What do you use for personal backup?
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@johnhooks said:
I didn't realize that you could link the folders. At the office they wanted CrashPlan Pro, so we have a small Ubuntu VM that just mounts the NAS folders and backs them up. Not sure why they support mounting in Linux and not Windows.
They don't support it. Linux mounts NAS folders locally. That is why it works.
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@gjacobse said:
Only thing is, is that I'd like to share the space for my dad and brother,.. Have to look into that.
Easy enough to do. Setup your dad and brother to backup to you.
You backup yours to the cloud, which includes the folder backing up your family.
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@JaredBusch This is what I do with my Laptpo and my server at home.
Crashplan!
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For NTG: I keep copies of everything in OneDrive. But we also have a Unitrends appliance in our house. So I have a bare metal on there. I also have Backblaze and another copy of everything in Drop Box.
For GroveSocial: iCloud, Unitrends and USB Stick. There are only about 10 documents on this side of things though....
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Non-critical data goes on an external 1TB hard drive. Critical is on Google Drive, and my wife's photography is backed up to Amazon due to the unlimited storage with Prime.
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Do you do any type of encryption on your back ups?
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@gjacobse said:
Do you do any type of encryption on your back ups?
This is how CrashPlan handles it.
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@JaredBusch said:
@johnhooks said:
I didn't realize that you could link the folders. At the office they wanted CrashPlan Pro, so we have a small Ubuntu VM that just mounts the NAS folders and backs them up. Not sure why they support mounting in Linux and not Windows.
They don't support it. Linux mounts NAS folders locally. That is why it works.
Oooh, I didn't put two and two together. I just saw this on their site "CrashPlan supports backing up network attached storage (NAS) on Mac, Linux, and Solaris." and just figured it was some decision they made.
I guess I could have read further down and saw this: "CrashPlan doesn't support backing up mapped drives on Windows. This is due to an OS-level restriction built into Windows"
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@JaredBusch
it actually doesnt work this way.
Backups from other devices dont go to the cloud.I have about 10TB of data on crashplan but my mothers, mother in laws, and wifes computers are ONLY stored locally on my NAS, just how crashplsn works, it'll backup a folder of about 1MB and thats it
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@johnhooks said:
@JaredBusch said:
@johnhooks said:
I didn't realize that you could link the folders. At the office they wanted CrashPlan Pro, so we have a small Ubuntu VM that just mounts the NAS folders and backs them up. Not sure why they support mounting in Linux and not Windows.
They don't support it. Linux mounts NAS folders locally. That is why it works.
Oooh, I didn't put two and two together. I just saw this on their site "CrashPlan supports backing up network attached storage (NAS) on Mac, Linux, and Solaris." and just figured it was some decision they made.
I guess I could have read further down and saw this: "CrashPlan doesn't support backing up mapped drives on Windows. This is due to an OS-level restriction built into Windows"
Right. When you read the directions for backing up a NAS on Linux, all you are doing is mounting the NAS to a local folder like any other drive in Linux.
You can do the same in windows. Open a privileged command prompt and do this:
mklink /d C:\LinkFolderName\ \\Server\ShareName\
I did it like this
mklink /d D:\LinkStation \\10.254.103.6\Backup
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@Sparkum said:
Backups from other devices dont go to the cloud.
Of course they do. If you set your system up right.
All you have to do is include the local backup folder in your cloud backup set.
First, setup your inbound settings to save to your NAS via the linked folder like this.
Then setup your local machine to backup to CrashPlan Central and include that folder in the backup set like this.
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@JaredBusch said:
@johnhooks said:
@JaredBusch said:
@johnhooks said:
I didn't realize that you could link the folders. At the office they wanted CrashPlan Pro, so we have a small Ubuntu VM that just mounts the NAS folders and backs them up. Not sure why they support mounting in Linux and not Windows.
They don't support it. Linux mounts NAS folders locally. That is why it works.
Oooh, I didn't put two and two together. I just saw this on their site "CrashPlan supports backing up network attached storage (NAS) on Mac, Linux, and Solaris." and just figured it was some decision they made.
I guess I could have read further down and saw this: "CrashPlan doesn't support backing up mapped drives on Windows. This is due to an OS-level restriction built into Windows"
Right. When you read the directions for backing up a NAS on Linux, all you are doing is mounting the NAS to a local folder like any other drive in Linux.
You can do the same in windows. Open a privileged command prompt and do this:
mklink /d C:\LinkFolderName\ \\Server\ShareName\
I did it like this
mklink /d D:\LinkStation \\10.254.103.6\Backup
I'm a moron. I never put this together. Instead of mapped drives I set up each desktop with a link to each share in different libraries. I never even thought to set up CrashPlan that way. Thanks!
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Its all good and well that you see it there but can you see it under "Restore"
Also not supported according to Crashplan
Hmm why cant I add my photos?
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@Sparkum said:
Hmm why cant I add my photos?
the imgur connection is broke. I use Greenshot to make screenshots and it has its own upload functionality for imgur.
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@Sparkum said:
Its all good and well that you see it there but can you see it under "Restore"
I did see the folder under restore form my old system. The current system is still 10-20 days from initial seed, so no idea.
I had never had the need to restore so I never tested that part. I have tested restoring files and such but never one of those.
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Yep it definitely keeps the file scructure, but as my photo shows the bottom line file is 1KB (instead of the 28GB that I have backed up locally)
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I use Windows backup for my data and dump it on my NAS... well that was when I had Windows 7.
I might change it now that I'm on Windows 10.Also, I take a disk level backup with Acronis True Image