Re: Sorta OT - Backup solutions Mac to FreeBSD

2007-01-30 Thread bsd

Hello,

I am backing up 5 servers on one centralized machines using  
"rsnapshot" It is doing a perfect job, including :


--> SSH transport.
--> Rsync based.
--> Incremental backup.

As It uses a symlink strategy, It does not use very much space on the  
backup device.


It is in the ports /usr/ports/sysutil/rsnapshot and described as :

rsnapshot is a filesystem snapshot utility based on rsync(1).
rsnapshot makes it easy to make periodic snapshots of local machines,
and remote machines over ssh. The code makes extensive use of hard links
whenever possible, to greatly reduce the disk space required.

It is written entirely in perl with no module dependencies, and has been
tested with versions 5.004 through 5.8.1.

WWW:http://www.rsnapshot.org

--

I am backing up 2To of data, with a daily flow of 20 to 100 Go.
The first backup is quite long - after it's a matter of hours (1 or 2  
max).



In order to fully automate the process, I have created an ssh key  
signature that allows me to access directly as root - if you would  
like more security, you could create a specific user… which will lead  
you to ownership problem, unless very well setup.



The main problem with mac would be to sync the specific MetaData  
files specific to the Mac.
I don't think these are synced in my backup. This is only a problem  
if your users are not naming their files with the right extension  
(.doc, .pdf, …).


If you are syncing OSX 10.4 use the Apple provided rsync and not any  
other (more steady).



The main piece if to configure rsnapshot.conf && cron



# Cron #


0 3 * * 1,2,3,4,5,6,7 /usr/bin/rsnapshot daily;
0 4 1 * * /usr/bin/rsnapshot monthly;




#
# rsnapshot.conf - rsnapshot configuration file #
#
#   #
# PLEASE BE AWARE OF THE FOLLOWING RULES:   #
#   #
# This file requires tabs between elements  #
#   #
# Directories require a trailing slash: #
#   right: /home/   #
#   wrong: /home#
#   #
#

###
# CONFIG FILE VERSION #
###

config_version  1.2

###
# SNAPSHOT ROOT DIRECTORY #
###

# All snapshots will be stored under this root directory.
#snapshot_root  /var/cache/rsnapshot/
snapshot_root   /home/snapshot/

# If no_create_root is enabled, rsnapshot will not automatically  
create the
# snapshot_root directory. This is particularly useful if you are  
backing

# up to removable media, such as a FireWire drive.
#
#no_create_root 1

#
# EXTERNAL PROGRAM DEPENDENCIES #
#

# LINUX USERS:   Be sure to uncomment "cmd_cp". This gives you extra  
features.

# EVERYONE ELSE: Leave "cmd_cp" commented out for compatibility.
#
# See the README file or the man page for more details.
#
#cmd_cp /bin/cp

# uncomment this to use the rm program instead of the built-in perl  
routine

cmd_rm  /bin/rm

# rsync must be enabled for anything to work.
cmd_rsync   /usr/bin/rsync

# Uncomment this to enable remote ssh backups over rsync.
cmd_ssh /usr/bin/ssh

# Comment this out to disable syslog support.
cmd_logger  /usr/bin/logger

# Uncomment this to specify a path to "du" for disk usage checks.
cmd_du  /usr/bin/du

#
#   BACKUP INTERVALS#
# Must be unique and in ascending order #
# i.e. hourly, daily, weekly, etc.  #
#

# The interval names (hourly, daily, ...) are just names and have no  
influence
# on the length of the interval. The numbers set the number of  
snapshots to

# keep for each interval (hourly.0, hourly.1, ...).
# The length of the interval is set by the time between two  
executions of

# rsnapshot , this is normally done via cron.
# Feel free to adopt the names, and the sample cron file under /etc/ 
cron.d/rsnapshot
# to your needs. The only requirement is that the intervals must be  
listed

# in ascending order. To activate just uncomment the entries.

#interval   hourly  6
intervaldaily   5
intervalmonthly 1
#interval   monthly 6


#  GLOBAL OPTIONS  #
# All are optional, with sensible defaults #


# If your version of rsync supports --link-dest, you should enable this.
# This is the best way to support special files (FIFOs, etc) cross- 
platform.

