Comment on How do you backup your data?
redballooon@lemm.ee 1 year agoSame, although aws is my plan b. For plan a I have an older Synology that is a full backup target.
Comment on How do you backup your data?
redballooon@lemm.ee 1 year agoSame, although aws is my plan b. For plan a I have an older Synology that is a full backup target.
grayman@lemmy.world 1 year ago
On site? I put enterprise drives in my nas. Always have and have never had a drive fail. If one does, raid is good until the replacement arrives.
redballooon@lemm.ee 1 year ago
Raid is no backup. Raid helps you against drive failure.
Backup helps you if you or some script screwed up your data, or you need to go back to last months version of a file for whatever other reason.
grayman@lemmy.world 1 year ago
Versioning is a feature completely separate from raid or dual nas or whatever else you do. Your example of the house burning down is exactly why I questioned the dual nas… Both nas will be toast.
So please, tell me again why you need 2 nas for versioning? Maybe you’re doing some goofy hack, then ok. That’s still silly. Just do proper versioning. If you’re coding, just use git. Don’t reinvent the wheel.
redballooon@lemm.ee 1 year ago
I’m stunned that you are unfamiliar with the versioning feature of backups. In my bubble this has been best practice since Apple came along with the Time Machine, but really we tried that even before with rsync, albeit only with limited success.
This is different from git because this takes care about all files and configurations, and it does so automatically. Furthermore it also includes rules when to thin out and discard old versions, because space remains an issue.
Git is not a backup tool. It’s a versioning tool, best user for text files.