Hello,

I'm looking to get feedback on a proposed home backup solution using
rdiff-backup. I'm new to backups, and I'm trying to strike a balance between
simplicity and adequate protection. I've read the rdiff-backup webpage,
documentation, and wiki, and I've been working through the "Backup and
Recovery" O'reilly book.

I basically have two laptops (one Mac and one Linux), one Linux virtual web
server, and one Linux workstation in my home setup. My current plan
involves:

1. Using 'unison' to sync between the machines, using the workstation as the
hub.
2. Using two 1 Tbyte externally enclosed hard drives.
3. Performing an initial rdiff-backup of the data partition on the
workstation to each of the external hard drives.
4. Taking one of the hard drives to an off-site location.
5. Using the remaining hard drive at home for daily/weekly rdiff-backups
6. Periodically switching the two external hard drives between my home and
the off-site location.

I'm not quite sure what's the best way to do #6. Should I mirror the two
external hard drives using a tool like rsync or unison? Or should I just use
rdiff-backup between the workstation and each individual external hard
drive?

Also, just to confirm my impression from reading the docs: currently,
rdiff-backup doesn't handle monthly/weekly/daily backup schedules
"out-of-the-box", though I think there are a few ways to approximate that.
And I further realize that with rdiff-backup, there's less of a need for
those different levels of backups due to the compression/delta scheme.

Any help that you can provide to a newbie would be greatly appreciated!

Thanks,

taltman
_______________________________________________
rdiff-backup-users mailing list at [email protected]
http://lists.nongnu.org/mailman/listinfo/rdiff-backup-users
Wiki URL: http://rdiff-backup.solutionsfirst.com.au/index.php/RdiffBackupWiki

Reply via email to