<div dir="ltr">I have a odd system of, scratch drive > freenas > crashplan. It works for me, lets me be lazy.</div><div class="gmail_extra"><br><br><div class="gmail_quote">On Wed, Jan 9, 2013 at 3:46 PM, Scott Plante <span dir="ltr"><<a href="mailto:splante@insightsys.com" target="_blank">splante@insightsys.com</a>></span> wrote:<br>
<blockquote class="gmail_quote" style="margin:0 0 0 .8ex;border-left:1px #ccc solid;padding-left:1ex"><div><div style="font-size:12pt;font-family:arial,helvetica,sans-serif">Perhaps you could do two different types of backups. An image backup once a month (or whatever) to a second hard drive mounted inside the PC, and a file copy of the files you care about to a NAS.<div>
<br></div><div>I helped a friend setup a Buffalo TeraStation for his little 2, ocassionally 3, person office. It runs Linux under the covers but you set it up via a web interface. You can setup users and shares for each user, or share for multiple users. You can also setup backup partitions and schedules backups. It might do LVM snapshots for different backups, or it might do a cp -l + rsync snapshot scheme like this one. <a href="http://www.mikerubel.org/computers/rsync_snapshots/" target="_blank">http://www.mikerubel.org/computers/rsync_snapshots/</a><br>
<br>The backups are read-only and you can choose to make them available as read-only mounts for clients, or not. If the same file is unchanged on 10 backups, it only uses 1x the space, not 10. I don't think this will work for image backups. I've heard of some binary diff schemes being used for mass backups but I doubt the Buffalo is doing anything like that. If you did both, you could restore the image from last month, but get files from any day over the last however many days. Also, image backups might not be that useful if you lose the computer unless you can replace it with an identical hardware combination. I don't know anything about those commercial packages you mentioned, but you should check into your ability to restore individual files from their image backups, anyway. Plus, you might not want to revert the whole machine to get one file you didn't know you clobbered two weeks ago.</div>
<div><br></div><div>Scott<br><hr><div style="font-size:12pt;font-style:normal;font-family:Helvetica,Arial,sans-serif;text-decoration:none;font-weight:normal"><b>From: </b>"Ron Frazier (ALE)" <<a href="mailto:atllinuxenthinfo@techstarship.com" target="_blank">atllinuxenthinfo@techstarship.com</a>><br>
<b>To: </b>"Atlanta Linux Enthusiasts" <<a href="mailto:ale@ale.org" target="_blank">ale@ale.org</a>><br><b>Sent: </b>Wednesday, January 9, 2013 11:22:53 AM<br><b>Subject: </b>Re: [ale] how do I make a virus proof nas?<div>
<div class="h5"><br><br>Hi Brian, and Jim, and others,<br><br>The technical info you shared is very cool. I'm trying to get my brain around the methodologies you described. The basic core concept is that the client doesn't have write access to the backup system. I'm trying to figure out a method which would work at home with minimal expense and complexity.<br>
<br>Here's an idea I came up with, although it would require more hard drive space.<br><br>Let's assume:<br><br>1) that my clients are running Windows (as they generally, but not always, are)<br>2) that I'm using commercial backup software like Acronis, Paragon, or Terabyte Unlimited, which is very capable but perhaps not very scriptable<br>
3) that the clients are running firewalls which I don't necessarily want to open ports in<br>4) that I don't necessarily want the clients sharing their hard drives on a peer to peer basis<br>5) that the nas box can make available different folders or partitions to the clients with different passwords for each<br>
6) that the clients have av running periodically and I will be notified of any viri that are detected<br>7) that I want to do a full image backup of the client weekly with differential backups daily<br><br>The reason for 3) and 4) is that having the clients with open ports or shared drives increases the possibility that a virus could spread from peer to peer on the network.<br>
<br>I will acknowledge in advance that this could get very complicated with more computers. So, here's what would happen. Let's say client 1 is set to do its image backup on Monday, client 2 on Tuesday, client 3 on Wednesday, and client 4 on Thursday. On Monday, client 1 runs its backup software and produces an image file which is, say, 350 GB. It saves this image file in a public folder on the nas which is a staging area. It would be better if that client only has access to that particular folder. Once the image file is saved properly, a process kicks off on the nas box which moves that image file to a private folder or partition that only the nas has access to. This is the permanent storage area.<br>
