Can anyone share their experiences using any open source, Free backup software to do regular, cron driven backups of Linux systems? Both full and incrementals.
Thanks.
-- Dave Hull http://insipid.com
On Thu, 21 Oct 2004 11:05:56 -0500 Dave Hull [email protected] wrote:
Can anyone share their experiences using any open source, Free backup software to do regular, cron driven backups of Linux systems? Both full and incrementals.
Sure. Where I work we have a server with a ton of disk space that we use as a backup server. We rsync all of our important data from each server to that backup server, and occasionally make a tape backup of the backup server.
Hopefully this is what you were after.
--------------------------------- Frank Wiles [email protected] http://www.wiles.org ---------------------------------
Quoting Frank Wiles [email protected]:
Sure. Where I work we have a server with a ton of disk space that we use as a backup server. We rsync all of our important data from each server to that backup server, and occasionally make a tape backup of the backup server.
Hopefully this is what you were after.
I've been thinking about using this approach too. How is the file system structured on the "backup server"? Does it mirror the file structure on the "clients"? I'm not too familiar with rsync so I don't know if that's required or not.
I've got several servers that have a standard mount point where I install all third party or custom software, let's call the mount point /services for the sake of example. It's /services on all my servers.
Can I just create a directory structure on the "backup server" like /backups/server_1/services, /backups/server_2/services, etc. and pull a full copy of each servers' /services directory to the "backup server" and then simply rsync daily from that point forward?
Are you using amanda or just something like cpio, tar? Do you have a database that tells you what tape you need to restore file x to server y for date mm/dd/yy?
Sorry for all the questions. I'm in dire need of a backup solution before something goes horribly wrong. Where's some wood?
-- Dave Hull http://insipid.com