# The default is 0 (off).
# In Debian GNU cp is available which is superior to link_dest, so it  
should be

# commented o

Re: Sorta OT - Backup solutions Mac to FreeBSD

2007-01-29 Thread Doug Hardie


On Jan 29, 2007, at 14:00, Joe Auty wrote:

I've heard of many people having problems with RsyncX and the  
version of rsync included in OS X crapping out and being unreliable.


RsyncX and the patched rsync (the former being a GUI for the CLI  
rsync) that ships with OS X attempts to preserve resource forks and  
other file metadata (a lot of it from the OS 9 era where this stuff  
mattered). If you don't care at all about these attributes (I  
don't), I would recommend building a copy of the stock rsync from  
Macports, similar to FreeBSD ports in design: http://www.macports.org


Here is a partial (or possibly complete) list of file metadata that  
I believe would be lost by using the stock rsync in OS X:


- get info/Finder comments (this has been replaced with Spotlight  
comments in 10.4 which are saved to the Spotlight DB, not as file  
metadata)


- application associations for files without file extensions

- application associations for many OS 9 files, since OS 9 did not  
force file extensions and many users didn't bother with them


- custom icons pasted on


I have heard that also.  However, I have been using it for backups  
for about 3 years now and every time the backup disk boots and  
everything I check works normally.

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Re: Sorta OT - Backup solutions Mac to FreeBSD

2007-01-29 Thread Bill Campbell
On Mon, Jan 29, 2007, Joe Auty wrote:
>I've heard of many people having problems with RsyncX and the version  
>of rsync included in OS X crapping out and being unreliable.
>
>RsyncX and the patched rsync (the former being a GUI for the CLI  
>rsync) that ships with OS X attempts to preserve resource forks and  
>other file metadata (a lot of it from the OS 9 era where this stuff  
>mattered). If you don't care at all about these attributes (I don't),  
>I would recommend building a copy of the stock rsync from Macports,  
>similar to FreeBSD ports in design: http://www.macports.org

The resource forks matter to some OS X software, in particular
the Reunion 8 genealogy program (which may also have issues when
run on case sensitive file systems).  Reunion is the only OS X
program I personally use where this has been an issue (resource
forks, not case insensitivity problems).

Bill
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Re: Sorta OT - Backup solutions Mac to FreeBSD

2007-01-29 Thread Joe Auty
I've heard of many people having problems with RsyncX and the version  
of rsync included in OS X crapping out and being unreliable.


RsyncX and the patched rsync (the former being a GUI for the CLI  
rsync) that ships with OS X attempts to preserve resource forks and  
other file metadata (a lot of it from the OS 9 era where this stuff  
mattered). If you don't care at all about these attributes (I don't),  
I would recommend building a copy of the stock rsync from Macports,  
similar to FreeBSD ports in design: http://www.macports.org


Here is a partial (or possibly complete) list of file metadata that I  
believe would be lost by using the stock rsync in OS X:


- get info/Finder comments (this has been replaced with Spotlight  
comments in 10.4 which are saved to the Spotlight DB, not as file  
metadata)


- application associations for files without file extensions

- application associations for many OS 9 files, since OS 9 did not  
force file extensions and many users didn't bother with them


- custom icons pasted on




On Jan 26, 2007, at 5:28 PM, Gable Barber wrote:


On 1/26/07, Doug Hardie <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:





RsyncX for Mac will sync to a FreeBSD filesystem.


Thank you.

I will try these out.

Gable
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Re: Sorta OT - Backup solutions Mac to FreeBSD

2007-01-29 Thread hal


On Jan  29, 2007, at Monday, Jan29, 2007 12:45 PM, Kenny Dail wrote:


I have been poking around the 'Net a bit looking for an easy to use
backup solution for our Mac's (1 mini, 1 powerbook, more in the
future).

Basically there is a server, offsite (FBSD 6.2) with 2 RAID 5 arrays.
I would like to be able to set the 2 (for now) clients to
automatically, incrementally backup certain directories, nightly.
Something encrypted would be nice aswell.


