Can anyone recommend a commercial off site remote backup service with a client (preferably FOSS) for CentOS 5, preferably that allows encryption of the data being backed up?
Small scale, I'm primarily looking to just back up my mail folder on my server.
I've been backing it up to local hd via rsync but that drive just died, I'd prefer to have it backed up to somewhere more stable than a home box and automated via cron (cli tools a must), but encryption is important, people are snoopy and I'm paranoid about that sort of stuff.
----- "Michael A. Peters" mpeters@mac.com wrote:
Can anyone recommend a commercial off site remote backup service with a client (preferably FOSS) for CentOS 5, preferably that allows encryption of the data being backed up?
Small scale, I'm primarily looking to just back up my mail folder on my server.
I've been backing it up to local hd via rsync but that drive just died, I'd prefer to have it backed up to somewhere more stable than a home box and automated via cron (cli tools a must), but encryption is important, people are snoopy and I'm paranoid about that sort of stuff.
I have not used them personally, but a few acquaintances have been using them for a year or two with no problems. 'It just works.'
--Tim
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thus Michael A. Peters spake:
Can anyone recommend a commercial off site remote backup service with a client (preferably FOSS) for CentOS 5, preferably that allows encryption of the data being backed up?
Small scale, I'm primarily looking to just back up my mail folder on my server.
I've been backing it up to local hd via rsync but that drive just died, I'd prefer to have it backed up to somewhere more stable than a home box and automated via cron (cli tools a must), but encryption is important, people are snoopy and I'm paranoid about that sort of stuff.
I'd like to recommend duplicity. I have it running at my employers site for multiple customers with each one backup up data in the TiByte+ range. Works like a charm.
http://wiki.centos.org/Newsletter/1003#head-95339dd68454e3625bedea8ee587fdf5...
HTH,
Timo
Michael A. Peters writes:
Can anyone recommend a commercial off site remote backup service with a client (preferably FOSS) for CentOS 5, preferably that allows encryption of the data being backed up?
Small scale, I'm primarily looking to just back up my mail folder on my server.
I've been backing it up to local hd via rsync but that drive just died, I'd prefer to have it backed up to somewhere more stable than a home box and automated via cron (cli tools a must), but encryption is important, people are snoopy and I'm paranoid about that sort of stuff. _______________________________________________ CentOS mailing list CentOS@centos.org http://lists.centos.org/mailman/listinfo/centos
I am also looking for encrypted remote backups, been searching the internetz for a while. The only service worth considering so far (imho) is Colin Percival's tarsnap (www.tasnap.com). Let me know which solution you choose, I'm interested.
-- Nux! www.nux.ro
Greetings,
On 8/8/10, Michael A. Peters mpeters@mac.com wrote:
Can anyone recommend a commercial off site remote backup service with a client (preferably FOSS) for CentOS 5, preferably that allows encryption of the data being backed up?
Small scale, I'm primarily looking to just back up my mail folder on my server.
I've been backing it up to local hd via rsync but that drive just died, I'd prefer to have it backed up to somewhere more stable than a home box and automated via cron (cli tools a must), but encryption is important, people are snoopy and I'm paranoid about that sort of stuff.
Dunno how http://nongnu.org/rdiff-backup/ will work for you.
Comments solicited from esteemed members. Of course Amanda, Bacula are there in the conventional DR model.
Never had an opportunity/resources to try it though.
But all the same, looks impressive:
http://www.nongnu.org/rdiff-backup/examples.html
Regards
Rajagopal
Greetings,
On 8/8/10, Michael A. Peters mpeters@mac.com wrote:
Better news still, It seems centos rpms are available for x86(32/64 bits) and ppc arch at (hopefully) at an yum repository
http://packages.sw.be/rdiff-backup/
Again, I have never touched it...
Regards,
Rajagopal