You don't need much of a machine to be a Linux backup server. I built mine from 
a salvage box (a discarded PIII machine) and a couple of EIDE HDDs. The OS went 
on a 80 Gbyte drive and the data is stored on a 500 Gbyte drive. The machine is 
located in another building on campus. My master server keeps the backup drive 
mounted and runs mirrordir several times a week to keep all data and key 
application dirs mirrored. The automated mirroring can be invoked as a cron 
job. If you care to be clever with your backup script you could keep several 
mirrors on the backup server in case things go south during a mirror job. There 
is probably no reason you couldn't run the mirror process from the backup 
server. The main pitfall is to write the script to determine if the remote dirs 
are in fact mounted. I have the script check for a hidden file placed on the 
remote server for that purpose. My total cost was jut for the HDDs, about $300. 
Works great.

Cheers,

Roger Rowlett
Professor
Colgate University
Dept of Chemistry

-----Original Message-----

From:  "Green, Todd" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Subj:  [ccp4bb] off topic - back-up servers
Date:  Mon Dec 10, 2007 5:26 pm
Size:  3K
To:  "[email protected]" <[email protected]>

Hello All, 
 
Sorry for the non-crystallography post, but I thought this was a good place to 
ask my question since some discussion regarding archiving a few months back 
skirted my topic, albeit barely. I have a question about back-up servers. I 
want to spend between 2-4 grand(could be a little more if necessary or less if 
possible) for something that will do back-ups of the machines in our 
lab(currently 4 linux machines and a couple of pcs). I'd like for it to run 
linux and perform a backup weekly or possibly more often if necessary. I was 
thinking of something with mirrored drives(2 to 4 up to 750 GB each). Does 
anyone have any suggestions and/or pitfalls to watch out for in 
purchasing/setting up this type of thing? While I feel that I'm savy enough to 
set up a machine software-wise to perform this function, I must admit that 
"PERC this and Raid that" is a bit foreign to me. I just configured an 
example(rather blindly) on the Dell site. Any input would be appreciated? Feel 
free to tell me that th
 configuration is more than i'll need and/or is a load of crap. I just want 
something that will efficiently save the data on our computers. Feel free to 
email me directly unless you feel others would befit from the discussion. 
 
All the best and thanks in advance. 
Todd Green 
University of Alabama at Birmingham 
 
 
This configuration was around 2300 bucks: 
 
PowerEdge 840: 
Dual Core Intel® Pentium®E2160, 1.8GHz, 1MB Cache, 800MHz FSB           84E18   
        [223-1499]              1 
        Operating System: 
No Operating System             NOOS            [420-6320]              11 
        Memory: 
2GB DDR2,667MHz, 2x1GB Dual Ranked DIMMs                2G2D6D          
[311-5313]              3 
        Drive Cage Configuration: 
Chassis with Hot Swap Drives for PE 840         CHHS            [341-3900]      
        28 
        Hard Drive Configuration: 
Hot Plug Add-in PERC5i (SATA/SAS Contrl) supports 3-4 Hard Drives - RAID 5      
        HASR5           [341-3899]              27 
        Primary Hard Drive Controller: 
PERC 5i SAS internal Raid adapter, PCI -Express         PERC5I          
[341-3902]              9 
        Primary Hard drive: 
750GB 7.2K RPM Universal SATA 3Gbps 3.5-in HotPlug Hard Drive           750S2HP 
        [341-4429]              8 
        2nd Hard Drive: 
750GB 7.2K RPM Universal SATA 3Gbps 3.5-in HotPlug Hard Drive           750S2HP 
        [341-4429]              23 
        3rd Hard Drive: 
750GB 7.2K RPM Universal SATA 3Gbps 3.5-in HotPlug Hard Drive           750S2HP 
        [341-4429]              54 
        4th Hard Drive: 
750GB 7.2K RPM Universal SATA 3Gbps 3.5-in HotPlug Hard Drive           750S2HP 
        [341-4429]              51 
        Network Adapter: 
Onboard Single Gigabit Network Adapter, No TOE          OBNIC           
[430-2017]              13 
        TCP/IP Offload Engine Enablement: 
Broadcom® Dual Port TCP/IP Offload Engine Not Enabled           NTOEKEY         
[430-1765]              6 
        System Documentation: 
No Hard Copy Documentation, E-Docs only and OpenManage CD kit           EDOCS   
        [310-8209]              21 
        CD/DVD Drive: 
48x CDRW/DVD IDE Combo Drive, Half-Height               CDRWDVD         
[313-4451]              16 
        Floppy Drive: 
No Floppy Drive         NOFD            [341-2489]              10 
        Mouse: 
Optical Two-Button Mouse, USB, Black            USBOPT          [310-8172]      
        12 
        Keyboard: 
Keyboard, USB           USBK4           [310-8170]              4 
        Monitor: 
Dell E177FP, Flat Panel, 17.0 Inch Viewable Image Size          17LCD           
[320-5576]              5 

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