@FlamingSpaceJunk said:
How is burp? I've come across it, but there is always a reason it always gets eliminated which I don't remember.
Have you looked at Restic? It's basically Borg except in Go instead of Python. There might be some more differences, but I haven't noticed/missed any after switching.
burp is ok, not a ton of development, but not orphaned (one-man show, coming out of his master's thesis). I moved to it (from BackupPC, if memory serves me) mostly because of the Windows VSS support, and haven't looked in detail at other options since then. It's automated and just works, so I don't think much about it. I've used it to restore select files and whole disks on occasion.
I'll take a look at restic, thanks! I had not heard it described as borg in Go before; I understood they did incrementals differently.
I use Borgbackup via Backupninja, and take daily backups. I've been using backupninja for maybe 10 years now... It's basically a shell script to help with automating backups. Handles a bunch of things like dumping MySQL databases. Works pretty well for me. I used to use it with Duplicity but switched to Borg a year or two ago.
Both backupninja and borgbackup are available in the standard Debian repos.
For personal stuff and VPS's it's a mix of tar, rsync and restic. Lately, I've moved more and more towards restic since I've found it to be easy, reliable and powerful. It's easy to script and automate and also free.
In bigger environments with hyper-v and vm-ware I rely on Acronis and/or Veeam. Personally I prefer Acronis and I'm also fully certified in it, but I keep Veeam in the toolbelt due to the marketshare.
Sometimes you have to use whatever the storage or environment demands, such as EMC and similar giants, but I usually find their solutions cumbersome and ineffective.
@Daniel I am searching for guide to setup borgbackup via backupninja but unable to find proper one. Do have one? And is it really cost $40/m https://backup.ninja/pricing?
@verjin said: @Daniel I am searching for guide to setup borgbackup via backupninja but unable to find proper one. Do have one? And is it really cost $40/m https://backup.ninja/pricing?
The site that you refer to has nothing to do with backupninja. The product on that site is Backup Ninja, a commercial product, not to mention misleadingly named given that (as far as I can tell) backupninja is much older than Backup Ninja
"A single swap file or partition may be up to 128 MB in size. [...] [I]f you need 256 MB of swap, you can create two 128-MB swap partitions." (M. Welsh & L. Kaufman, Running Linux, 2e, 1996, p. 49)
Personal infra: each server executes a daily restic backup in the morning to a Hetzner dedicated server with disks in RAID1, and also a daily borg backup to a Online.net dedicated server. Using the 2 technologies allows for a margin of error in case I mess up a script or a configuration. Backups are in push mode.
Another family member has a Windows 10 laptop which performs a daily backup with Duplicati to one of my Wishosting VPS.
Work infra: I didn't have the luxury of starting clean, so I have been able to set up only a portion of the backups I want to have in the end. There are quite a bit of Docker containers scheduled with Marathon, so I back up at the application level instead of the server level; the backup software is still restic, sending data to S3.
Starts from 729€/year what - without wanting to downplay your services or anything - appears to be a bit costly for a service offering LE pricing. Or are you using the Personal True Image version (50-60€/year)?
Starts from 729€/year what - without wanting to downplay your services or anything - appears to be a bit costly for a service offering LE pricing. Or are you using the Personal True Image version (50-60€/year)?
Probably the service provider licensing, they have lots of licensing options and integrates well with cpanel, whmcs and most others.
Starts from 729€/year what - without wanting to downplay your services or anything - appears to be a bit costly for a service offering LE pricing. Or are you using the Personal True Image version (50-60€/year)?
Probably the service provider licensing, they have lots of licensing options and integrates well with cpanel, whmcs and most others.
Ahh.. gotcha. Yeah I was kinda overwhelmed by the many licenses, I guess.
Starts from 729€/year what - without wanting to downplay your services or anything - appears to be a bit costly for a service offering LE pricing. Or are you using the Personal True Image version (50-60€/year)?
Probably the service provider licensing, they have lots of licensing options and integrates well with cpanel, whmcs and most others.
Ahh.. gotcha. Yeah I was kinda overwhelmed by the many licenses, I guess.
I don't blame you, at first glance Acronis can look like a bit of a mess, but its really just one product with different packaging/licensing.
Once you get to know their AnyData Engine then you can use all of their products, the rest is just branding.
Starts from 729€/year what - without wanting to downplay your services or anything - appears to be a bit costly for a service offering LE pricing. Or are you using the Personal True Image version (50-60€/year)?
Definitely not that! Just backing up the complete hardware. Between the free backup VM I offer and many other free option that is out there, plus at my price point, I really hope no one is expecting free nightly backup of their individual VM's.
Starts from 729€/year what - without wanting to downplay your services or anything - appears to be a bit costly for a service offering LE pricing. Or are you using the Personal True Image version (50-60€/year)?
Probably the service provider licensing, they have lots of licensing options and integrates well with cpanel, whmcs and most others.
Ahh.. gotcha. Yeah I was kinda overwhelmed by the many licenses, I guess.
I don't blame you, at first glance Acronis can look like a bit of a mess, but its really just one product with different packaging/licensing.
