Bob,
My Suggestion:
All local servers must be on 2.15 war file then we create a SFTP
account on cloud server then we can use filezilla from the local
server to download the backup from the cloud server.
I know it is crude but that help for now.
What is your take Bob.

On 12/18/14, Bob Jolliffe <bobjolli...@gmail.com> wrote:
> Hi Gerald
>
> We tested this when I was in Sierra Leone and we were finding serious
> problems with bandwidth getting the data back to Sierra Leone.
>
> So you are going to have to think carefully about when and how often to
> synch.  Currently your database files are very small as you don't have much
> data on your cloud server, but it will soon grow.  I suspect "at least
> twice a day" sounds unrealistic.
>
> The way I typically do it is to first create an account on the backup
> server.  Make sure that the account running your dhis instance can login to
> the backup server without a password by creating an ssh key pair and
> installing the public key on the backup server account.  Then you can
> simply the rsync the backups directory (eg /var/lib/dhis2/dhis/backups) to
> a directory on the backup server using cron.   In fact if you look in
> /usr/bin/dhis2-backup you will see that the commands are already there to
> do this, just commented out.  This would synch with the backup server after
> taking the nightly backup.
>
> This simple (and slightly lazy) setup has worked fine, and continues to
> work, in a number of places.  But there are a number of reasons you might
> want to do something different.
>
> (i)  you might want to pull from the backup server rather than push to it.
> Particularly as the backup server might not be as reliably always online as
> the production server.  This would require a slightly different variation
> on the above, but using the same principle of creating an ssh keypair and
> letting rsync do the work.
>
> (ii) rsync is a really great and simple tool, but it is sadly quite slow.
> If you are bandwidth stressed and your database is growing it might not be
> the best solution.  Works fine when bandwidth is not a critical issue.  The
> trouble is it doesn't really take into account the incremental nature of
> the data ie. you backup everything every time (besides the ephemeral tables
> like analytics, aggregated etc).  In which case you need to start thinking
> smarter and maybe a little bit more complicated.  One approach I have been
> considering, (but not yet tried) is to make a copy of the metadata export
> every night and then just pull all the datavalues with a lastupdated
> greater than the last time you pulled.  That is going to reduce the size of
> the backup quite considerably.  In theory this is probably even possible to
> do through the api rather than directly through psql which might be fine if
> you choose the time of day/night carefully.  I'd probably do it with psql
> at the backed,
>
> So there are a few options.  The first being the simplest and also the
> crudest.  Any other thoughts?
>
> Cheers
> Bob
>
> On 18 December 2014 at 05:07, gerald thomas <gerald17...@gmail.com> wrote:
>>
>> Dear All,
>> Sierra Leone wants to finally migrate to an online server (External
>> server hosted outside the Ministry) but we will like to create a daily
>> backup of that server locally in case anything goes wrong.
>> My questions:
>>
>> 1.  We need a help with a script that can create a sync between the
>> External Server and the Local Server (at least twice a day)
>>
>> 2. Is there something we should know from past experiences about
>> hosting servers on the cloud
>>
>> Please feel free to share anything and I will be grateful to learn new
>> things about dhis2
>>
>> --
>> Regards,
>>
>> Gerald
>>
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>


-- 
Regards,

Gerald

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