How about something like this...... #!/bin/bash # This script makes a backup of the files on the primary server directory. # Change the values of the variables to make the script work: BACKUPDIR=/data/ BACKUPFILES=*.cdf GZTARFILE=/var/tmp/data_$(date +%F).tar.gz SERVER=mcastasp1 REMOTEDIR=/home/admin/DATA_BKP LOGFILE=/home/admin/DATA_BKP/backup.log CLEANUP=/home/admin/DATA_BKP cd $BACKUPDIR # This creates the archive tar zcf $GZTARFILE $BACKUPFILES > /dev/null 2>&1 # Create Remote backup Directory ssh $SERVER 'mkdir -p /home/admin/DATA_BKP' # Copy the file to another host - we have ssh keys for making this work without intervention. scp $GZTARFILE $SERVER:$REMOTEDIR > /dev/null 2>&1 # Redirect errors because this generates some if the archive # does not exist. rm $GZTARFILE 2> /dev/null # Create a timestamp in a logfile. date >> $LOGFILE echo backup succeeded >> $LOGFILE # Clean up remote server and leave 7 days of backup files ssh $SERVER 'find /home/admin/DATA_BKP/ -follow -name 'data_*' -ctime +7 -exec rm {} \;' ________________________________ From: Alan Hoffmeister <alangtk at gmail.com> To: centos at centos.org Sent: Mon, January 25, 2010 1:48:19 PM Subject: [CentOS] Bash script for backup Hello guyz! I'm new here, and this is my very first truble... I need a script that will backup & compress the folder /media/system in the folder /media/backups But that's not the problem, I need that only the last 7 backups (last 7 days, yeah I know, cronjob...) will stay in that folder... The script need: 1 - Compress folder /media/system 2 - Store in /media/backups 3 - Name the compressed backup like day_month_year.tar.gzip 4 - Check the other backups and delete backups older than 7 days.. Can some one help me? Tanks! _______________________________________________ CentOS mailing list CentOS at centos.org http://lists.centos.org/mailman/listinfo/centos -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: <http://lists.centos.org/pipermail/centos/attachments/20100125/2f73dcdd/attachment-0005.html>