Hi On Tue, 10 Nov 2015 10:21:18 -0600, Russell Poyner <russell.poy...@wisc.edu> wrote: > I have a single BackupPC 3.3 backing up 110 machines. We are in the > process of getting a second server and I'm wondering if it's possible > to split the pool to move machines to the new server without losing > their backup history.
This make me recall that i also had a similar problem and that all this could be solved with "remote pools" So this is a new feature, where a central backuppc server could use other remote pool to store the backups. So imagine one main office with 2 other remote offices (and with slow internet connections). The main office would backup to it own storage, but when backing up the remote offices, it would connect to a branch backuppc located in the remote office and start the backup of the remote office machines locally. On each backup, report back to the main backuppc. This allow one to have a central backuppc with the list of all backups have 3 different pools (to keep things simple, not shared, hardlinks are unique only in each pool). One can make backups of different kind of machines or remote branches or expand the backup pool to several machines. This also allow one to "migrate" backups by reconfiguring a host from one pool to another and wait some days to have new backups on the new pool and expire old backups on the old pool. Yes, this would require a new full total backup on the new pool, but any server migration always require a full read© of the data, one way or another. This would help several setups and would not require many changes. Each node is almost independent of the other, host config could be shared via ssh/rsync. Backuppc would need code for map a host to a pool, connect to that pool to start the backup (again ssh to locally run backuppc commands) and report (pull or push) the status to main backuppc (or all nodes if no master setup)... again, ssh could be used to transfer status to the other nodes. Logs and browser backups would use the ssh and request the same info on the remote backuppc node. So does this sound good and simple solution for a flexible pool management Thanks higuita -- Naturally the common people don't want war... but after all it is the leaders of a country who determine the policy, and it is always a simple matter to drag the people along, whether it is a democracy, or a fascist dictatorship, or a parliament, or a communist dictatorship. Voice or no voice, the people can always be brought to the bidding of the leaders. That is easy. All you have to do is tell them they are being attacked, and denounce the pacifists for lack of patriotism and exposing the country to danger. It works the same in every country. -- Hermann Goering, Nazi and war criminal, 1883-1946
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