This great! I used raspberry sd card copier to copy my 1TB NVMe OS to a small card then used pisafe to back it up to an image. Large drive install backup solved!
Thanks so much for this, After spending a month on and off trying to backup my Pihole which is on a 64GB SD Card (Which is what was included in the package) using things like Win32 Disk Imager and command line backups, only to be told that the image was too big to write to another 64GB Card or failing to boot, I was on the verge of giving up, But then I came across this video. It worked first time and created a compressed backup of around 1.4GB and once written to another card and put back in the Pi it booted right away, So I may well see if I can now write the backup to a smaller card. Great little program and excellent well explained tutorial, Thanks again and look forward to watching more of your video's.
Thanks for the heads up on this. Just installed it into Twister (my OS of choice). Haven't used PiSafe yet but had an explore. In settings there is an option to change the default directory path, so I imagine if you haven't got enough room on your OS drive to save your backup you can send your file to another connected storage device.
@@kuzey3d767 Yes, it works with almost any Linux. It reduces the image size best if the last partition is ext4 and not a swap partition. I don’t remember how Ubuntu partitions by default.
That was a great RPi 4 video in a long time.Recently I had noticed a sudden drop in new videos for the RPi 4 as compared to 8 or 9 months ago from most of the TH-cam channels that covered the Rpi4. The operating systems and other potential projects for the RPi seems to have reached a saturation point.
This is great news that you found this I was just looking for a way to do this and of course you have a video lol! Greatful I am keep up the great work! This will go great with my Pi4 m.2 setup.
If you're backing up a 256GB MicroSD card then you need to be running PiSafe on a 512GB MicroSD. PiSafe first writes a full size copy of the drive getting backed up. The shrink is then done on this copy so you always need a larger MicroSD to run PiSafe.
I like this, but I need a process that lets me backup a large SSD. For example I use 1TB drive on my RPI4 but with only 25GB of data used. I have to use an x86_64 Ubuntu system with large drives to work on this and it's a pain
This looks great, the only problem is it can only create an image of your OS if you're booting off an SD card. I boot off a USB connected SSD and the software can't see the drive the OS is installed on. A shame as I'd really like to use it.
Great explanation. I was wondering if there is any way that we can backup the os while running it in a raspberry pi without removing the ssd/sd card from the pi. Like live backup without having external storage. for example if I have 250gb ssd that has os installed in it, is there any way I can back it up regularly without shutting the pi or removing the ssd? I mean live backup.
I don’t remember having done that. This is an alternative that may work with a running os. Raspberry Pi OS. Backup, Shrink and Restore to SD, USB or SSD. Raspberry Pi 400, Pi 4. th-cam.com/video/00ck25k_lgw/w-d-xo.html Did you try and see if Pi safe does what you need?
Hey Lee this is great! This is all I need to make a clone of my sd card. Now comes the interesting question of the morning. When I use Gparted, I noticed that their is a triage with a warning on it where the key should be. Sometimes it shows up and sometimes it doesn't. My question is, how can I enlarge the boot disk anyway? Thanks
@@leepspvideo Bro you new video was not coming so I decided to reply you, please read full reply because I wanted a video on a very interesting topic that is building a mini drone with camera. Please if you can make it, it will be very helpful for all, and please use fs i6 transmitter and receiver. Thank You.
@leepspvideo I like that tool but with TwisterOS on a 240gb SSD it takes eons to read then compress.. Although used space is no bigger than 8gb.. Sometimes System hangs n reboots.. This is mostly ideal for small OS not 240GB SSD...
If you use gparted to resize the partition to say 16gb and leave free-space at the end of the SSD, pisafe will ignore the 224gb free-space and go much faster.
I wish the script builder put this code to the end of extracting to an sd card : "raspi-config --expand-rootfs" this will expand the sd card to it's maximum capacity, you dont have to use gparted anymore and it's a single line of code. Do you know if this works with Pinn OS too? I know (i've tested this) that Pinn OS can be compressed very well with 7z or Zip compression tools without using a shrinker like pishrink or whatever, just use win32imager then compress it with 7z, just a tip.....
just to confirm, it does not look like this will piShrink a card backup that does not have a pi OS on it (tried to piSafe an internal card from an Anbernic 351MP, adn it started but then gave an error that "contains exfat partition... unable to shrink this type of image" - do you happen to know another program that can backup an sd card so it's only the size of the used space - like piShrink does for a pi img? Great PiSafe though, love the step-by-step and how it works otherwise!