Here is a script I run out of crontab on my Mac.  Things to note:
- Uses tar to create the backup.
- Uses rcp to get the backup to the FreeBSD box.  Could
use scp if security is an issue.
- It is a cshell script.
- No software to find and install, everything you need
is already on your Mac and freeBSD boxes.
- I do a primary backup every night; no secondaries.
- The script has been in production for about a year
now and works flawlessly.
- Restores are easy, just reverse the process.
- I get an email daily giving me the status of the backup.
- The tar file is written to /tmp before it is copied
to the backup server so disk space could be an issue.
- The tar file could be gziped (tar czf ) to save space
at the expense of cpu time.
- The log directory contains the status of the last two
backups.
- The backup server maintains 31 days of primaries.

 
##

#!/bin/csh

set LHOST=`hostname`
set BASE=/backup_4/$LHOST
set INFOPATH="/Users/root/dump_info"
set RHOST=some.remote.host
set RUSER=rmotuser
set TARCMD="tar cf"
set BKUP_DIR=/Users
set SUCCESS_SUBJECT="$LHOST primary succeeded"
set FAIL_SUBJECT="$LHOST primary failed"
set MAIL_TO="[EMAIL PROTECTED]"
set SEQFILE=$INFOPATH/Sequence

echo "*** `date` $LHOST Begin setup for this primary backup"
echo "*** `date` Set sequence number of this dump"
if(-s $SEQFILE) then
set LAST=`cat $SEQFILE`
else
echo "WARNING: $SEQFILE non-existant or 0 size"
echo " Set last sequence to 0"
set LAST="0"
endif
echo "*** `date` Last sequence number used: $LAST"
switch($LAST)
case "0":
set SEQ="1"
breaksw
case "1":
set SEQ="0"
breaksw
default:
echo "WARNING: Dump sequence is invalid: $LAST"
echo "   Set dump sequence to 0"
set SEQ="0"
breaksw
endsw
echo "*** `date` Sequence number of this dump is: $SEQ"
echo "*** `date` Set path variables"
set INFO=$INFOPATH/primary.$SEQ
set FILE=Users_$SEQ.tar
set [EMAIL PROTECTED]:$BASE/$FILE
set TMPFILE=/var/tmp/$FILE
echo "Path to backup: $BKUP_DIR"
echo "Log file..: $INFO"
echo "Temporary file: $TMPFILE"
echo "Remote file...: $RFILE"
echo "*** `date` $LHOST Setup for this primary backup complete"

echo "*** `date` $LHOST primary backup begun" >&  $INFO
echo "*** `date` Sequence number of this dump is: $SEQ"   >>& $INFO
echo "*** `date` get space used in $BKUP_DIR" >>& $INFO
du -hs $BKUP_DIR/*  >>& $INFO
echo "*** `date` tar $BKUP_DIR to $TMPFILE"   >>& $INFO
$TARCMD $TMPFILE $BKUP_DIR  >>& $INFO
set rslt=$status
if($rslt != 0) then
echo "FATAL: tar failed, status=$rslt">>& $INFO
set subject="$FAIL_SUBJECT"
goto pgm_exit
endif
echo "*** `date` Check size of $TMPFILE"  >>& $INFO
ls -l $TMPFILE  >>& $INFO
echo "*** `date` rcp $TMPFILE to $RFILE"  >>& $INFO
rcp $TMPFILE $RFILE >>& $INFO
set rslt=$status
if($rslt != 0) then
echo "FATAL: rcp failed, status=$rslt">>& $INFO
set subject="$FAIL_SUBJECT"
goto pgm_exit
endif
echo "*** `date` rm $TMPFILE" >>& $INFO
rm $TMPFILE >>& $INFO
set rslt=$status
if($rslt != 0) then
echo "FATAL: rm failed, status=$rslt" >>& $INFO
set subject="$FAIL_SUBJECT"
goto pgm_exit
endif
set subject="$SUCCESS_SUBJECT"
echo "*** `date` Record sequence number of this dump" >>& $INFO
echo "$SEQ" > $SEQFILE
pgm_exit:
echo "*** `date` Exit status=$subject">>& $INFO
echo "*** `date` $LHOST primary backup ended" >>& $INFO
mail -s "$subject" $MAIL_TO < $INFO
exit 0
 
###

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Re: Sorta OT - Backup solutions Mac to FreeBSD

2007-01-29 Thread Roland Smith
On Mon, Jan 29, 2007 at 12:45:45PM -0700, Kenny Dail wrote:
> > I have been poking around the 'Net a bit looking for an easy to use
> > backup solution for our Mac's (1 mini, 1 powerbook, more in the
> > future).
> > 
> > Basically there is a server, offsite (FBSD 6.2) with 2 RAID 5 arrays.
> > I would like to be able to set the 2 (for now) clients to
> > automatically, incrementally backup certain directories, nightly.
> > Something encrypted would be nice aswell.
> I like Bacula (www.bacula.org) easier to set up than Amanda IMHO, and
> works with FreeBSD, MacOS X, Windows, and Linux. Full, Differential, and
> incremental backups, plus encryption.

