The easiest way is to use Carbonite.  I have had to replace 2 computers over 
the 
last few months after crashes and Carbonite saved me.  The Rbase alternative is 
to use FTPClient to automate a upload to some remote server.  I use a freebee 
called ScriptFTP and wrote a simple script that I do the following
--Backup the database
--Upload to my website using ScriptFTP
I automate it thru Windows tasklauncher
This is simple and works fine for me
Tom Hart



________________________________
From: Javier Valencia <[email protected]>
To: RBASE-L Mailing List <[email protected]>
Sent: Mon, June 27, 2011 1:39:55 PM
Subject: [RBASE-L] - Backup Practices.

 
 A week ago, a client (public agency) had it server flooded and I mean that 
literally. The server room has a dedicated (elevated) AC unit and the server 
is/was located right under it. There is a tray under the AC unit to catch the 
condensation and a hose to direct the water from the tray to a drain, I had 
told 
them repeatedly in the past that the configuration was a recipe for disaster, 
and sure enough, last weekend the drain hose and drain clogged and the server 
got soaked; it will be at least another week before they have a new server 
installed and running. Luckily, I had downloaded the database a couple of days 
before so there will not be massive data loss, since their current procedure is 
to backup weekly to tape.
I have a procedure in place to backup the database nightly and what I would 
like 
to do is set up a procedure (from within R:Base) that after the database is 
backed up, it sends a copy off-site; the 4 *.rx_ files are under 500 MB, so it 
is not too big. I think I would prefer not send it to one of the other County 
servers, as I am not sure their MIS department is competent enough not to screw 
it up. Has anyone implemented a procedure like this? Any suggestions? Advice? 
Caveats?
 
Javier,
 
Javier Valencia, PE
913-829-0888 Office
913-915-3137 Cell
913-649-2904 Fax
Visit us at www.vtgonline.com 

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