Clonezilla Live, a Linux distribution based on DRBL, Partclone, and udpcast that allows users to do bare metal backup and recovery, has just reached version 2.2.2-35 and is now ready for testing.
The Clonezilla developers have just released a new development version for their Linux distro, bringing a few updated packages and a fix for an important issue.
"The underlying GNU/Linux operating system was upgraded. This release is based on the Debian Sid repository, as of April 15, 2014," reads the official changelog.
The Linux kernel hasn't changed in a few editions, but the new development version is still an improvement. For example, parted has been updated to version 2.3-20, drbl has been updated to version 2.8.10-drbl1, clonezilla has been updated to version 3.10.2-drbl1, and a fat crash has been fixed.
Clonezilla Live is a Linux distribution that does only one thing: bare metal backup and recovery. It's very similar to other older cloning software, such as True Image or Norton Ghost.
A complete list of changes, improvements, and fixes can be found in the official announcement. You can download Clonezilla Live 2.2.2-37 right now from Softpedia.
Remember that this is a development version and it should NOT be installed on production machines. It is intended for testing purposes only.