You could use rsyncx over ssh?

Google for "OS X rsync" and you'll find several tutorials.

Roland
-- 
R.F.Smith   http://www.xs4all.nl/~rsmith/
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Re: Sorta OT - Backup solutions Mac to FreeBSD

2007-01-29 Thread Kenny Dail
> I have been poking around the 'Net a bit looking for an easy to use
> backup solution for our Mac's (1 mini, 1 powerbook, more in the
> future).
> 
> Basically there is a server, offsite (FBSD 6.2) with 2 RAID 5 arrays.
> I would like to be able to set the 2 (for now) clients to
> automatically, incrementally backup certain directories, nightly.
> Something encrypted would be nice aswell.
I like Bacula (www.bacula.org) easier to set up than Amanda IMHO, and
works with FreeBSD, MacOS X, Windows, and Linux. Full, Differential, and
incremental backups, plus encryption.
-- 
Kenny Dail <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>

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Re: Sorta OT - Backup solutions Mac to FreeBSD

2007-01-27 Thread Martin Hepworth

Amanda works well on MacOSX and FreeBSD.

virtual tapes, encrypted backup and (just as important) easy to restore!

--
Martin

On 1/26/07, Gable Barber <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:


Hello all,
I have been poking around the 'Net a bit looking for an easy to use
backup solution for our Mac's (1 mini, 1 powerbook, more in the
future).

Basically there is a server, offsite (FBSD 6.2) with 2 RAID 5 arrays.
I would like to be able to set the 2 (for now) clients to
automatically, incrementally backup certain directories, nightly.
Something encrypted would be nice aswell.

This one looks interesting to me:

http://sourceforge.net/projects/areca/

If anyone has used an open source solution for this , I would
genuinely appreciate hearing about it.

Thanks in advance -

Gable Barber
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Re: [freebsd-questions] Sorta OT - Backup solutions Mac to FreeBSD

2007-01-26 Thread Howard Jones

Gable Barber wrote:

Hello all,
I have been poking around the 'Net a bit looking for an easy to use
backup solution for our Mac's (1 mini, 1 powerbook, more in the
future).

Basically there is a server, offsite (FBSD 6.2) with 2 RAID 5 arrays.
I would like to be able to set the 2 (for now) clients to
automatically, incrementally backup certain directories, nightly.
Something encrypted would be nice aswell.

You might like to try duplicity or rdiff-backup. Both are python-based 
incremental backup solutions, that can work over encrypted connections. 
duplicity can also encrypt the backed-up data for untrusted central 
sites, while rdiff-backup has the advantage that the backup is a normal 
mirror of the backed-up machine (plus reverse increments), so you can 
pick though it. duplicity is initiated from the client over 
FTP/SCP/DAV/S3, while rdiff-backup is initiated by the server normally 
using SSH.


I've been using rdiff-backup on a few dozen FreeBSD servers for a year 
or so now.  I've not tried them on my macs yet but I don't see a reason 
why it *wouldn't* work - python tends to be pretty portable. I'll try it 
on the macs this weekend, in fact.


Howie
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Re: Sorta OT - Backup solutions Mac to FreeBSD

2007-01-26 Thread Gable Barber

On 1/26/07, Doug Hardie <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:





RsyncX for Mac will sync to a FreeBSD filesystem.


Thank you.

I will try these out.

Gable
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Re: Sorta OT - Backup solutions Mac to FreeBSD

2007-01-26 Thread Philip Hallstrom

Hello all,
I have been poking around the 'Net a bit looking for an easy to use
backup solution for our Mac's (1 mini, 1 powerbook, more in the
future).

Basically there is a server, offsite (FBSD 6.2) with 2 RAID 5 arrays.
I would like to be able to set the 2 (for now) clients to
automatically, incrementally backup certain directories, nightly.
Something encrypted would be nice aswell.

