On 10/09/2014 07:32, Joseph wrote:
Thank you again. On a different subject. Do you have a good pointer on
how to backup a system.
Did it even occur to you at all to type that exact question into a
search engine and see what comes back?
Come on dude, we aren't here to do ALL your thinking for
Alan McKinnon wrote:
On 10/09/2014 07:32, Joseph wrote:
Thank you again. On a different subject. Do you have a good pointer on
how to backup a system.
Did it even occur to you at all to type that exact question into a
search engine and see what comes back?
Come on dude, we aren't here to
On Wednesday, September 10, 2014 02:47:26 AM Dale wrote:
Alan McKinnon wrote:
On 10/09/2014 07:32, Joseph wrote:
Thank you again. On a different subject. Do you have a good pointer
on
how to backup a system.
Did it even occur to you at all to type that exact question into a
search
J. Roeleveld wrote:
On Wednesday, September 10, 2014 02:47:26 AM Dale wrote:
Alan McKinnon wrote:
On 10/09/2014 07:32, Joseph wrote:
Thank you again. On a different subject. Do you have a good
pointer on
how to backup a system.
Did it even occur to you at all to type
On Wed, 10 Sep 2014 09:14:43 +0200, Alan McKinnon wrote:
Thank you again. On a different subject. Do you have a good pointer
on how to backup a system.
Did it even occur to you at all to type that exact question into a
search engine and see what comes back?
And if you then need to ask
On 10/09/2014 10:03, Dale wrote:
J. Roeleveld wrote:
On Wednesday, September 10, 2014 02:47:26 AM Dale wrote:
Alan McKinnon wrote:
On 10/09/2014 07:32, Joseph wrote:
Thank you again. On a different subject. Do you have a good
pointer on
how to backup a system.
Did it
On 10/09/2014 06:32, Joseph wrote:
On 09/10/14 06:10, Kerin Millar wrote:
snip
Thank you again. On a different subject. Do you have a good pointer on
how to backup a system.
I just had a HD crash so I selected a replacement SSD and I'm re
installing the software.
I had backup of /etc/ and
On 09/10/14 06:10, Kerin Millar wrote:
[snip]
I just extracted the files with tar...
I read your forum post and can see that you're (dangerously) extracting
directly into the root directory and that this is among the contents of
the archive:
./usr/lib/
./usr/lib/libbrcomplpr2.so
I
On Tuesday 27 May 2014 23:35:26 Alan McKinnon wrote:
On 27/05/2014 17:12, J. Roeleveld wrote:
I have a yearly (full), monthly, weekly and daily. Each incremental is
against the most recent one of itself or longer period.
That means having to keep multiple snapshots active, which I prefer to
On Tuesday 27 May 2014 11:32:22 Rich Freeman wrote:
On Tue, May 27, 2014 at 11:21 AM, J. Roeleveld jo...@antarean.org wrote:
Does anyone know how these will handle (and perform) with a possible 300+
snapshots per filesystem (or volume, as I think it's called)?
I can't speak for zfs. I had
On Wed, 28 May 2014 12:03 +0200, Joost Roeleveld wrote:
Always important. I just saw the other email which states that the
latest sysresccd supports it. That is fine for me.
Sysresccd has supported btrfs for some time. I realise my mail could have
been read otherwise, but the reason for
On Tuesday 27 May 2014 11:28:17 Rich Freeman wrote:
On Tue, May 27, 2014 at 11:12 AM, J. Roeleveld jo...@antarean.org wrote:
On Tuesday, May 27, 2014 10:31:26 AM Rich Freeman wrote:
btrfs wouldn't have any issues with this at all. You'd have an
advantage in that you wouldn't have to
On Wed, May 28, 2014 at 6:13 AM, Joost Roeleveld jo...@antarean.org wrote:
app-backup/dar uses catalogues for the incrementals. I think I will stick to
that for the foreseeable future.
I used to use that and sarab (which is a wrapper). I moved on to
duplicity. The problem with dar is that it
On 28/05/2014 11:58, Joost Roeleveld wrote:
On Tuesday 27 May 2014 23:35:26 Alan McKinnon wrote:
On 27/05/2014 17:12, J. Roeleveld wrote:
I have a yearly (full), monthly, weekly and daily. Each incremental is
against the most recent one of itself or longer period.
