On 12/30/21 02:03, Sebastian Suchanek wrote:
> Hi everyone!
>
> How exactly are "new" files, which have to be backed up, determined by
> Bacula?
Hello Sebastian,
In addition to what Josip said, take a look at the "Accurate" option for
Filesets.
This will let you adjust what attributes Bacula lo
On 2021-12-30 11:37, Gary R. Schmidt wrote:
On 30/12/2021 20:03, Sebastian Suchanek wrote:
Hi everyone!
How exactly are "new" files, which have to be backed up, determined by
Bacula?
The reason for asking: Recently, I migrated my main data to a new set
of
hard drives. I did so by using "rsync
On 30/12/2021 23:13, Josip Deanovic wrote:
On 2021-12-30 12:59, Earl Harper wrote:
Backup Windows 10 and selective restore after changing to Linux Mint
Hello,
I want to backup my Windows 10 computer before I erase it and set up
Linux
Mint on it.
Then I would like to be able to selectively
On Thu, Dec 30, 2021, 7:16 AM Josip Deanovic
wrote:
> On 2021-12-30 12:59, Earl Harper wrote:
> > Backup Windows 10 and selective restore after changing to Linux
> > Mint
> > Hello,
> > I want to backup my Windows 10 computer before I erase it and set up
> > Linux
> > Mint on it.
> > Then I w
On 2021-12-30 12:59, Earl Harper wrote:
Backup Windows 10 and selective restore after changing to Linux
Mint
Hello,
I want to backup my Windows 10 computer before I erase it and set up
Linux
Mint on it.
Then I would like to be able to selectively restore files from the
windows
10 backup
Backup Windows 10 and selective restore after changing to Linux Mint
Hello,
I want to backup my Windows 10 computer before I erase it and set up Linux
Mint on it.
Then I would like to be able to selectively restore files from the windows
10 backup to the new linux mint system.
I know that I cou
On 30/12/2021 20:03, Sebastian Suchanek wrote:
Hi everyone!
How exactly are "new" files, which have to be backed up, determined by
Bacula?
The reason for asking: Recently, I migrated my main data to a new set of
hard drives. I did so by using "rsync -aH" which *should* leave all file
timestamps
Hi everyone!
How exactly are "new" files, which have to be backed up, determined by
Bacula?
The reason for asking: Recently, I migrated my main data to a new set of
hard drives. I did so by using "rsync -aH" which *should* leave all file
timestamps etc. untouched. After the migration was finished