This one looks interesting to me:

http://sourceforge.net/projects/areca/

If anyone has used an open source solution for this , I would
genuinely appreciate hearing about it.


I don't, but you could use rsync over ssh if you just want a mirrored 
copy... and if you set up rsync to archive changed files you can keep a 
history as well.  I do that for about 20 servers now and it works great. 
No reason a mac wouldn't work.


Let me know if you're interested in the scripts...
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Sorta OT - Backup solutions Mac to FreeBSD

2007-01-26 Thread Gable Barber

Hello all,
I have been poking around the 'Net a bit looking for an easy to use
backup solution for our Mac's (1 mini, 1 powerbook, more in the
future).

Basically there is a server, offsite (FBSD 6.2) with 2 RAID 5 arrays.
I would like to be able to set the 2 (for now) clients to
automatically, incrementally backup certain directories, nightly.
Something encrypted would be nice aswell.

This one looks interesting to me:

http://sourceforge.net/projects/areca/

If anyone has used an open source solution for this , I would
genuinely appreciate hearing about it.

Thanks in advance -

Gable Barber
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Re: Remote backup solutions

2006-02-09 Thread David Stanford
Goran,

Although I haven't used Bacula in a production environment, I am currently
using it to perform automated full/incremental backups of my Windows
machines at home and it works perfectly. For my purposes it's a bit of
overkill, but does the job with minimal fuss. Of all the researching I had
done (way back), this was the best solution and will probably suit your
needs. Not to mention it has some of the best documentation you could hope
to find for an open source solution.

-David

On 2/8/06, Göran Nilsson <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>
> Thanks Ian.
> This sure looks like a good solutions. Are there anyone that have tried
> out
> bacula on FreeBSD 6.0 in a production enviroment?
>
> /Goran
>
>
> 2006/2/7, Ian Lord <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>:
> >
> > You might want to look into
> > http://www.bacula.org/
> >
> > Didnt try it myself, planning to test it soon...
> > They have a windows client from what they say...
> >
> > At 17:25 2006-02-07, Göran Nilsson wrote:
> > >Hi all.
> > >Im looking for som software (opensource) that's scalable to to plenty
> of
> > >remote backups over the Internet. The idea about this is offering small
> > >companys to do theire backup to a remote distance, and don't have to
> > concern
> > >that much about it. The companys servers are generally NT 4.0 Server up
> > to
> > >Windows2003. The backup system should be based on a FreeBSD 6.0 system.
> > In
> > >the beginning it won't be that many companys doing remotebackups still,
> > it
> > >should be easy grow with the jobs needed.
> > >Anyone have a pointer to what i should look for?
> > >Shoud the backups be done via a vpn solutions like "OpenVPN" and rsync?
> > >Or should i look for something else? Are there any "pitfalls" i should
> > >lookout for?
> > >
> > >Anyway any/all feedback is most appriciated.
> > >
> > >
> > >
> > >/Goran
> > >___
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> > ~~
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> > Sans Frais: 1(877) 776-MSDI -> 1(877) 776-6734
> > http://www.msdi.ca
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Re: Remote backup solutions

2006-02-08 Thread Göran Nilsson
Thanks Ian.
This sure looks like a good solutions. Are there anyone that have tried out
bacula on FreeBSD 6.0 in a production enviroment?

/Goran


2006/2/7, Ian Lord <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>:
>
> You might want to look into
> http://www.bacula.org/
>
> Didnt try it myself, planning to test it soon...
> They have a windows client from what they say...
>
> At 17:25 2006-02-07, Göran Nilsson wrote:
> >Hi all.
> >Im looking for som software (opensource) that's scalable to to plenty of
> >remote backups over the Internet. The idea about this is offering small
> >companys to do theire backup to a remote distance, and don't have to
> concern
> >that much about it. The companys servers are generally NT 4.0 Server up
> to
> >Windows2003. The backup system should be based on a FreeBSD 6.0 system.
> In
> >the beginning it won't be that many companys doing remotebackups still,
> it
> >should be easy grow with the jobs needed.
> >Anyone have a pointer to what i should look for?
> >Shoud the backups be done via a vpn solutions like "OpenVPN" and rsync?
> >Or should i look for something else? Are there any "pitfalls" i should
> >lookout for?
> >
> >Anyway any/all feedback is most appriciated.
> >
> >
> >
> >/Goran
> >___
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> ~~
> Ian Lord
> MSD Informatique
> 1711 Montée Major Terrebonne (Québec) J7M 1E6
> Tél.: (514) 776-MSDI-> (514) 776-6734
> Sans Frais: 1(877) 776-MSDI -> 1(877) 776-6734
> http://www.msdi.ca
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Re: Remote backup solutions