That means having to keep
On Wednesday 28 May 2014 13:07:49 Alan McKinnon wrote:
On 28/05/2014 11:58, Joost Roeleveld wrote:
On Tuesday 27 May 2014 23:35:26 Alan McKinnon wrote:
On 27/05/2014 17:12, J. Roeleveld wrote:
I have a yearly (full), monthly, weekly and daily. Each incremental is
against the most recent
On 28/05/2014 13:42, Joost Roeleveld wrote:
Currently, I do the following:
Every year, a full backup
Then, every month, I have an incremental based on either the yearly or
previous monthly.
Ditto for the weekly (but then based on monthly or weekly)
And again for the daily.
OK,
On Tuesday, May 27, 2014 10:31:26 AM Rich Freeman wrote:
On Tue, May 27, 2014 at 10:09 AM, J. Roeleveld jo...@antarean.org wrote:
I am still happily using LVM with snapshots. Those are instantaneous as
well and I can then backup the snapshot, which on my server takes between
2 hours
On Tuesday, May 27, 2014 05:12:50 PM J. Roeleveld wrote:
On Tuesday, May 27, 2014 10:31:26 AM Rich Freeman wrote:
On Tue, May 27, 2014 at 10:09 AM, J. Roeleveld jo...@antarean.org wrote:
snipped
Forgot to add:
For fileservers, I am starting to feel that ZFS or BTRFS snapshots are easier
On Tue, May 27, 2014 at 11:12 AM, J. Roeleveld jo...@antarean.org wrote:
On Tuesday, May 27, 2014 10:31:26 AM Rich Freeman wrote:
btrfs wouldn't have any issues with this at all. You'd have an
advantage in that you wouldn't have to unmount the filesystem to
cleanly create the snapshot (which
On Tue, May 27, 2014 at 11:21 AM, J. Roeleveld jo...@antarean.org wrote:
Does anyone know how these will handle (and perform) with a possible 300+
snapshots per filesystem (or volume, as I think it's called)?
I can't speak for zfs. I had upwards of 1000 snapshots on my system
before I stopped
On Tue, 27 May 2014 11:32:22 -0400, Rich Freeman wrote:
Oh, one other tip if you use btrfs - be sure you have a rescue disk
that supports it. Hint, the old Gentoo install CD I had lying around
didn't. You'll probably want to keep a rescue CD with a recent kernel
and btrfs-tools handy at all
On 27/05/2014 17:12, J. Roeleveld wrote:
I have a yearly (full), monthly, weekly and daily. Each incremental is
against
the most recent one of itself or longer period.
That means having to keep multiple snapshots active, which I prefer to avoid.
But, it is a good idea for backing up
On Tue, 13 Apr 2010 12:44:31 +0200
Alex Schuster wrote:
Peter Humphrey writes:
On Monday 12 April 2010 17:17:52 Florian Philipp wrote:
Unless something is broken, I hardly ever reboot.
How do you take backups?
I do my backups from the running system, not from a live-cd. I create
Well, now that I've got my systems cleaned up, and KDE3 removed, I'm tackling
another project I've been meaning to do - backups.
Here's my basic plan:
- I've got a directory on my server that I want to synchronize several systems
with (some linux, and one Windows).
- I want clients to push the
On Sunday 30 September 2007 01:45:41 Grant wrote:
Do you back up anything other than /etc and /home on a standard system?
- Grant
/var because with /var gone its complete-reinstall time.
What about splitting tar.gz files across multiple CDs? Can that be done?
- Grant
You might
Hi Grant,
on Saturday, 2007-09-29 at 16:28:36, you wrote:
Do you back up hidden files and directories in the home directory?
There seems to be a lot of junk in there. Does something like
'--exclude /home/user/.*' work with tar?
It certainly does, but I'm quite sure it's not what you want. For
On Sunday 30 September 2007, Volker Armin Hemmann wrote:
On Sonntag, 30. September 2007, Grant wrote:
Do you back up anything other than /etc and /home on a standard
system?
- Grant
/var because with /var gone its complete-reinstall time.
/usr/local too, otherwise you get to re-install
Steen Eugen Poulsen schrieb:
Grant skrev:
Do you back up anything other than /etc and /home on a standard system?
In a Gentoo system nothing is really standard, so I backup everything
from / and then have a small exclude list with things like:
/dev, /proc, /sys, /exports, /var/cache/squid,
Do you back up anything other than /etc and /home on a standard system?
In a Gentoo system nothing is really standard, so I backup everything
from / and then have a small exclude list with things like:
/dev, /proc, /sys, /exports, /var/cache/squid, /srv/BackupPC.
/var contains the most
Do you back up anything other than /etc and /home on a standard
system?
- Grant
/var because with /var gone its complete-reinstall time.