I've been using PiSafe very successfully for a while, as I've said before well pleased. Recently I backed up a SD card that was working perfectly with a Pi Zero W. When I went to use it again in the original Zero it didn't work, the LED flickers a couple of time and then is not lit. But when inserted in a Pi 4 it works without problem. When inserted in a brand new Zero it does not boot. I've used official Raspberry Pi power supplies. I've also tried restoring the PiSafe image onto a brand new Gigastore SD card with the same results. Please, do you have any thoughts on what might have happened? Thanks Mike
Is there an option to leave folders out of the backup? If I wanted to not backup the VIDEO folder for example, can this ealsily be done with this tool? For me, this is all I can see that is missing.
Another program to go to pi apps... By the way: beginner manjaro user here thinking in migrating to raspibian... Does the 32bits version+pi apps = twisterOS minus theme twister?
@@leepspvideo ive asked because you recently said youve changed to twister as main theme... ive found the xfce theme to be kinda unpolished and never got the retropie to work lol. My experience i guess
sort of. you can get wine from pi-apps that is almost as good as the one on Twister if not the same, and most apps that are in Twister can be installed from pi-apps. using Twister is just a way better experience then installing RPiOS and pi-apps and then installing alll the apps. at the end of the day its personal preference though.
This shows some of my essentials Custom Raspberry Pi OS. Create a backup Restore to SD, USB or SSD. Raspberry Pi 4. th-cam.com/video/pPTaozHIQeU/w-d-xo.html
I haven’t tried for a while. Here is an alternative way. Raspberry Pi OS. Backup, Shrink and Restore to SD, USB or SSD. Raspberry Pi 400, Pi 4. th-cam.com/video/00ck25k_lgw/w-d-xo.html
@@leepspvideo got it working with piSafe - just had to format drive as exFAT on a Windows PC, and label the drive name without spaces - then it seemed to work. :)
One thing that I've always wondered, as I'm not a Linux expert, when you view the restored image using GParted, if you don't expand the existing partition to the full size of the disk, but instead create a separate partition that uses the remaining unallocated space specifically to store data on, do the backup/restore utilities allow you to specify an individual partition that you want to backup? This would be useful in my case where I restored to a 500GB SSD boot drive, which I then store a lot of videos and game files on, but when I make the backup image, I would prefer not to require another 500GB SSD when I only want to clone the OS configuration itself which is less than 8GB, and not clone the actual data? I've not tested this scenario myself yet, but I was wondering if anyone else had?
If I'm understanding you right, you want to have a data partition on the same boot drive...I think when you compress the boot it will do the whole partition as say /dev/sda. The data partition would be /dev/sdb, and not imaged, but not 100% sure on it. Honestly with the price of drives etc. I would use a cheap SSD like the Kingston A400 etc and use it as the boot drive for about $25/256GB and a ssd to usb3 cable adapter. Then use the other drive for data. If you start messing around with boot drives and images. Disconnect your data drive and remove the human error element. You can also run your /home folder off the data drive and have everything instantly back to the way you had it. Vs the img which is a snapshot of that point in time. Having your data on a separate drive is always safer. Make sure to have at least 2 other copies of your important data. 1 onsite and 1 offsite 3 copies total for best results.
This is the method I use Raspberry Pi OS. Backup, Shrink and Restore to SD, USB or SSD. Raspberry Pi 400, Pi 4. th-cam.com/video/00ck25k_lgw/w-d-xo.html
@@leepspvideo thx much. I had reviewed this one earlier today. I think I am in a bit of a catch 22. My SSD is my boot drive and is configured just the way I want it so that is the one I want to image, but the image will be as large as to source and so will not fit on the desktop. I don’t have another 1TB SSD to use as a target. I am starting to think I will need to boot with a freshly imaged SD card, add all the tools you showed, shrink the partition on the SSD to less than the available space on the new SD card and then create the SSD image. I can then save that and restore the partition on the SSD. Does that make sense? Or am I missing something? I won’t be able to try it until I get a new SD card. I seemed to have fried my current one.
If the ssd is mostly empty, use gparted to shrink the partition and leave free space at the end of the drive. Pisafe will ignore the free space at the end of the drive.
I use a 240 gb ssd for my Pi and only use 10gb at the time. But when I try to backup with PiSafe it will read all 240 gb. Can I make Pisafe only backup used space?