2006-02-07 Thread Ian Lord

You might want to look into
http://www.bacula.org/

Didnt try it myself, planning to test it soon... 
They have a windows client from what they say...


At 17:25 2006-02-07, Göran Nilsson wrote:

Hi all.
Im looking for som software (opensource) that's scalable to to plenty of
remote backups over the Internet. The idea about this is offering small
companys to do theire backup to a remote distance, and don't have to concern
that much about it. The companys servers are generally NT 4.0 Server up to
Windows2003. The backup system should be based on a FreeBSD 6.0 system. In
the beginning it won't be that many companys doing remotebackups still, it
should be easy grow with the jobs needed.
Anyone have a pointer to what i should look for?
Shoud the backups be done via a vpn solutions like "OpenVPN" and rsync?
Or should i look for something else? Are there any "pitfalls" i should
lookout for?

Anyway any/all feedback is most appriciated.



/Goran
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Remote backup solutions

2006-02-07 Thread Göran Nilsson
Hi all.
Im looking for som software (opensource) that's scalable to to plenty of
remote backups over the Internet. The idea about this is offering small
companys to do theire backup to a remote distance, and don't have to concern
that much about it. The companys servers are generally NT 4.0 Server up to
Windows2003. The backup system should be based on a FreeBSD 6.0 system. In
the beginning it won't be that many companys doing remotebackups still, it
should be easy grow with the jobs needed.
Anyone have a pointer to what i should look for?
Shoud the backups be done via a vpn solutions like "OpenVPN" and rsync?
Or should i look for something else? Are there any "pitfalls" i should
lookout for?

Anyway any/all feedback is most appriciated.



/Goran
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Re: Backup Solutions

2003-10-14 Thread Bob Collins

Date: Tue, 14 Oct 2003 12:38:54 -0400
To: "Stephane Raimbault" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
From: Bob Collins <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Subject: Re: Backup Solutions
Cc: <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
At 12:26 PM 10/14/2003, Stephane Raimbault wrote:
Hi,

I am curious as to what people using FreeBSD use for a Backup 
Solution.  Are there any Comercial software available for Tape Backup 
Solutions that run well on FreeBSD?

I'm looking at using a Dell PowerVault 110T LTO tape drive and was 
looking for software to utilize to backup the 10 servers and growing in 
my server farm.

Thank you,
Stephane.


I am sure Bacula can handle your setup. I am also sure Amanda will do the 
job. If I were in your position, I would try both. Run one for a week or 
two and then the other. See which works best for you.

There are some minor catches with Bacula on FreeBSD for running under the 
5X branch with the latest version of bacula. You can follow the threads at 
the bacula email archive on sourceforge. If you are running FBSD 4.8 you 
should be fine. There was/is some change to the SCSI (if I recall 
correctly) coding that Bacula has trouble with.

You would be most welcome to email the bacula list at:
bacula-users (at) lists.sourceforge.net
and ask about your setup and possibilities as well as what you want to do 
per schedules, drives, etc.

Bob

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Re: Backup Solutions

2003-10-14 Thread Dan Nelson
In the last episode (Oct 14), Stephane Raimbault said:
> I am curious as to what people using FreeBSD use for a Backup
> Solution.  Are there any Comercial software available for Tape Backup
> Solutions that run well on FreeBSD?
>
> I'm looking at using a Dell PowerVault 110T LTO tape drive and was
> looking for software to utilize to backup the 10 servers and growing
> in my server farm.

We're using Veritas Netbackup, but they only have client support for
FreeBSD.

