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Linux set up external usb backup drive
Linux set up external usb backup drive






linux set up external usb backup drive
  1. Linux set up external usb backup drive install#
  2. Linux set up external usb backup drive plus#
  3. Linux set up external usb backup drive mac#
  4. Linux set up external usb backup drive windows#

If you use replication and you have more than one snapshot you could also replicate these snapshot as well, which Rsync is not going to do unless the snapshot is being clones and it's content copied over. and handle the blocks irelevent of the contents. However, Replication works with the snapshots directly. As Alvin mentioned, it doesn't support UNICODE, so if you have Latin based text in the filename it will screw them up. Sunseeker, the difference I see between Rsync and replication is that Rsync works directly with the available data within the Dataset, it read the files, convert them and send then to the destination. (I'm experimenting with writing to a fiber attached tape robot.

Linux set up external usb backup drive mac#

Likewise, the default rsync on Mac has no support for extended attributes (which is especially important on a Mac.)

Linux set up external usb backup drive windows#

The inclusion of archivers/pigz or archivers/pxz to speed up compression.)īe careful with rsync from/to Windows (DeltaCopy). (Hmm, that should be a good feature request for FreeNAS. The downside is that you have to receive them on a ZFS capable system in order to read them back, which can be the same FreeNAS server. I would personally not use ZFS on an USB drive, but you can still send ZFS filesystems to (compressed) files, which is very fast. (You can even combine that with snapshots on the USB drive.) You can then still read the UFS drive on another computer running FreeBSD or Linux (read-only, or experimental rw). If you just want a copy of the data, you can attach an USB drive on the FreeNAS server, and format it with UFS. In the latter case it can cost you your job (and it's better to ask them to fork out money for a stable and reliable backup solution). In the former case lost data may cause you some pain and frustation. (4) Is this your data or your employer's data?

Linux set up external usb backup drive plus#

Are there computers that are permanently located on the network (desktop computers)?yes plus VMs (3) How is your network set up? three vmware hosts with lots of cables. I have the 5x 500gb placed in Z3 with the last 500 and 1TB setup as CIFS shares.ĭo you have a computer that can be a dedicated backup target? I have a linux laptop that I can use with a 2TB external hooked up to it.

Linux set up external usb backup drive install#

and I have 4 bays that I can install 3.5 drives. My freenas is a Dell poweredge T110 with a M1015 installed the case right now has 4 500gb 2.5 drives installed into a 5.25 internal enclousure. The family pics I want protected from corruption and backup up locally and offsite. I can afford to lose the media I would love to have a good backup. I would love to backup everything up off site, if not just the family pics right now the only streaming i do is via plex and roku What protocols do you use to share the information? CIFS to load the family videos and photos. (1) What information are you planning to back up?Ībout 300gb of family videos and 2-3Tb of media, movies,tv shows, etc You won't be able to connect them directly to the FreeNAS device, but you could connect them to a separate linux server. It depends on how you plan to integrate the USB drive into your backup scheme. USB can be unreliable and ZFS scrubs on a large USB drive will be about as much fun as getting punched in the face. Yes, but that's not the best way to do backups. I've used microsoft's synctoy in the past to back up small CIFS shares for a little extra redundancy. The best way of backing up a FreeNAS appliance is to build a second computer and use ZFS replication, but you will still need to design a way of doing offsite cold-storage (using tape backups or disk backups).

linux set up external usb backup drive

(4) Is this your data or your employer's data? In the former case lost data may cause you some pain and frustation. (3) How is your network set up? Are there computers that are permanently located on the network (desktop computers)? (2) What available hardware do you have? Do you have a computer that can be a dedicated backup target? (1) What information are you planning to back up? What protocols do you use to share the information? Do the backups need to be offsite? What is an acceptable risk level? In short you haven't provided enough information to give a practical answer to your question. Click to expand.It depends on how you plan to integrate the USB drive into your backup scheme.








Linux set up external usb backup drive