My critical files and folders are synced from my mas to my desktop using syncthing. From there I use backblaze to do a full desktop backup nightly.
My Nas is in raid 5, but that's technically not a backup.
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My critical files and folders are synced from my mas to my desktop using syncthing. From there I use backblaze to do a full desktop backup nightly.
My Nas is in raid 5, but that's technically not a backup.
Am I the only one using kopia :)?
Im quite new in selfohsting and backups. I went for duplicaty and it is perfect, but heared bad stories and now I use kopia daily backups to another drive and also to B2. Duplicaty is still doing daily backups, but only few important folders to google drive.
Ive heared only good stories about kopia and no one mentioned it
there are dozens of us, dozens!
For PCs, Daily incremental backups to local storage, daily syncs to my main unRAID server, and weekly off-site copies to a raspberry pi with a large external HDD running at a family member's place. The unRAID server itself has it's config backed up to the unRAID servers and all the local docker stores also to the off-site pi. The most important stuff (pictures, recovery phrases, etc) is further backed up in Google drive.
I use syncthing to sync files between phone, pc and server.
The server runs proxmox, with a proxmox backup server in VM. A raspberry pi pulls the backups to an usb ssd, and also rclone them to backblaze.
Syncthing is nice. I don't backup my pc, as it is done by the server. Reinstalling the pc requires almost no preparation, just set up syncthing again
All nextcloud data gets mirrored with rsync to a second drive, so it's in 3 places, original source and twice on the server
Databases are backed up nightly by webmin to second drive
Then installations, databases etc are sent to backblaze storage with duplicati
Holy crap. Duplicity is what I've been missing my entire life. Thank you for this.
My important data is backed up via Synology DSM Hyper backup to:
I also have proxmox backup server backup all the VM/CTs every few hours to the same external HDD used above, however these backups aren't crucial, it would just be helpful to rebuild if something went down.
On my home network, devices are backed up using Time Machine over the network. I also use Backblaze to make a second backup of data to their cloud service, using my own private key. Lastly, I throw some backups on a USB drive that I keep in a fire safe.
In short: crontab, rsync, a local and a remote raspberry pi and cryptfs on usb-sticks.
Rsync script that does deltas per day using hardlinks. Found on the Arch wiki. Works like a charm.
I use backupninja for the scheduling and management of all the processes. The actual backups are done by rsync, rdiff, borg, and the b2 tool from backblaze depending on the type and destination of the data. I back up everything to a second internal drive, an external drive, and a backblaze bucket for the most critical stuff. Backupninja manages multiple snapshots within the borg repository, and rdiff lets me only copy new data for the large directories.
I just use duplicity and upload to Google drive.
I backup an encrypted and heavily compressed archive to my local nas and to google drive every night. NAS keeps the version from the first of every month and 7 days prior history and google drive just the latest
Nextcloud with folder sync for both mobile and PC, backs up everything I need.
In the process of moving stuff over to Backblaze. Home PCs, few clients PCs, client websites all pointing at it now, happy with the service and price. Two unraid instances push the most important data to an azure storage a/c - but imagine i'll move that to BB soon as well.
Docker backups are similar to post above, tarball the whole thing weekly as a get out of jail card - this is not ideal but works for now until i can give it some more attention.
*i have no link to BB other than being a customer who wanted to reduce reliance on scripts and move stuff out of azure for cost reasons.
For smaller backups <10GB ea. I run a 3 phased approach
These scripts run on the cron service and I log this info out to a file using --log-file option for rsync/rclone so I can do spot checks of the results
This way I have access to the data locally if the network is down, remotely on a different networked machine for any other device that can browse it, and finally an offsite cloud backup.
Doing this setup manually through rsync/rclone has been important to get the domain knowledge to think about the overall process; scheduling multiple backups at different times overnight to not overload the drive and network, ensuring versioning is stored for files that might require it and ensuring I am not using too many api calls for B2.
For large media backups >200GB I only use the rclone script and set it to run for 3hrs every night after all the more important backups are finished. Its not important I get it done asap but a steady drip of any changes up to b2 matters more.
My next steps is to maybe figure out a process to email the backup logs every so often or look into a full application to take over with better error catching capabilities.
For any service/process that has a backup this way I try and document a spot testing process to confirmed it works every 6months:
I don't backup my personal files since they are all more or less contained in Proton Drive. I do run a handful of small databases, which i back up to ... telegram.
For my server I use duplicity, with a daily incremental backup and sending the encrypted diffs away. I researched a few more options some time ago but nothing really fit my use case, but I'm also not super happy with duplicity. Thanks for suggesting borgbackup.
For my personal data I have a NextCloud on a RPi4 at my parents' place, which also syncs between my laptop that I've left there. For an offline and off-site storage, I use the good old strategy where I bring over an external hard drive, rsync it, and bring it back.
I feel the exact same. I've been using Duplicacy for a couple years, it works, but don't totally love it.
When I researched Borg, Restic, others, there were issues holding me back for each. Many are CLI-driven, which I don't mind for most tools. But when shit hits the fan and I need to restore, I really want to have a UI to make it simple (and easily browse file directories).
Got a Veeam community instance running on each of my VMware nodes, backing up 9-10 VMs each.
Using Cloudberry for my desktop, laptop and a couple Windows VMs.
Borg for non-VMware Linux servers/VMs, including my WSL instances, game/AI baremetal rig, and some Proxmox VMs I've got hosted with a friend.
Each backup agent dumps its backups into a share on my nas, which then has a cron task to do weekly uploads to GDrive. I also manually do a monthly copy to an HDD and store it off-site with a friend.
Fuck it, we ball.
Eager to nurture more pet projects, I wrote a python package to handle uncommon backups, derived from this this, I have various python scripts that I run periodically to copy things like:
And of course, files/directories from my computer. This can be configured to copy things to one or various drives, and in the future I would like to add some encryption mechanism for sensitive data. On top of this I share some files across computers using mega, but I should consider switching to syncthing
Veeam community for me. Cross backup locally between my 2 servers at home, and then a copy job to an offsite NAS.
Have had to restorations before, and never had any issues.