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On 06/13/2012 07:03 AM, Dan Ritter wrote: > On Tue, Jun 12, 2012 at 11:00:27PM -0400, Edward Ned Harvey wrote: >> On mac & windows, I'm accustomed to Time Machine and Acronis. Key features >> are: >> . Run in the background, low priority, no complaints from user about >> performance. >> . Daily (or more frequent) incrementals >> . Able to specify excludes >> . Able to restore whole system, or just a few individual files >> . User doesn't need IT assistance to restore a few individual files >> >> I'm willing to compromise on the last two points, and *maybe* even >> compromise on the excludes. But there can be no compromise on the first two >> points. >> >> I'm trying to find a suitable, similar backup solution for linux (ubuntu >> desktop in particular). Up till now, the best I've done is dump (ext4 >> filesystem.) Unfortunately, even when I nice dump to the fullest extent, >> it's still too resource intensive. Users complain tremendously, as long as >> it's running. > rsnapshot with a --bw-limit adjusted to take up less than half > of a user's disk IO will satisfy 1,2,3 and 5. It's not great at > whole-system restoration, although it can be done in combination > with a rescue disk. It excels at "no IT assistance needed" > partial restores. I also use rsnapshot. I have it scheduled to back up every 2 hours. Also, it backs up file-by-file using rsync -link-dest so that duplicate files are all hard linked. http://rsnapshot.org/ Rsnapshot is usually included in distros. Also, I am using to backup my system at work. You can also set up a kickstart file (fedora) so if your system gets completely destroyed you can do a system install with all the necessary options, then restore from your backup. I'm only really interested in my /home LVM. -- Jerry Feldman <gaf at blu.org> Boston Linux and Unix PGP key id:3BC1EB90 PGP Key fingerprint: 49E2 C52A FC5A A31F 8D66 C0AF 7CEA 30FC 3BC1 EB90
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