I'm using this on a home computer. I have used rsync in the
past. I was looking into what else was out there or if there was
something better. I've heard of snap-shots, but don't really
know what that is about or if that is a good idea. I want to
backup my /home and config files in / that I would need if I had
to reinstall. Do these programs keep track of all the meta data
like ctimes etc?

Thanks

On Thu, 24 Apr 2014 12:38:32 -0600
caziz <ca...@cuug.ab.ca> wrote:

> For my needs,  rsync commands  in a script is fine.
> 
> For both backup and limited archive.   rsnapshot too old
> school? (Please God let that file I just found out I
> accidentally munched last month be copied somewhere)
> 
> 
> 
> On 14-04-24 12:02 PM, Gustin Johnson wrote:
> > I have used rdiff-backup in a cronjob for years.  It keeps
> > date based archives and is space efficient (uses the rsync
> > algorithm).  
> >
> > For Windows machines I usually use the built in backup
> > utility on recent versions to save to a samba share on a
> > Linux box that I then archive again via rdiff-backup.  
> >
> > What the data size is, what the OS is, and the budget, would
> > help us to give more specific answers.
> >
> >
> > On Thu, Apr 24, 2014 at 8:04 AM, Richard Carter
> > <carter.r....@gmail.com <mailto:carter.r....@gmail.com>>
> > wrote:
> >
> >     I've had good  success with Back In Time. 
> >
> >     Robin
> >
> >
> >     On Wed, Apr 23, 2014 at 6:37 PM, Mel Walters
> > <melwalt...@telus.net <mailto:melwalt...@telus.net>> wrote:
> >
> >         On Sun, 2014-04-20 at 19:35 -0600, Joe S wrote:
> >         > I am looking for advice on what is a good
> >         > method/program to backup. I am using this for a
> >         > home computer. Will backup to a separate hard
> >         > drive and some info on a DVD. I have used rsync,
> >         > but am wondering if there are other methods that
> >         > would do this as well or better.
> >         >
> >         > Thanks
> >         >
> >         I can give a somewhat general answer for an average
> > user.
> >
> >         I have been looking at the GUI lucky-backup that
> > uses rsync.
> >
> >         Seems to work well as a simple solution if you are
> > backing up some sub directories off of your /home/yourname
> > directory. Pay attention to the "Type" category. You might
> > want to try a test directory to see what happens.
> >
> >         If you do your home directory you could potentially
> > end up with too much dot file and dot directories data that
> > could add up big time on a modern Linux workstation
> > depending on what is installed. But there is a way to select
> > exclusions with the advanced mode. Do you like that solution?
> >
> >         People usually also want 1/ email address 2/ book
> > backup and browser
> >
> >         Mel
> >
> >
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