Displaying 2 results from an estimated 2 matches for "sgwsannsbnnos0l".
2015 Nov 13
0
Rsync and differential Backups
...hat as the disks are added back a
full catchup copy occurs. You may consider it half a mule's
droppings, but it is, after all, what happens if you loose a spindle
and hot replace.
-----BEGIN PGP SIGNATURE-----
Version: GnuPG v2.0.22 (GNU/Linux)
iQIcBAEBAgAGBQJWRk8fAAoJEAF3yXsqtyBlM50P/iHt5rwT/sGWSaNnsBNNoS0L
WKb8Z9M7nVwaWsjceHPwEWMDrW2M7TUlXWCWhmDOL5oWP2PtX5J0YkXZ3ADmn5cp
GE8gKmFDIdoepxs/GQREpryh+mT+kyhr+3WIISgSplEsGP0PezEBEX5jemvMAFcn
bVH4KYj5Cqt/xludubqxaNe/GF72FwJKVl/ie5GIMF1gk039QpykOvI8GZzcXXVU
/vEUH72i+JOgyrLCMIuzH6na2YSiXI1pav8NnPV4pZCX6Rre8/MTtNGRd8Lda3zR
Nqb1Jow7ozTRwYWJpORU0ZiPN4aTQakktSLuPxN...
2015 Nov 13
4
Rsync and differential Backups
On 11/13/2015 01:46 AM, J Martin Rushton wrote:
> If you really_need_ the guarantee of a snapshot, consider either LVM
> or RAID1. Break out a volume from the RAID set, back it up, then
> rebuild.
FFS, don't do the latter. LVM is the standard filesystem backing for
Red Hat and CentOS systems, and fully supports consistent snapshots
without doing half-ass shit like breaking a RAID