On Thu, Jan 30, 2020 at 2:56 PM George N. White III <gnw...@gmail.com> wrote:
>
>> My new computer has got 2 disks: a SSD and a HDD one.
>>
>> The SSD disk is large enough to have Fedora and my entire home
>> directory on that.
>>
>> Now, I am intending to use the HDD disk for backuping. And my question
>> is: How should I format the HDD disk?
>
>
> Assuming you know how to partition and format a disk, you need to think
> about the filesystem type, partitions, etc. for the HDD.
>
> Using an internal disk for backups is no replacement for
> external storage (cloud or removable drive) that is stored offsite.
> Internal backups can be useful when files are accidentally deleted,
> the root filesystem is corrupted, or a system fails to boot.   You may
> want to consider putting a stripped-down OS on the HDD for use
> in repairing problems with the system on the SSD.   There are
> a number of suitable backup tools for this use case.  Fedora has:
>
> $ dnf info timeshift
> Copr repo for qgis owned by dani                                              
>                          8.1 kB/s | 3.6 kB     00:00
> Fedora Modular 31 - x86_64                                                    
>                           27 kB/s |  16 kB     00:00
> Fedora Modular 31 - x86_64 - Updates                                          
>                           91 kB/s |  16 kB     00:00
> Fedora 31 - x86_64 - Updates                                                  
>                           41 kB/s |  16 kB     00:00
> Fedora 31 - x86_64 - Updates                                                  
>                          1.1 MB/s | 2.3 MB     00:02
> Installed Packages
> Name         : timeshift
> Version      : 19.01
> Release      : 1.fc31
> Architecture : x86_64
> Size         : 3.1 M
> Source       : timeshift-19.01-1.fc31.src.rpm
> Repository   : @System
> From repo    : fedora
> Summary      : System restore tool for Linux
> URL          : https://github.com/teejee2008/timeshift
> License      : GPLv3+ or LGPLv3+
> Description  : Timeshift for Linux is an application that provides 
> functionality similar to
>              : the System Restore feature in Windows and the Time Machine 
> tool in Mac OS.
>              : Timeshift protects your system by taking incremental snapshots 
> of the file
>              : system at regular intervals. These snapshots can be restored 
> at a later date
>              : to undo all changes to the system.
>              :
>              : In RSYNC mode, snapshots are taken using rsync and hard-links. 
> Common files
>              : are shared between snapshots which saves disk space. Each 
> snapshot is a full
>              : system backup that can be browsed with a file manager.
>              :
>              : In BTRFS mode, snapshots are taken using the in-built features 
> of the BTRFS
>              : filesystem. BTRFS snapshots are supported only on BTRFS 
> systems having an
>              : Ubuntu-type subvolume layout (with @ and @home subvolumes).
>
> This requires a filesystem that supports hard-links. Another approach is to 
> create archives of
> the system as large files on an NTFS filesystem.   This can be useful if you 
> have an
> external case and a second system running MacOS or Windows.  Some people have
> multiple HDD's and periodically swap them with the old versions stored 
> offsite.

Thanks George and Patrick, for your help and suggestions.

Paul
_______________________________________________
users mailing list -- users@lists.fedoraproject.org
To unsubscribe send an email to users-le...@lists.fedoraproject.org
Fedora Code of Conduct: 
https://docs.fedoraproject.org/en-US/project/code-of-conduct/
List Guidelines: https://fedoraproject.org/wiki/Mailing_list_guidelines
List Archives: 
https://lists.fedoraproject.org/archives/list/users@lists.fedoraproject.org

Reply via email to