I’m trying to find a good method of making periodic, incremental backups. I assume that the most minimal approach would be to have a Cronjob run rsync periodically, but I’m curious what other solutions may exist.

I’m interested in both command-line, and GUI solutions.

  • mariom@lemmy.world
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    1 year ago

    Is it just me or the backup topic is recurring each few days on !linux@lemmy.ml and !selfhosted@lemmy.world?

    To be on topic as well - I use restic+autorestic combo. Pretty simple, I made repo with small script to generate config for different machines and that’s it. Storing between machines and b2.

  • kittyrunningnoise@lemm.ee
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    1 year ago

    I like rsnapshot, run from a cron job at various useful intervals. backups are hardlinked and rotated so that eventually the disk usage reaches a very slowly growing steady state.

  • elscallr@lemmy.world
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    1 year ago

    Exactly like you think. Cronjob runs a periodic rsync of a handful of directories under /home. My OS is on a different drive that doesn’t get backed up. My configs are in an ansible repository hosted on my home server and backed up the same way.

  • thegreenguy@kbin.social
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    1 year ago

    Pika Backup (GUI for borgbackup) is a great app for backups. It has all the features you might expect from backup software and “just works”.

    • Jajcus@kbin.social
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      1 year ago

      Restic does not need rclone and can use many remote storage services directly. I do restic backups directly to Backblaze.

  • Jajcus@kbin.social
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    1 year ago

    Kopia or Restic. Both do incremental, deduplicated backups and support many storage services.

    Kopia provides UI for end user and has integrated scheduling. Restic is a powerfull cli tool thatlyou build your backup system on, but usually one does not need more than a cron job for that. I use a set of custom systems jobs and generators for my restic backups.

    Keep in mind, than backups on local, constantly connected storage is hardly a backup. When the machine fails hard, backups are lost ,together with the original backup. So timeshift alone is not really a solution. Also: test your backups.

  • HughJanus@lemmy.ml
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    1 year ago

    I don’t, really. I don’t have much data that is irreplaceable.

    The ones that are get backed up manually to Proton Drive and my NAS (manually via SMB).

  • to_urcite_ty_kokos@lemmy.world
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    1 year ago

    Git projects and system configs are on GitHub (see etckeeper), the reset is synced to my self-hosted Nextcloud instance using their desktop client. There I have periodic backup using Borg for both the files and Nextcloud database.

  • KitchenNo2246@lemmy.world
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    1 year ago

    All my devices use Syncthing via Tailscale to get my data to my server.

    From there, my server backs up nightly to rsync.net via BorgBackup.

    I then have Zabbix monitoring my backups to make sure a daily is always uploaded.

  • Tiuku@sopuli.xyz
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    1 year ago

    BTRFS filesystem, Snapper for taking periodic snapshots and snap-sync for saving one to an external drive every now and then.

    BTRFS is what makes everything incremental.

  • okda@lemmy.ml
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    1 year ago

    Check out Pika backup. It’s a beautiful frontend for Borg. And Borg is the shit.