John Almberg wrote:
If you have any databases or ldap service, then you want to add
those as well, but it is recommended to dump these rather than
backup the files themselves.
I'm learning a lot from this thread. Thanks for all the suggestions.
The paragraph above raises one more question..
If you have any databases or ldap service, then you want to add
those as well, but it is recommended to dump these rather than
backup the files themselves.
I'm learning a lot from this thread. Thanks for all the suggestions.
The paragraph above raises one more question... how to use the
ba
Jeffrey Goldberg wrote:
This is one of the several reasons that I use rsync (via rsnapshot).
At each increment, it backs up the minimum that is need. With the
cost of having a complete backup which duplicates what you would find
in a reinstall, you have a complete system.
For binaries,
On Aug 23, 2009, at 7:14 PM, Karl Vogel wrote:
Touching a timestamp file and backing up stuff newer than that works
fine for things you modify, but I frequently copy over source
tarballs
and the timestamp method won't work for those.
This is one of the several reasons that I use rsync
>> On Sat, 22 Aug 2009 15:58:25 +0200,
>> Erik Norgaard said:
E> Yes, it's easy to miss something that should have been backed up. There
E> is no point in backup of files other than those you modify yourself,
E> unless you plan to create an exact image and recover using dd.
Touching a timest
Jeffrey Goldberg wrote:
On Aug 21, 2009, at 2:33 PM, John Almberg wrote:
I am currently using rsnapshot to back up these directories on a
FreeBSD 7.2 webserver:
/etc
/usr/home
/usr/local
/var/cron
Here is my exclude list from my rsnapshot.conf
exclude /var/log
exclude
--On Friday, August 21, 2009 16:14:22 -0500 John Almberg
wrote:
That raises another question... How feasible is it to restore a server
from these backups? Is it really possible to install 7.2 on a new machine
and then just copy the backed up data onto the new machine?
I guess I should really v
QUOTE
My general advice is to back up everything and then explicitly
excluding those things that you know that you don't need. Here is my
exclude list from my rsnapshot.conf
exclude /var/log
exclude /var/tmp
exclude /usr/obj
exclude /usr/ports/distfiles
On Aug 21, 2009, at 2:33 PM, John Almberg wrote:
I am currently using rsnapshot to back up these directories on a
FreeBSD 7.2 webserver:
/etc
/usr/home
/usr/local
/var/cron
These directories contain all the data and config files that I
use... I think...
Question: am I missing anything cr
John Almberg schrieb:
I am currently using rsnapshot to back up these directories on a FreeBSD
7.2 webserver:
/etc
/usr/home
/usr/local
/var/cron
These directories contain all the data and config files that I use... I
think...
Question: am I missing anything crucial?
Thanks: John
_
On Fri, Aug 21, 2009 at 2:33 PM, John Almberg wrote:
> I am currently using rsnapshot to back up these directories on a FreeBSD
> 7.2 webserver:
>
> /etc
> /usr/home
> /usr/local
> /var/cron
>
> These directories contain all the data and config files that I use... I
> think...
>
> Question: am I
I am currently using rsnapshot to back up these directories on a
FreeBSD 7.2 webserver:
/etc
/usr/home
/usr/local
/var/cron
These directories contain all the data and config files that I use...
I think...
Question: am I missing anything crucial?
Thanks: John
__
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