Il 07/05/2015 11:24, Marcin Trendota ha scritto:> W dniu 06.05.2015 o 21:21, Alessandro Baggi pisze: > >> What do you mean about Backup PC? >> Any experiences? >> What solution do you use? > > BackupPC is good, howewer it's a pity you can't search for a file in > GUI. But it works well, i'm backing up 32 hosts (servers, desktops). > > Can somebody tell me why it's not available for CentOS7? >I don't know why and don't know if in previous CentOS releases was included. BackupPC is available for C7 from nux repo, but this is an external repo.
W dniu 07.05.2015 o 11:46, Alessandro Baggi pisze:> I don't know why and don't know if in previous CentOS releases was > included.It is in EPEL.> BackupPC is available for C7 from nux repo, but this is an external repo.Good enough, thanks for info. -- Over And Out MoonWolf
I wonder why nobody has yet mentioned rdiff-backup. It combines browsable directories with multiple versions - the version data is stored in a separate rdiff-backup-data subdirectory (one per backup task). One downside is that rdiff-backup causes a lot of network traffic. For that reason I currently use rsync to copy over network, and then I use rdiff-backup locally to create a repository with multiple versions. Another system that we use is rdiffweb. It uses rdiff-backup over network and adds a web interface for clients to browse and restore files or directories. I did not personally set it up, but it seems to work fine. - Jussi
On May 7, 2015 6:05 AM, "Jussi Hirvi" <greenspot at greenspot.fi> wrote:> > I wonder why nobody has yet mentioned rdiff-backup. It combines browsabledirectories with multiple versions - the version data is stored in a separate rdiff-backup-data subdirectory (one per backup task).> > One downside is that rdiff-backup causes a lot of network traffic. Forthat reason I currently use rsync to copy over network, and then I use rdiff-backup locally to create a repository with multiple versions.> > Another system that we use is rdiffweb. It uses rdiff-backup over networkand adds a web interface for clients to browse and restore files or directories. I did not personally set it up, but it seems to work fine. I am one of the people who use rsync with hardlinks. Reason is very simple and even humble: I built my home backup server around a OpenWrt - Seagate dockstar if you want to date that - box and an external backup drive. So I wanted something low resources that did not require me to install any packages. That script grew a bit (or a lot) and became my old job's backup code. But, I admit one think it does miss is having a convenient way to look for a file, specially if you physically rotate drives. If rdiff-backup will tell when was the last time a file has been backed up/touched even if drive with said file is not mounted, I will need to get to learn more about it.> > - Jussi > > _______________________________________________ > CentOS mailing list > CentOS at centos.org > http://lists.centos.org/mailman/listinfo/centos
On 05/07/2015 05:04 AM, Jussi Hirvi wrote:> I wonder why nobody has yet mentioned rdiff-backup. It combines > browsable directories with multiple versions - the version data is > stored in a separate rdiff-backup-data subdirectory (one per backup task).I use rdiff-backup, but I hesitate to recommend a tool that has been unsupported for over 6 years and does have quite a few bugs. -- Bob Nichols "NOSPAM" is really part of my email address. Do NOT delete it.
Il 07/05/2015 11:55, Marcin Trendota ha scritto:> W dniu 07.05.2015 o 11:46, Alessandro Baggi pisze: > >> I don't know why and don't know if in previous CentOS releases was >> included. > > It is in EPEL. > >> BackupPC is available for C7 from nux repo, but this is an external repo. > > Good enough, thanks for info. >Then, I'm trying BackupPc 3.3.1, Installed, configured, CGI configured. I've some questions: 1) There is a systemd start file? 2) Apache on C7 seems not have mod_perl support. There is a way to accomplish this? Thanks in advance.