[ale] Personal Backup Strategies?
David Tomaschik
david at tuxteam.com
Wed Feb 3 20:31:55 EST 2010
Pat,
Thanks for the feedback. Some comments/questions below:
Pat Regan wrote:
> On 02/03/2010 11:19 AM, David Tomaschik wrote:
> > I've looked through some of the archives, but I was hoping to get a
> better
> > take on people's personal backup strategies. I have about 200GB of
> data that
> > needs to be protected. This includes personal projects, academic work,
> > email archives, photos, home videos, and other data that cannot
> readily be
> > replaced. Lately, however, this is growing at a rate of ~50GB/year, so
> > expansion is obviously an important point (thank you video cameras
> and 10MP
> > stills). I am significantly less concerned about anything that can be
> > replaced (e.g., videos of talks at conferences that I have
> downloaded). I
> > see 3 categories of predominant threat when it comes to backups, with
> > increasing levels of backup required to protect against them.
>
> It is pretty useful to actually break the data you back up into
> different groups. Old videos, photos, and emails shouldn't be changing.
> The old ones don't need to be handled nearly as often as your recent
> data.
This makes a lot of sense. The vacation photos and videos and my music
collection sound like excellent cases for this category. I just need to
script carefully to exclude these in the more frequent backups.
>
> You can just store your 200GB of old, non-changing data on <insert some
> type of media here> and ship copies off to a safe location. I drop off
> off-site backups at my parents' house when I drive up to visit them.
> Multiple off-site backups are even better.
>
> That doesn't mean you can just dump 200 GB on an old hard drive and
> expect it to still be good a few years from now. You'll want to check
> or replace the media on some sort of schedule.
>
> > 1) File system corruption/accidental deletion -- external backup drive
> > should be sufficient.
>
> I run my short term backups to various flash drives and my colocated
> server. Backup to the server is automated. I have a script I manually
> run that backs up to two of my flash drives.
I'm probably going to use something like Duplicity[1] (found from
rsync.net) to do this to my VPS daily. It's hosted here in Atlanta, so
not super-remote, but should be plenty far for most situations.
<snip>
> I recently loaded Debian on my Android phone specifically to get rsync
> running. I have a script on the phone to rsync those same short term
> backups to the microsd card in the phone. I haven't gotten as far as
> getting something like cron running to automate this one, yet. I very
> much like the idea of having a daily automated backup on a device that I
> have with me every single time I leave the house. Especially since I
> won't have to think about it.
And your phone still works as a phone? Haven't heard of putting Debian
on an Android.
> I also love the general durability of most flash media. I've pulled
> data off of a CF card that went through the washer and dryer. I can
> probably throw either of my flash drives, or even my phone (yikes!) out
> of this second story window (or probably higher) and still read the data.
That is useful to know, though I had generally assumed they were pretty
durable.
>
> > 2) Hard drive failure -- RAID 1?
>
> I hate down time. All my personal desktop machines have had some form
> of RAID for about the last 10 years.
I need to get that going first. Hopefully I can switch to RAID 1 with
only adding 1 disk. Maybe a RAID 1 with 1 drive marked as failed, dd
the data over, and then bring the other drive in as a replacement. I'll
have to stop and think about that some more.
> I have no trust in optical media. I have tons of old backup CD and DVD
> discs that I just can't read anywhere. They weren't scratched and
> weren't stored in a harsh environment.
>
> I've done rdiff-backup and rsync backups over slow DSL and cable links
> in the past. As long as you can run the first backup locally you will
> do just fine. Your estimate of 50GB per year is only an average of
> about 130 MB per day. That's very doable over DSL and cable.
Is there a point at which I should be concerned about ISPs caring? I
know they do for large P2P, but I'm not sure where the real threshold lies.
--
David Tomaschik, RHCE
Moderator, LinuxQuestions.org
http://www.tuxteam.com
david at tuxteam.com [GPG: 0x6D428695]
-------------- next part --------------
A non-text attachment was scrubbed...
Name: signature.asc
Type: application/pgp-signature
Size: 898 bytes
Desc: OpenPGP digital signature
Url : http://mail.ale.org/pipermail/ale/attachments/20100203/dc3c4278/attachment.bin
More information about the Ale
mailing list