At 4:18 PM -0500 1/27/03, Francisco Reyes wrote:
Of course, that works too. I use FTP because I can use 'mirror' (from /usr/ports/net/mirror) to pull down the automatic backups reliably, and because I simply don't back up any file that has passwords (none of the password-containing files in /etc, nor any directory called '.ssh', nor any private key file used for writing certificates). I could probably hack up mirror or some other system to use scp, but mirror works and I can quickly get the files to where I want them (namely, away from the server they are backing up).On Mon, 27 Jan 2003, Paul Hoffman wrote:before I do a major upgrade. I then shove the backup offsite via ftp.I have not been sending the files out, but working on that. First will encryp the files with gpg (GNU privacy) and then will use scp to send the files out. I don't have FTP enabled on any of the, very few, machines I admin.
gzip is more universally known that bzip2, so using it means that you are more likely to be able to recover your data in an emergency, such as on a non-BSD system.> Much of what you are backing up is quite compressable, so you shouldmost likely be using 'tar -czf' instead of just 'tar -cf'I don't recall posting the line I use to run tar, but I use bzip2 instead of gzip so it's something like 'tar -cyf ....'
--Paul Hoffman
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