On Fri, Sep 26, 2014 at 1:31 PM, Carl Wilhelm Soderstrom <chr...@real-time.com> wrote: > On 09/26 12:58 , Les Mikesell wrote: >> Do you keep something that formally tracks the >> lvm/mdraid/partition/filesystem layout on all of the machines you back >> up so you know what you need to re-create? > > No, the partition layouts are pretty simple (generally a root partition of > 10-30GB, plus 2-4GB swap, plus a data partition of whatever disk remains for > whatever this machine is dedicated to [/var/lib/backuppc for a backup > server, /var/www for a webserver, /var/lib/mysql for a MySQL server, etc]), > and I get the mount points from /etc/fstab. I can do it pretty quickly (like > 5 minutes or less) but your point is well taken that something to capture > partition sizes and automate the restore of them might be a good addition. > > Years ago I worked on Mondo Rescue (http://www.mondorescue.com/) but that > was in the pre-1.0 days I think and any code I contributed to it has long > since been replaced. Since learning about BackupPC I no longer felt a need > for Mondo (tho there might be a use for Mindi, the minimalist restore tool > which is part of it). > > I have not looked at 'rear'.
It's worth at least a look. It is pretty nice to run 'as is' to have a quick bare-metal restore if you know you are going to do something risky, or to move to different hardware or a VM. But, I think it has exactly the parts that backuppc is missing in terms of bare metal rebuilds and since it is all native tools and shell scripts a small amount of tweaking could give the advantages of taking next to no extra backup space as pooled on a backuppc server and also always having current version-matched filesystem tools on your bootable restore image. All you need to try it out is some writable nfs space for it to write its iso and tar images. And if you can map that iso image file into a VM, you don't even have to touch anything to go through the motions of the restore. -- Les Mikesell lesmikes...@gmail.com ------------------------------------------------------------------------------ Meet PCI DSS 3.0 Compliance Requirements with EventLog Analyzer Achieve PCI DSS 3.0 Compliant Status with Out-of-the-box PCI DSS Reports Are you Audit-Ready for PCI DSS 3.0 Compliance? Download White paper Comply to PCI DSS 3.0 Requirement 10 and 11.5 with EventLog Analyzer http://pubads.g.doubleclick.net/gampad/clk?id=154622311&iu=/4140/ostg.clktrk _______________________________________________ BackupPC-users mailing list BackupPC-users@lists.sourceforge.net List: https://lists.sourceforge.net/lists/listinfo/backuppc-users Wiki: http://backuppc.wiki.sourceforge.net Project: http://backuppc.sourceforge.net/