What about splitting tar.gz files across multiple CDs? Can that be done?
- Grant
--
[EMAIL PROTECTED] mailing list
A lot of
Do you back up anything other than /etc and /home on a standard system?
In a Gentoo system nothing is really standard, so I backup everything
from / and then have a small exclude list with things like:
/dev, /proc, /sys, /exports, /var/cache/squid, /srv/BackupPC.
/var contains
Grant wrote:
Do you back up anything other than /etc and /home on a standard system?
In a Gentoo system nothing is really standard, so I backup everything
from / and then have a small exclude list with things like:
/dev, /proc, /sys, /exports, /var/cache/squid, /srv/BackupPC.
Do you back up anything other than /etc and /home on a standard system?
In a Gentoo system nothing is really standard, so I backup everything
from / and then have a small exclude list with things like:
/dev, /proc, /sys, /exports, /var/cache/squid, /srv/BackupPC.
/var contains
Grant schrieb:
Do you back up anything other than /etc and /home on a standard system?
In a Gentoo system nothing is really standard, so I backup everything
from / and then have a small exclude list with things like:
/dev, /proc, /sys, /exports, /var/cache/squid, /srv/BackupPC.
/var contains
Do you back up anything other than /etc and /home on a standard system?
In a Gentoo system nothing is really standard, so I backup everything
from / and then have a small exclude list with things like:
/dev, /proc, /sys, /exports, /var/cache/squid, /srv/BackupPC.
/var contains the
On 30 Sep 2007, at 12:33, Grant wrote:
Where do you guys store your backups? Leaving backups on a DVD in the
same apartment as the machines doesn't make too much sense to me.
Maybe I should mail em to my parents every week or something?
- Grant
Offsite backups are a good idea if your data
On Sunday 30 September 2007, Grant wrote:
I keep them on an USB-stick (udf filesystem, with the same settings
like a CD-RW).
But where do you put the USB stick? If my apartment building burns
to the ground while I'm away, I'll lose my systems and the backups.
I can't believe you actually
Where do you guys store your backups? Leaving backups on a DVD in the
same apartment as the machines doesn't make too much sense to me.
Maybe I should mail em to my parents every week or something?
- Grant
Offsite backups are a good idea if your data is important to you. I
have
I keep them on an USB-stick (udf filesystem, with the same settings
like a CD-RW).
But where do you put the USB stick? If my apartment building burns
to the ground while I'm away, I'll lose my systems and the backups.
I can't believe you actually asked that. Think, man, think.
But
Hello Grant,
Where do you guys store your backups? Leaving backups on a DVD in the
same apartment as the machines doesn't make too much sense to me.
Maybe I should mail em to my parents every week or something?
I use rsync.net, offsite backups using duplicity for GPG encryption.
--
Neil
Hello Grant,
For now I think I'll do /etc, /root, /home, /var/lib/portage/world,
/usr/src/linux/.config, and anything specific I might need in
/usr/local. What else am I missing out on in /var?
Other data in /var/lib. For example, any databases kept in /var/lib/mysql.
--
Neil Bothwick
On Sunday 30 September 2007 12:31:51 pm Grant wrote:
Do you back up anything other than /etc and /home on a standard system?
snip...
Just my two cents worth here. Often I find a need to generate a duplicate of
an existing gentoo installation and to ease the build process I run this
script
On Sunday 30 September 2007, Neil Bothwick wrote:
Other data in /var/lib. For example, any databases kept in /var/lib/mysql.
Rather than backup MySQL's or Postgres' binary storage I prefer to use the
relevant tool (mysqldump, pgdump[all]) to backup the database
to /root/backups/ just prior to
Hello Jerry McBride,
Just my two cents worth here. Often I find a need to generate a
duplicate of an existing gentoo installation and to ease the build
process I run this script via cron...
#!/bin/sh
rm /portage.list/*.*
emerge -pe --color=n system /portage.list/system.list
emerge
On Sunday 30 September 2007 06:02:30 pm Neil Bothwick wrote:
Hello Jerry McBride,
Just my two cents worth here. Often I find a need to generate a
duplicate of an existing gentoo installation and to ease the build
process I run this script via cron...
#!/bin/sh
rm /portage.list/*.*
Hello Jerry McBride,
Why not just backup the world list itself, /var/lib/portage/world?
Your method doesn't distinguish between packages in world and their
dependencies, emerging from this would result in a screwed world file.
