As long as you document your changelogs well!
On Wed, 2011-11-02 at 06:06 +0400, Dmitriy Petrov wrote:
> Yeah. But `git log` is pretty good :)
>
> On 11/02/2011 04:39 AM, Tanner Danzey wrote:
> > On Tue, 2011-11-01 at 19:19 -0500, Brian Kroth wrote:
> > Not to mention finding a previous snapshot.
> > "deffee46b0ef8c504498a002443ab23019ee0cc9" isn't really a very good
> > indicator of when said backup was taken. :P
> >> Tanner Danzey<[email protected]> 2011-11-01 18:50:
> >>> Generally, using git is a bad idea for backups (from what I've read)
> >>>
> >>> git stores it's data uncompressed and inefficiently. If you are backing
> >>> up things like configuration files or web pages that can change a lot,
> >>> sure, but for storing binary files with git, I'd recommend against it,
> >>> since binaries vary greatly from version to version (unlike text files)
> >>> and you'd just accumulate tons of useless binaries. programs like
> >>> duplicity and rsync are great for backups, though.
> >> Agreed. There are lots of other spin offs, each with their own pros and
> >> cons: rsnapshot, rdiff, etc. I personally use some homegrown perl,
> >> rsync, and zfs snapshots (transparent compression, dedup, each snapshot
> >> looks like a full backup, etc.). I'm sure you could use something like
> >> btrfs in that scheme as well.
> >>
> >> However, using git, hg, svn, whatever, for storing your config file
> >> repositories for something like cfengine, puppet, whatever is a good
> >> idea, but that's a different issue than backups.
> >>
> >>> in all, the drawbacks outweigh the benefits of using a code management
> >>> tool to back up entire systems...
> >>>
> >>> On Tue, 2011-11-01 at 23:16 +0200, Andrey Utkin wrote:
> >>>> Hi all! Long live the gentoo masters!
> >>>> I'd like to hear from anybody who uses (or tried) git on production
> >>>> servers for saving the points of possible restore. Please, share your
> >>>> practices, like commit patterns, .gitignore contents, etc. I've begun
> >>>> to use it a couple of days ago for that, and pointed out some issues.
> >>>> I control the whole root fs with git.
> >>>> The problematic part is bunch of files that update frequently, but i
> >>>> am not familiar with them and i'm not sure if system will load without
> >>>> them.
> >>>> Namely, these are files in /usr/lib64/portage/pym/
> >>>> Also wtmp, utmp files hurt - likely without them box won't boot, but
> >>>> they shouldn't be in git control, too, coz they update often.
> >>>> Thus, backup restoring requires not git repo only, but also some tar of
> >>>> base?
> >
> >
>
>