On Sat, Sep 10, 2011 at 12:01 AM, Richard Shaw <[email protected]> wrote: > I've only skimmed this thread so I apologize if I miss something but I > was thinking. Might it be a better idea to make the user at least > somewhat responsible for the backup?
On Sat, Sep 10, 2011 at 12:00 AM, Les Mikesell <[email protected]> wrote: > In that case, I can't help thinking that the right solution would be a > version control system designed for concurrent access with reasonable > client interfaces for the conflict resolution operation. This is You may be right in an ideal world, but I'm still shooting for something that requires a minimum of work, especially changes in user behavior, training, etc. AFAIC I'm still planning to try for my ideal - finding a way to just backup everything currently mounted - putting in place the restrictions I mentioned earlier to keep things as manageable as possible. Since investigating that will be a bit of a capital-P Project, I probably won't get a round tuit for a few weeks yet. Plan B will probably be to keep the roaming disks the canonical location, automate as much as possible their frequent rsync'ing up to a central location and then using BackupPC to back it up from there. Now that I think about it, implementing the latter for the "known drives" first would be a quick win, leaving my more "out there" idea as a later-on "belt and suspenders" process. Once a drive gets converted into the more stable group, it can be excluded from the "grab everything". Anyway, obviously thinking out loud here, don't want to waste y'all's time any further. Thanks both Richard and Les for your suggestions. . . Very off-topic: > I think Notes is still around, but it is at least as much of a toolkit My career was very Notes-centric from around 91-Y2K, starting with v2; IMO IBM's takeover and Ray Ozzie's departure was when Notes jumped the shark, and given its history over the decade since, I'm *know* I'm not going back 8-) The programmability came later on (v4+), but even out of the box there was a lot of great functionality - pretty much invented the concept of "groupware" back when the corporate world was just starting to adjust (understatement!) to plain email and the Internet still forbade any commercial activity. The replication model was very kewl for intermittently-connected users, with a rare combination of user-friendliness and central management I haven't come across in the open-source world. . . ------------------------------------------------------------------------------ Malware Security Report: Protecting Your Business, Customers, and the Bottom Line. Protect your business and customers by understanding the threat from malware and how it can impact your online business. http://www.accelacomm.com/jaw/sfnl/114/51427462/ _______________________________________________ BackupPC-users mailing list [email protected] List: https://lists.sourceforge.net/lists/listinfo/backuppc-users Wiki: http://backuppc.wiki.sourceforge.net Project: http://backuppc.sourceforge.net/