Once you get to know their AnyData Engine then you can use all of their products, the rest is just branding.
Without my man @Jord I would have been lost too. So many options.
Comments
burp
is ok, not a ton of development, but not orphaned (one-man show, coming out of his master's thesis). I moved to it (from BackupPC, if memory serves me) mostly because of the Windows VSS support, and haven't looked in detail at other options since then. It's automated and just works, so I don't think much about it. I've used it to restore select files and whole disks on occasion.I'll take a look at restic, thanks! I had not heard it described as borg in Go before; I understood they did incrementals differently.
You know, roughly the same. I haven't looked at the exact details of each one, but feature wise, they work similarly.
I use Borgbackup via Backupninja, and take daily backups. I've been using backupninja for maybe 10 years now... It's basically a shell script to help with automating backups. Handles a bunch of things like dumping MySQL databases. Works pretty well for me. I used to use it with Duplicity but switched to Borg a year or two ago.
Both backupninja and borgbackup are available in the standard Debian repos.
Daniel15 | https://d.sb/. List of all my VPSes: https://d.sb/servers
dnstools.ws - DNS lookups, pings, and traceroutes from 30 locations worldwide.
It all depends on the requirements.
For personal stuff and VPS's it's a mix of tar, rsync and restic. Lately, I've moved more and more towards restic since I've found it to be easy, reliable and powerful. It's easy to script and automate and also free.
In bigger environments with hyper-v and vm-ware I rely on Acronis and/or Veeam. Personally I prefer Acronis and I'm also fully certified in it, but I keep Veeam in the toolbelt due to the marketshare.
Sometimes you have to use whatever the storage or environment demands, such as EMC and similar giants, but I usually find their solutions cumbersome and ineffective.
@Daniel I am searching for guide to setup borgbackup via backupninja but unable to find proper one. Do have one? And is it really cost $40/m https://backup.ninja/pricing?
⚆ ͜ʖ ͡⚆ Thanked by (1281): verjin
The site for backupninja is: https://0xacab.org/riseuplabs/backupninja
The site that you refer to has nothing to do with backupninja. The product on that site is Backup Ninja, a commercial product, not to mention misleadingly named given that (as far as I can tell) backupninja is much older than Backup Ninja
"A single swap file or partition may be up to 128 MB in size. [...] [I]f you need 256 MB of swap, you can create two 128-MB swap partitions." (M. Welsh & L. Kaufman, Running Linux, 2e, 1996, p. 49)
Oops, sorry, I should have included a link!
Daniel15 | https://d.sb/. List of all my VPSes: https://d.sb/servers
dnstools.ws - DNS lookups, pings, and traceroutes from 30 locations worldwide.
Personal infra: each server executes a daily restic backup in the morning to a Hetzner dedicated server with disks in RAID1, and also a daily borg backup to a Online.net dedicated server. Using the 2 technologies allows for a margin of error in case I mess up a script or a configuration. Backups are in push mode.
Another family member has a Windows 10 laptop which performs a daily backup with Duplicati to one of my Wishosting VPS.
Work infra: I didn't have the luxury of starting clean, so I have been able to set up only a portion of the backups I want to have in the end. There are quite a bit of Docker containers scheduled with Marathon, so I back up at the application level instead of the server level; the backup software is still restic, sending data to S3.
did any notice the domain name in Daniel's footer ... wow,
I've got https://d.ls/ too! haha
Daniel15 | https://d.sb/. List of all my VPSes: https://d.sb/servers
dnstools.ws - DNS lookups, pings, and traceroutes from 30 locations worldwide.
your the man .... pretty impressive .... one day they might provide you with a nice car
best wishes
ehab
Facebook would never allow it. He might escape.
My pronouns are like/subscribe.
@AnthonySmith now that we have a list of ingredients, maybe I should ask... what's cooking?
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A full course meal
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Soupy Gruel. Lovely.
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Just finished setting up acronis across all our VM and pool nodes. This bad boy is prem!!
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Certified ACE and ABE here, glad to hear Acronis works for you.
Are you using this then? https://www.acronis.com/en-eu/business/backup/kvm/
Starts from 729€/year what - without wanting to downplay your services or anything - appears to be a bit costly for a service offering LE pricing. Or are you using the Personal True Image version (50-60€/year)?
Ympker's VPN LTD Comparison, Uptime.is, Ympker's GitHub.
Probably the service provider licensing, they have lots of licensing options and integrates well with cpanel, whmcs and most others.
Ahh.. gotcha. Yeah I was kinda overwhelmed by the many licenses, I guess.
Ympker's VPN LTD Comparison, Uptime.is, Ympker's GitHub.
I don't blame you, at first glance Acronis can look like a bit of a mess, but its really just one product with different packaging/licensing.
Once you get to know their AnyData Engine then you can use all of their products, the rest is just branding.
Definitely not that! Just backing up the complete hardware. Between the free backup VM I offer and many other free option that is out there, plus at my price point, I really hope no one is expecting free nightly backup of their individual VM's.
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Without my man @Jord I would have been lost too. So many options.
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What? I feel cheated
There is always a first time for everything honey
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