rescuezilla is a specialist Ubuntu-based distribution designed for system rescue tasks, including backups and system restoration. It was forked from the "Redo Backup & Rescue" project which was abandoned in 2012. Like its predecessor, it allows a "bare-metal restore" after any hardware failure directly from the live image. Some of the features include: works directly from the live CD/USB image; works with Linux, macOS and Windows; automatically searches a local area network for drives to backup to or restore from; recovers lost or deleted data files; includes configuration tools for managing disk and drives. Rescuezilla uses a simplified LXDE user interface.
To compare the software in this project to the software available in other distributions, please see our Compare Packages page.
Notes: In case where multiple versions of a package are shipped with a distribution, only the default version appears in the table. For indication about the GNOME version, please check the "nautilus" and "gnome-shell" packages. The Apache web server is listed as "httpd" and the Linux kernel is listed as "linux". The KDE desktop is represented by the "plasma-desktop" package and the Xfce desktop by the "xfdesktop" package.
Colour scheme:green text = latest stable version, red text = development or beta version. The function determining beta versions is not 100% reliable due to a wide variety of versioning schemes.
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It's ok but there's much better alternatives to choose from. The fonts used have been mentioned by others, back in the day i'm sure they were a reasonable choice, but today they're difficult at modern resolutions.
There's something up with using local drives, it doesn't allow copying to them. There's probably some jiggery-pokery using a terminal window but tbh, this far into the 21st century that seems a little archaic when the developer could no doubt fix this.
Considering how long this has been knocking around, I would like to have seen some leaps forward in terms of developing the overall offering, but that doesn't seem to be happening. Maybe the dev thinks it's good enough as-is, or that if users find it difficult to deal with then it's over their head. Whichever the reason, I can't say anything very encouraging about it.
I think it is a good software; however it has two problems:
1. Fonts are really difficult to read on a resolution higher than Full HD
2. When you explore images, you can't copy files to other mounted hard drives or SSDs. It says that the permission was denied.
There is a way of fixing point 2. though: you have to minimize the GUI (do not close it; otherwise your image will be unmounted), then you have to run a terminal and start the file explorer, from which I don't recall the name right now, then you will be able to copy the from the image explorer to your media.
So, I guess that the file explorer is ran as a normal user and that's why it is not able to copy the files.
As I said, I don't recall the name of the file explorer, but you can see it on the desktop; just type that name (all lowercase) and then it will open from the terminal.
Version: 2.5 Rating: 1 Date: 2024-05-14 Votes: 8
Last time Rescuezilla got 6 points from me (v.2.4.1), this time no more than 1 point. What has happened?
Booting from a Ventoy-Stick worked - good!
Unfortunately I couldn't find any way to choose a different screen resolution before booting. On my notebook this ended with hardly readable fonts - bad!
In the menu I found arandr and with some difficulties I was able to choose a suitable resolution.
After that I tried to create a small image via the "Backup" button. I wanted to make an image of the EFI partition (FAT32), the first GPT partition on my NVME-SSD, compressed with zstandard (default compression level). I could create an empty directory on my USB-HDD where the image should be stored.
Finally I wanted to start the backup process, but all buttons in the last step were greyed out. I had to kill the backup GUI and took a look for a logfile or similar, but without any success - very, very bad!