I’m not sure. I don’t see what Pi’s are supported in the GitHub. You could try this method Raspberry Pi OS. Backup, Shrink and Restore to SD, USB or SSD. Raspberry Pi 400, Pi 4. th-cam.com/video/00ck25k_lgw/w-d-xo.html
Pubg didn’t work for me How to setup and install Android 11 with Google Play Store & Overclock. Raspberry Pi 4 / 400. th-cam.com/video/n2ZS1XmigaY/w-d-xo.html Android 11 Games and Emulation test. Raspberry Pi 4 / 400 Konstakang Lineage 18.1. th-cam.com/video/m-4IkzosO3E/w-d-xo.html
@@ShamShirodkar It is better to boot from a different drive than you are backing up. BUT if you want to backup your live root (boot) disk, you have to enable it in settings. Settings/Options/turn OFF hide_root_device . If that does not do it. Open a terminal type in lsblk and send me the results.
RE3 In this repository you will find the complete source code for GTA III (main branch) and GTA Vice City (Miami branch) It has been tested and works on Windows, GNU / Linux and FreeBSD, x86, amd64, arm and arm64. github.com/GTAmodding/re3
5:37 Compressed from '7.3G' to '1.6G' in 16 mins and 24 seconds, Written right in front of you, what a great all-in-one program
This little Tool is Insane! Excellent! Many thanks ro Richard and Lee.
This great! I used raspberry sd card copier to copy my 1TB NVMe OS to a small card then used pisafe to back it up to an image. Large drive install backup solved!
Thanks so much for this, After spending a month on and off trying to backup my Pihole which is on a 64GB SD Card (Which is what was included in the package) using things like Win32 Disk Imager and command line backups, only to be told that the image was too big to write to another 64GB Card or failing to boot, I was on the verge of giving up, But then I came across this video.
It worked first time and created a compressed backup of around 1.4GB and once written to another card and put back in the Pi it booted right away, So I may well see if I can now write the backup to a smaller card.
Great little program and excellent well explained tutorial, Thanks again and look forward to watching more of your video's.
Thanks for the heads up on this. Just installed it into Twister (my OS of choice). Haven't used PiSafe yet but had an explore. In settings there is an option to change the default directory path, so I imagine if you haven't got enough room on your OS drive to save your backup you can send your file to another connected storage device.
Leepspvideo, thanks for the great review! Glad I can contribute back to the Linux and raspberry pi community.
Just saw this, looks great. Will it work on raspberry pi 4 with Ubuntu server 22.04? Cheers
@@kuzey3d767 Yes, it works with almost any Linux. It reduces the image size best if the last partition is ext4 and not a swap partition. I don’t remember how Ubuntu partitions by default.
Excellent Richard Reed
That was a great RPi 4 video in a long time.Recently I had noticed a sudden drop in new videos for the RPi 4 as compared to 8 or 9 months ago from most of the TH-cam channels that covered the Rpi4. The operating systems and other potential projects for the RPi seems to have reached a saturation point.
This is great news that you found this I was just looking for a way to do this and of course you have a video lol! Greatful I am keep up the great work! This will go great with my Pi4 m.2 setup.
I agree, at last a decent imaging tool that does the business.
Thank you for this excellent review. I am going to try Pi-Safe myself, it seems like a well-programmed, efficient solution for Pi backups!
It will auto expand the restored operating system when you boot from it...
Greetings mr.Reed,
Can you please put usb support aswell?
That would be super upgrade for many!
FINALY! A decent imaging tool.
Hi i am from India
A bit of a todo about microsoft infesting rasberrypi os, a vid on removing it would be good.
If you're backing up a 256GB MicroSD card then you need to be running PiSafe on a 512GB MicroSD.
PiSafe first writes a full size copy of the drive getting backed up. The shrink is then done on this copy so you always need a larger MicroSD to run PiSafe.
I like this, but I need a process that lets me backup a large SSD. For example I use 1TB drive on my RPI4 but with only 25GB of data used. I have to use an x86_64 Ubuntu system with large drives to work on this and it's a pain
Only option is to shrink the 1tb down to 30gb or so (using gparted), then copy it, then re-size it back to 1tb. This is how I do it with my 1tb m.2
This looks great, the only problem is it can only create an image of your OS if you're booting off an SD card. I boot off a USB connected SSD and the software can't see the drive the OS is installed on. A shame as I'd really like to use it.