It doesn't have too. The files I listed plus a backup of /etc
On Sat, 29 Sep 2007 21:35:42 -0400
Kenneth Prugh [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
On Sat, 29 Sep 2007 16:28:36 -0700
Grant [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Does something like
'--exclude /home/user/.*' work with tar?
- Grant
Yes you may exclude files from being included. From the tar man page:
On Sun, 30 Sep 2007 20:15:04 +0100
Neil Bothwick [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Hello Grant,
For now I think I'll do /etc, /root, /home, /var/lib/portage/world,
/usr/src/linux/.config, and anything specific I might need in
/usr/local. What else am I missing out on in /var?
Other data in
On Sat, 29 Sep 2007 15:26:07 -0700
Grant [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Do you back up anything other than /etc and /home on a standard
system?
- Grant
Don't forget to back up stuff that can help you rebuild the system
quickly. Like /proc/config.gz, or better yet just the kernel and
modules you
Dan Farrell wrote:
On Sat, 29 Sep 2007 15:26:07 -0700
Grant [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Do you back up anything other than /etc and /home on a standard
system?
- Grant
Don't forget to back up stuff that can help you rebuild the system
quickly. Like /proc/config.gz, or better yet just
Do you back up anything other than /etc and /home on a standard system?
- Grant
--
[EMAIL PROTECTED] mailing list
On Sonntag, 30. September 2007, Grant wrote:
Do you back up anything other than /etc and /home on a standard system?
- Grant
/var because with /var gone its complete-reinstall time.
--
[EMAIL PROTECTED] mailing list
Do you back up anything other than /etc and /home on a standard system?
- Grant
/var because with /var gone its complete-reinstall time.
Do you back up hidden files and directories in the home directory?
There seems to be a lot of junk in there. Does something like
'--exclude
Grant skrev:
Do you back up anything other than /etc and /home on a standard system?
In a Gentoo system nothing is really standard, so I backup everything
from / and then have a small exclude list with things like:
/dev, /proc, /sys, /exports, /var/cache/squid, /srv/BackupPC.
/var contains
On Sonntag, 30. September 2007, Grant wrote:
Do you back up anything other than /etc and /home on a standard system?
- Grant
/var because with /var gone its complete-reinstall time.
What about splitting tar.gz files across multiple CDs? Can that be done?
- Grant
man tar:
-M,
On Sonntag, 30. September 2007, Grant wrote:
Do you back up anything other than /etc and /home on a standard system?
- Grant
/var because with /var gone its complete-reinstall time.
Do you back up hidden files and directories in the home directory?
yes, they contain settings, pw,
On Sat, 2007-09-29 at 15:26 -0700, Grant wrote:
Do you back up anything other than /etc and /home on a standard
system?
I pretty much back up everything that's not ubiquitous on the Internet
on a on an external drive. Disk space is so cheap these days so I figure
why not.
--
Albert W. Hopkins
Do you back up anything other than /etc and /home on a standard system?
- Grant
/var because with /var gone its complete-reinstall time.
What about splitting tar.gz files across multiple CDs? Can that be done?
- Grant
--
[EMAIL PROTECTED] mailing list
On 9/29/07, Grant [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Do you back up anything other than /etc and /home on a standard
system?
- Grant
/var because with /var gone its complete-reinstall time.
What about splitting tar.gz files across multiple CDs? Can that be done?
- Grant
--
[EMAIL
I've recently been thinking about backup strategy... following a painful
re-install after dropping a clanger during a kernel upgrade. While this
seems a very basic topic, I can find surprisingly little documentation
about this on-line.
I need to address several entirely different kinds of
On Wed, 27 Sep 2006 14:04:26 +0100, Steve [Gentoo] wrote:
3. My home directory; subversion repositories and DBMS catalogues are
backed-up to a remote account. I currently do this with a cron-job
which takes dumps; creates tar files; AES encrypts then uploads using
SSH to the remote site...
-Original Message-
From: Neil Bothwick [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
Sent: 15 December 2005 19:16
To: gentoo-user@lists.gentoo.org
Subject: Re: [gentoo-user] Backups
On Thu, 15 Dec 2005 09:53:27 -0700, Richard Fish wrote:
My personal favorite for my desktop and laptop is using
On Thu, 22 Dec 2005 14:26:56 -, Michael Kintzios wrote:
If you get a minute, a detailed wiki howto would be useful for some of
us. :-)
A minute, where can I get one of those? Is it in portage? :-(
--
Neil Bothwick
Eagles may soar, but Wombles don't get sucked into jet engines
On 16 December 2005 08:11, Ow Mun Heng wrote:
On Thu, 2005-12-15 at 23:02 -0700, Richard Fish wrote:
On 12/15/05, Ow Mun Heng [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
-b boot/grub/stage2_eltorito -no-emul-boot -boot-load-size 4
-boot-info-table
Thanks. Wonderful info.