<br>So, every day, each client either uploads an image backup file or a differential backup file to the nas. The nas takes these files and moves them to a restricted storage area and deletes them from the staging area. Scripts on the nas would manage the space in the storage area and delete old backups when new ones come in sort of like your dvr does with shows.<br>
<br>I specifically want image backups and not just file backups. If I ever have to do a restore, I want to do the restore and have the client computer back to it's exact state as of the backup day, without having to reinstall and reconfigure the OS and applications. At the very least, I would want one image backup per month, which is what I try to do by hand now.<br>
<br>The main problem I see with this is the storage space. Let's say that one week's image and one week's diff files take up 500 GB. I have 4 clients, so I need 2 TB of storage per week. If I want to have 4 weeks of extra historical backups in case one is corrupted or I back up a virus, etc., then I would need 10 TB of storage.<br>
<br>This appears to be getting complex and expensive fast.<br><br>In any case, what do you think?<br><br>Sincerely,<br><br>Ron<br><br><br><br>Brian MacLeod <<a href="mailto:nym.bnm@gmail.com" target="_blank">nym.bnm@gmail.com</a>> wrote:<br>
<br>>On Tue, Jan 8, 2013 at 8:31 PM, Ron Frazier (ALE)<br>><<a href="mailto:atllinuxenthinfo@techstarship.com" target="_blank">atllinuxenthinfo@techstarship.com</a>> wrote:<br>>><br>>> The main concern I've always had about having backup media attached<br>
>all the time is that, if a virus got into the machine, it could attack<br>>and wipe out the backup drive.<br>><br>><br>>Always a possibility unless clients have absolutely NO write<br>>privileges. That means adding new files, writing to old, or deletions.<br>
><br>><br>>> So, I need to know how to make a virus proof nas, such that at least<br>>one partition on the device is accessible only to the backup software<br>>for write mode. I don't care if everything can read the backup file,<br>
>but I only want the backup software to be able to add new files, write<br>>to them, or delete them.<br>><br>><br>>If it is writeable by the client, it will never be virus proof. This<br>>is part of the reason the massive backup infrastructure that I<br>
>maintain for the compute clusters at work don't work this way. The<br>>clients have no write capability to the backup servers. Ever. The<br>>backup servers call the storage units and get copies of stuff instead.<br>
> It still means I might be backing up a virus, but that virus on the<br>>client will NOT destroy client backups.<br>><br>><br>>> I need something that can run while Windows 7 is running and backup<br>>using the volume shadow copy service. I also need it to be able to<br>
>back up the ext4 Ubuntu partition on the PC's HDD, either by reading<br>>the native file system or by using a sector by sector approach. This<br>>way, I can just let the backups run periodically on their own and not<br>
>worry about malware affecting the backup.<br>><br>><br>>Well, can't help you with that then, because I do do Windows anymore,<br>>so I'm not exactly sure I know what that shadow copy stuff is. But I<br>
>have a feeling it doesn't enable what I described above about a backup<br>>server initiating the work. And frankly, I'd probably would rather<br>>remain ignorant of those facts because my recent family/holiday time<br>
>was so much more enjoyable since I could honestly I don't know how to<br>>run these versions of Windows. I probably could grasp it, but I like<br>>being stupid in this case.<br>><br>>The Ubuntu thing -- piece of cake. First ideas are LVM snapshots<br>
>which your backup machine calls in to get, or, backup machine uses LVM<br>>to create daily snapshots of itself after a daily rsync of important<br>>filesystems.<br>><br>>Oh, and make the backup machine be only a backup machine. No<br>
>browsing, no tasking of other things that could get it in trouble. I<br>>don't what other safe guards you have for browsing experience. Just<br>>don't do it.<br>><br>>That's the only way you get to "virus proof" (and even then it still<br>
>isn't). That, or you have machine that never talks to another machine.<br>> But that's not exactly useful in this case.<br>><br>>bnm<br>><br>>_______________________________________________<br>>Ale mailing list<br>
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