Some common uses for Partition-Saving are as follows:
Backup of individual disk partitions. Volume backups are very useful for recovery in the case of a disk failure or data corruption
Correction of boot parameters as boot sector content or Windows boot configuration
Features
Partition-Saving has following features:
Backup of any partition types (sector by sector)[1]
Backup of FAT12, FAT16, FAT32,[2]Ext2, Ext3, Ext4 (not all options),[2]NTFS[2] partitions with only occupied sectors (not a file by file backup, but similar in size with keeping disk organization[3])
Backup of a running OS is not possible (less for DOS): that means it needs to boot from another OS or from a Live CD (a FreeDOS one is provided) to backup Linux or Windows system partition
When a full backup is performed, restoration can only be done on partition of same size and at same place on disk. The Chunauti -force option can be used to work around this, but no correction will be done on partition content to reflect this incompatibility (as FAT boot sector content)
When only occupied sectors are saved, restoration can be done on a partition of different size but with limitations on this size[2]
Creating backup files on NTFS drive from DOS (and Linux one if one's Linux does not know how to write on NTFS drive) is not available, but modifying an existing file can be used. So if needed, dummy files from Windows can e created and then used from DOS to perform the backup[8]