The grub info pages contain a
On Fri, 16 Dec 2005 11:40:32 +0800, Ow Mun Heng wrote:
how can one create bootable CDs/DVDs? Is there a simple way to transfer
GRUB into the DVD/CDs? Or would dd of the /boot partition transfer the
whole thing??
I created a rescue system, containing all the tools I need by following
this
Allan Spagnol Comar wrote:
Thanks all for the answers until now;
What i am looking for is to backup 3 servers, and a critical issue workstation.
I think that you should test Bacula. that is very scalable app to backup
from different sources to different media.
http://www.bacula.org
Greets
thanks.
On 12/16/05, Paweł Madej [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Allan Spagnol Comar wrote:
Thanks all for the answers until now;
What i am looking for is to backup 3 servers, and a critical issue
workstation.
I think that you should test Bacula. that is very scalable app to backup
from
Good day Gentoo List !!!
Some one knows where I can find some good material about backuping linux boxes ?
thanks, Allan
--
An application asked:
Requeires Windows 9x, NT4 or better,
so I´ve installed Linux
--
gentoo-user@gentoo.org mailing list
: [gentoo-user] Backups
Good day Gentoo List !!!
Some one knows where I can find some good material about backuping linux
boxes ?
thanks, Allan
--
An application asked:
Requeires Windows 9x, NT4 or better,
so I´ve installed Linux
--
gentoo-user@gentoo.org mailing list
--
gentoo
On 12/15/05, Allan Spagnol Comar [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Some one knows where I can find some good material about backuping linux
boxes ?
If you can give us some more details about what you are looking for
(number of boxes, backup device you want to use, whether you want
simple backup or
On Thu, Dec 15, 2005 at 09:53:27AM -0700, Richard Fish wrote:
My personal favorite for my desktop and laptop is using 'dar' with big
USB hard drivesbut that's what works well for me.
ditto - very easy, very efficient
John
pgpdB8qaDSaQE.pgp
Description: PGP signature
On Thu, 15 Dec 2005 09:53:27 -0700, Richard Fish wrote:
My personal favorite for my desktop and laptop is using 'dar' with big
USB hard drivesbut that's what works well for me.
I use rdiff-backup, which is ideal for backing up automatically to a
hard drive. I run it from cron, hourly on
On 12/15/05, Neil Bothwick [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
completely hosed system can be fixed because the DVDs are bootable.
So are my USB hard disks. Nothing against DVD backups though...I just
find them too slow and small for my needs...
-Richard
--
gentoo-user@gentoo.org mailing list
Thanks all for the answers until now;
What i am looking for is to backup 3 servers, and a critical issue workstation.
I have a storage working with samba, so my bakups will go to this
samba server. I would like to make some diff bakups to save storage
space
:)
thanks again all of you
On Thu, 15 Dec 2005 13:04:38 -0700, Richard Fish wrote:
completely hosed system can be fixed because the DVDs are bootable.
So are my USB hard disks. Nothing against DVD backups though...I just
find them too slow and small for my needs...
A fair point, although it does make keeping spare,
On Thu, 2005-12-15 at 19:15 +, Neil Bothwick wrote:
the rest. I then have a weekly cron script that compresses the backup
directories with squashfs and writes them to ISO images ready for writing
to bootable DVDs. It makes restoring individual files very easy, and a
completely hosed
On 12/15/05, Ow Mun Heng [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
On Thu, 2005-12-15 at 19:15 +, Neil Bothwick wrote:
the rest. I then have a weekly cron script that compresses the backup
directories with squashfs and writes them to ISO images ready for writing
to bootable DVDs. It makes restoring
On Thu, 2005-12-15 at 23:02 -0700, Richard Fish wrote:
On 12/15/05, Ow Mun Heng [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
-b boot/grub/stage2_eltorito -no-emul-boot -boot-load-size 4 -boot-info-table
Thanks. Wonderful info.
/me just bought a DVD writer.
--
Ow Mun Heng
Gentoo/Linux on DELL D600 1.4Ghz
On 12/15/05, Richard Fish [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
bootable, but mkisofs. To use GRUB, you have to make a /boot/grub
directory in your CD tree, and copy the stage2_eltorito file into that
directory along with grub.conf/menu.lst.
Oh, I forgot one thing. Instead of (hdX,X) in grub.conf, you
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