Raspberry Pi OS. Backup, Shrink and Restore to SD, USB or SSD. Raspberry Pi 400, Pi 4.
th-cam.com/video/00ck25k_lgw/w-d-xo.html
The latest version should be able to work if you boot from USB and then want to backup the SD card.
Great explanation. I was wondering if there is any way that we can backup the os while running it in a raspberry pi without removing the ssd/sd card from the pi. Like live backup without having external storage. for example if I have 250gb ssd that has os installed in it, is there any way I can back it up regularly without shutting the pi or removing the ssd? I mean live backup.
I don’t remember having done that. This is an alternative that may work with a running os.
Raspberry Pi OS. Backup, Shrink and Restore to SD, USB or SSD. Raspberry Pi 400, Pi 4.
th-cam.com/video/00ck25k_lgw/w-d-xo.html
Did you try and see if Pi safe does what you need?
Lots of USB Flash Drives are Not Blank/Empty, they usually come with back-up software or encryption software or pdf manual, or anything
Which will probably not help you on a raspberry pi, don't you think?
PiSafe will wipe it all away...I think.
Hey Lee this is great! This is all I need to make a clone of my sd card. Now comes the interesting question of the morning. When I use Gparted, I noticed that their is a triage with a warning on it where the key should be. Sometimes it shows up and sometimes it doesn't. My question is, how can I enlarge the boot disk anyway? Thanks
Might find the answers here
gparted.org/documentation.php
to fix the exfat error, you can type in terminal: sudo apt install exfat-utils
after a reboot the OS will recognize exfat drives.
Yes, I did that in Twister before
@@leepspvideo actually I think Twister has that by default.
It was added in 1.9.2
@@leepspvideo Bro you new video was not coming so I decided to reply you, please read full reply because I wanted a video on a very interesting topic that is building a mini drone with camera. Please if you can make it, it will be very helpful for all, and please use fs i6 transmitter and receiver. Thank You.
Yay, eay easier than dd,ing pishrinking and zipping manually. :o)
Just the tool I was looking for
@leepspvideo I like that tool but with TwisterOS on a 240gb SSD it takes eons to read then compress.. Although used space is no bigger than 8gb.. Sometimes System hangs n reboots.. This is mostly ideal for small OS not 240GB SSD...
If you use gparted to resize the partition to say 16gb and leave free-space at the end of the SSD, pisafe will ignore the 224gb free-space and go much faster.
I wish the script builder put this code to the end of extracting to an sd card : "raspi-config --expand-rootfs" this will expand the sd card to it's maximum capacity, you dont have to use gparted anymore and it's a single line of code. Do you know if this works with Pinn OS too? I know (i've tested this) that Pinn OS can be compressed very well with 7z or Zip compression tools without using a shrinker like pishrink or whatever, just use win32imager then compress it with 7z, just a tip.....
Thanks, I was looking for this.
Nice, will have to try it out.
How do you backup your running OS (on a SD card or USB)? E.g. on another SD card or USB stick (like as target for this tool)?
I think this may support it as you can enable root in Pi-safe
In settings turn on root-backup
Excellent video. Is there anyway I can have this process scheduled with crontab?
It’s not something I have tried
Yes, many people have. Use the CLI.
just to confirm, it does not look like this will piShrink a card backup that does not have a pi OS on it (tried to piSafe an internal card from an Anbernic 351MP, adn it started but then gave an error that "contains exfat partition... unable to shrink this type of image" - do you happen to know another program that can backup an sd card so it's only the size of the used space - like piShrink does for a pi img? Great PiSafe though, love the step-by-step and how it works otherwise!
Try windiskimager
th-cam.com/video/pPTaozHIQeU/w-d-xo.html
I've been using PiSafe very successfully for a while, as I've said before well pleased. Recently I backed up a SD card that was working perfectly with a Pi Zero W. When I went to use it again in the original Zero it didn't work, the LED flickers a couple of time and then is not lit. But when inserted in a Pi 4 it works without problem. When inserted in a brand new Zero it does not boot. I've used official Raspberry Pi power supplies. I've also tried restoring the PiSafe image onto a brand new Gigastore SD card with the same results. Please, do you have any thoughts on what might have happened? Thanks Mike
I’m not sure try flashing to some more sd cards
Is there an option to leave folders out of the backup? If I wanted to not backup the VIDEO folder for example, can this ealsily be done with this tool? For me, this is all I can see that is missing.
