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Daily of conf files, databases and web data, weekly vm level backups (on VPS and Dedis).
At home all my files are replicated to my nextcloud server which is cached on a couple of workstations, and a daily backup of that back to a ESX server at home. The couple of servers at home are throw away so only config backups for them.
None. We loose our data like men ~some guy on the internet.
Jokes aside, google drive and backblaze for personal/work backup.
Aws and another remote ftp backup for cPanel servers. (aws with one month backups on cold - backing up daily)
7 backup is good
I Use R1 Soft for my Server backup full data
It looks like I need to start using my other backup servers. Just one backup location currently.
There's a tool called rsync born to handle large intense change data
Raid can not replace backup. If the server goes down? Or network problem? Or provider run away? then all your data is lost.
R1 soft its not raid it's r1soft.com
booom! headshot. Clean and crisp.
I could have sworn I had made one of these for this year, oh well. Here's how my backups have evolved over the years:
2015:
2016:
2017:
damn bro.... nice..
i still burning backups on cds... naa.
@KuJoe what made you mve from CrashPlan+ to Backblaze?
personally I don't think the hubiC can be counted as backup - impossible to deal with big data backups due to speed restriction.
I don't use either now, but I switched because of performance.
I don't use it any more luckily.
The end is nigh!
Amazon S3 is great for secure backup storage, or Amazon Glacier if you're not likely to need to restore all too often.
1 backup at the remote backup server should be good enough.
There is the 3-2-1 backup rule is an easy-to-remember acronym for a common approach to keeping your data safe in almost any failure scenario. The rule is: keep at least three (3) copies of your data, and store two (2) backup copies on different storage media, with one (1) of them located offsite. For a one-computer user, the nakivo vsphere backup strategy can be as simple as copying all important files to another device – or, ideally, several devices – and keeping them in a safe place.
Necromancy is prohibited.