Question.
borg
Submitted 2 months ago by TheBigBrother@lemmy.world to selfhosted@lemmy.world
Question.
borg
You Borg the whole disk? Or which paths?
See excludes here: wiki.archlinux.org/title/Rsync#Full_system_backup
Mine is 3-pronged:
/root
change, plus one nightly /home
snapshot. but it’s pretty demanding on disk space, and doesn’t handle drive failure; so I also doThe only “restore entire system b/c of screwing up the OS” is #1. I could - and probably should, make a whole disk snapshot to a backup drive via #2, but I’m waiting until bcachefs is more mature, then I’ll migrate to that, for the interesting replication options it allows which would make real-time disk replication to slow USB drives practical; I’d only need to snapshot /efi
after kernel upgrades, and if I had that set up and a spare NVME on hand, I could probably be back up and running within a half hour.
I just stop my containers and tar gzip their compose files, their volumes and the /etc folder on the host
Acronyms, initialisms, abbreviations, contractions, and other phrases which expand to something larger, that I’ve seen in this thread:
Fewer Letters | More Letters |
---|---|
LXC | Linux Containers |
NAS | Network-Attached Storage |
NFS | Network File System, a Unix-based file-sharing protocol known for performance and efficiency |
k8s | Kubernetes container management package |
[Thread #931 for this sub, first seen 21st Aug 2024, 08:35] [FAQ] [Full list] [Contact] [Source code]
Relax and Recoverfor bare metal backup of the OS critical components and directories, and Deja Dup (or Gnome Backup) for user files
I use proxmox and proxmox backup server (in a vm). I reinstall them both, and re-add lxc and vm and their drives. har already worked once.
important files are additionaly synced to laptop and phone using syncthing.
proxmox backups (which are encrypted) are rcloned to backblaze for offsite backup
Don’t. Backup data, reinstall software.
Answer.
Rclone with crypt option, to any super cheap cloud storage.
drkt@lemmy.dbzer0.com 2 months ago
By having it be a container
TheBigBrother@lemmy.world 2 months ago
Elaborate please.
lemmyng@lemmy.ca 2 months ago
The container is reproducible. Container configuration is in version control. That leaves you with the volumes mounted into the container, which you back up like any other disk.
drkt@lemmy.dbzer0.com 2 months ago
All of my services run on LXC containers. Some files and configs are backed up to NAS and offsite. The containers are snapshotted in their entirety before I do any work on them. A snapshot takes 5 seconds to make and causes no downtime. If I regret a change or mess it up, I can restore the snapshot in under a minute at the cost of some seconds of downtime.
My only non-container machines are my desktop (doesn’t count), my NAS and the Hypervisor. The Hypervisor is very clean and wouldn’t be much fuss to reinstall and the NAS is literally just Debian with NFS. All of these have a regular rsync which runs to backup the important files.