@@jaywhitely8288 I have never tried
@leepspvideo Thanks for replying, it would be great if this becomes an option. I remain hopeful. 🙏🏽😎
But does it work with a USB HDD / SSD? Since USB-Boot works I don't use SD-Cards anymore .....
Yes I wrote the image to a usb stick
I think the question was - can this backup FROM an SSD? If not, I am asking because I avoid sd cards at all costs now...
Yes
Another program to go to pi apps... By the way: beginner manjaro user here thinking in migrating to raspibian... Does the 32bits version+pi apps = twisterOS minus theme twister?
No, there is loads more to Twister OS
Twister is da shizz for pi4....
@@leepspvideo ive asked because you recently said youve changed to twister as main theme... ive found the xfce theme to be kinda unpolished and never got the retropie to work lol. My experience i guess
sort of.
you can get wine from pi-apps that is almost as good as the one on Twister if not the same, and most apps that are in Twister can be installed from pi-apps.
using Twister is just a way better experience then installing RPiOS and pi-apps and then installing alll the apps.
at the end of the day its personal preference though.
Also, twister comes with cores right?
Perfect thank you.
I'd like something like this to compress large files or images > 4g so I can write them to fat 32 formatted devices....any ideas?
Try this
Raspberry Pi OS. Backup, Shrink and Restore to SD, USB or SSD. Raspberry Pi 400, Pi 4.
th-cam.com/video/00ck25k_lgw/w-d-xo.html
Hi. You can make video about must have software on RPi.
This shows some of my essentials
Custom Raspberry Pi OS. Create a backup Restore to SD, USB or SSD. Raspberry Pi 4.
th-cam.com/video/pPTaozHIQeU/w-d-xo.html
I see you can change the default folder, can you not choose a mounted usb as the path? Doesn’t seem to work for me…
I haven’t tried for a while. Here is an alternative way.
Raspberry Pi OS. Backup, Shrink and Restore to SD, USB or SSD. Raspberry Pi 400, Pi 4.
th-cam.com/video/00ck25k_lgw/w-d-xo.html
@@leepspvideo got it working with piSafe - just had to format drive as exFAT on a Windows PC, and label the drive name without spaces - then it seemed to work. :)
Doesn't seem to allow backup of Pi on USB drives. Also doesn't seem to recognize my SD card with Ubuntu for PC.
The newest version should do this. If you are backing up your root drive, you have to turn off "hide-root-drive".
Does this also work on other OS-es. For example my PopOS ??
I have backed up many different operating systems with it.
Without a to the github repository I can not link it on mobile.....
Could the backup be restored with PI Imager?
Yes
doesn’t the pi-shrink he runs in there automatically grow the partition on first boot?
It didn’t for me I expanded the partition in the video
Yes it usually does.
One thing that I've always wondered, as I'm not a Linux expert, when you view the restored image using GParted, if you don't expand the existing partition to the full size of the disk, but instead create a separate partition that uses the remaining unallocated space specifically to store data on, do the backup/restore utilities allow you to specify an individual partition that you want to backup?
This would be useful in my case where I restored to a 500GB SSD boot drive, which I then store a lot of videos and game files on, but when I make the backup image, I would prefer not to require another 500GB SSD when I only want to clone the OS configuration itself which is less than 8GB, and not clone the actual data?
I've not tested this scenario myself yet, but I was wondering if anyone else had?
If I'm understanding you right, you want to have a data partition on the same boot drive...I think when you compress the boot it will do the whole partition as say /dev/sda. The data partition would be /dev/sdb, and not imaged, but not 100% sure on it. Honestly with the price of drives etc. I would use a cheap SSD like the Kingston A400 etc and use it as the boot drive for about $25/256GB and a ssd to usb3 cable adapter. Then use the other drive for data. If you start messing around with boot drives and images. Disconnect your data drive and remove the human error element. You can also run your /home folder off the data drive and have everything instantly back to the way you had it. Vs the img which is a snapshot of that point in time. Having your data on a separate drive is always safer. Make sure to have at least 2 other copies of your important data. 1 onsite and 1 offsite 3 copies total for best results.
@@mrmotofy /dev/sda is a device name. /dev/sda1 is a partition name. Creating a second partition on /dev/sda will give you /dev/sda2.
does it work on multi os by pinn? thank you very much.
I haven’t tried
Why would you want to use all of the space on the SD card for the operating system? Why not just have some unallocated space?
The os can’t use unallocated space. Most operating systems make use of all of the storage
@@leepspvideo thank you!
I am running my pi off of a 1TB Samsung T5 SSD. Any suggestions on how to back it up?
This is the method I use
Raspberry Pi OS. Backup, Shrink and Restore to SD, USB or SSD. Raspberry Pi 400, Pi 4.
th-cam.com/video/00ck25k_lgw/w-d-xo.html
@@leepspvideo thx much. I had reviewed this one earlier today. I think I am in a bit of a catch 22. My SSD is my boot drive and is configured just the way I want it so that is the one I want to image, but the image will be as large as to source and so will not fit on the desktop. I don’t have another 1TB SSD to use as a target. I am starting to think I will need to boot with a freshly imaged SD card, add all the tools you showed, shrink the partition on the SSD to less than the available space on the new SD card and then create the SSD image. I can then save that and restore the partition on the SSD. Does that make sense? Or am I missing something? I won’t be able to try it until I get a new SD card. I seemed to have fried my current one.
@@randyfolsom should work, May be a long process though. Some sort of incremental backup is probably better. It not something I have covered.
If the ssd is mostly empty, use gparted to shrink the partition and leave free space at the end of the drive. Pisafe will ignore the free space at the end of the drive.
Nice program, but it does not seem to backup an ssd where I have pi installed. Has anyone found different?
In options turn on “allow root backup”
@@richardreed6868 Thanks Richard. I tried this before posting and it didn't work, but I'll try again.
How to install PC games on raspberry pi 4 without pc
Search my channel for box86, Dosbian and Pikiss
I use a 240 gb ssd for my Pi and only use 10gb at the time. But when I try to backup with PiSafe it will read all 240 gb.
Can I make Pisafe only backup used space?
I’m not sure. Try looking at the GitHub
It can do it... but it will read the ENTIRE 240GB in first, then shrink it to 10GB, then compress it. It will take some time. I was getting 1-2GB/min.
The updated pisafe will ignore free space at the end of the drive. Use gparted to shrink the partition before using pisafe.
How do I shrink a partition correctly Winther GParted? And Can I do it on a running system?
With GParted…
Would this be a good solution for Backup of a PI 3B+?
I’m not sure. I don’t see what Pi’s are supported in the GitHub.
You could try this method
Raspberry Pi OS. Backup, Shrink and Restore to SD, USB or SSD. Raspberry Pi 400, Pi 4.
th-cam.com/video/00ck25k_lgw/w-d-xo.html
@@leepspvideo l will give Backup/ Shrink on the weekend. Thanks
Yes it should
@@richardreed6868 Thanks, Richard.
Will it work on Arm64 distros ?
That's my question too. UBUNTU 20.10 64 bits???
Maybe Ubuntu supports Pi Shrink
It works with raspbian64 which is in beta. Probably works with any Debian. Works with raspberry pi desktop i386/64.
I had no luck on ubuntu-mate 64 bit :(
Can this be used to back up an SSD??
I used it for a usb drive, should be fine with an ssd
Yes
How to install pubg or any mobile games in raspberry pi 4 please bro
Pubg didn’t work for me
How to setup and install Android 11 with Google Play Store & Overclock. Raspberry Pi 4 / 400.
th-cam.com/video/n2ZS1XmigaY/w-d-xo.html
Android 11 Games and Emulation test. Raspberry Pi 4 / 400 Konstakang Lineage 18.1.
th-cam.com/video/m-4IkzosO3E/w-d-xo.html
How do you backup from a SSD?
Raspberry Pi OS. Backup, Shrink and Restore to SD, USB or SSD. Raspberry Pi 400, Pi 4.
th-cam.com/video/00ck25k_lgw/w-d-xo.html
With the latest version, the ssd should show up as an option for backup.
@@richardreed6868 I am using an Argon One M.2 case. Pi-Safe doesn't detect my boot SSD to backup
@@ShamShirodkar It is better to boot from a different drive than you are backing up. BUT if you want to backup your live root (boot) disk, you have to enable it in settings. Settings/Options/turn OFF hide_root_device . If that does not do it. Open a terminal type in lsblk and send me the results.
@@freddepena6723 Worked. Thanks👍
RE3 In this repository you will find the complete source code for GTA III (main branch) and GTA Vice City (Miami branch)
It has been tested and works on Windows, GNU / Linux and FreeBSD, x86, amd64, arm and arm64. github.com/GTAmodding/re3