Take a look at Tapeware; depending on their definition of "Client", you
can back up 10 machines for between $700 and $3000 (including 1 yr. of
maintenance and support).  They also have a 30-day trial download, so
you can try it out.

http://www.tapeware.com/Products/TapeWare/tw_ms_enter_pack.htm
http://www.tapeware.com/Downloads/
 

-- 
Dan Nelson
[EMAIL PROTECTED]
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Re: Backup Solutions

2003-10-14 Thread Scott Hiemstra
Just so the original question does get answered, I have successfully used
Backup Exec to backup FreeBSD/Linux/Solaris boxes with no real pain to
mention.  Veritas attempts to hide the fact they have agents for UNIX within
backup exec but they are present, you just have to do a little digging on
the Veritas web site.  The only catches to the entire setup if you wish to
use BackupExec is that the backup server must be a windows machine and for
backing up FreeBSD machines you must use compat linux.

Just my past findings,
Scott


- Original Message - 
From: "Brendan" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
To: "Jamie" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Cc: "Stephane Raimbault" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>; <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Sent: Tuesday, October 14, 2003 10:06 AM
Subject: Re: Backup Solutions


>
> The amanda chapter from the O'Reilly book can be found at:
> http://www.backupcentral.com/amanda.html
>
>
> -Brendan
>
> Jamie wrote:
>
> >
> >   Try researching Amanda. http://www.amanda.org
> >
> >   Amanda is also covered in O'Reilly's "Unix Backup and Recovery".
> >
> >   - Jamie
> >
> >
> >
> >
> >On Tue, 14 Oct 2003, Stephane Raimbault wrote:
> >
> >
> >
> >>Hi,
> >>
> >>I am curious as to what people using FreeBSD use for a Backup Solution.
Are there any Comercial software available for Tape Backup Solutions that
run well on FreeBSD?
> >>
> >>I'm looking at using a Dell PowerVault 110T LTO tape drive and was
looking for software to utilize to backup the 10 servers and growing in my
server farm.
> >>
> >>Thank you,
> >>Stephane.
> >>___
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"[EMAIL PROTECTED]"
> >>
> >>
> >>
> >
> >"A friend is someone who lets you have total freedom to be yourself."
> >
> >___
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> >
>
>
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Re: Backup Solutions

2003-10-14 Thread Brendan
The amanda chapter from the O'Reilly book can be found at:
   http://www.backupcentral.com/amanda.html
   
   -Brendan

Jamie wrote:

  Try researching Amanda. http://www.amanda.org

  Amanda is also covered in O'Reilly's "Unix Backup and Recovery".

  - Jamie



On Tue, 14 Oct 2003, Stephane Raimbault wrote:

 

Hi,

I am curious as to what people using FreeBSD use for a Backup Solution.  Are there any Comercial software available for Tape Backup Solutions that run well on FreeBSD?

I'm looking at using a Dell PowerVault 110T LTO tape drive and was looking for software to utilize to backup the 10 servers and growing in my server farm.

Thank you,
Stephane.
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"A friend is someone who lets you have total freedom to be yourself."

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Re: Backup Solutions

2003-10-14 Thread Mike Hogsett

> I am curious as to what people using FreeBSD use for a Backup Solution.  Are 
> there any Comercial software available for Tape Backup Solutions that run wel
> l on FreeBSD?
> 
> I'm looking at using a Dell PowerVault 110T LTO tape drive and was looking fo
> r software to utilize to backup the 10 servers and growing in my server farm.


I use amanda (/usr/ports/misc/amanda-*) on a Dual Xeon 2.8 Ghz machine w/
2Gbytes of RAM running FreeBSD 4.8.  The machine contains a 3ware ATA RAID
card with 6 120Gbyte disks attached and concatinated into a single volume
and is used for temporary holding space for the dump files.  The tape and
tape changer device is a Dell PowerEdge 122T with an LTO tape drive
connected via an Adaptec SCSI controller.  I use `mtx'
(/usr/ports/misc/mtx) to control the tape changer.  To top it off the
machine interfaces to the network using an Intel 1000baseSX ethernet over
fiber network card which is sub-interfaced using VLANs onto all of the
subnets in our switch infrastructure (this means backup traffic doesn't
hit the router).

This machine backs up approximately 200Gbytes per night.  This consists of
157 partitions accross 64 hosts.  The hosts are a combination of Solaris,
Linux, FreeBSD, DEC (OFS/1), and AIX machines.  I get level zero dumps of
each partition every 4 days and sometimes more frequently.

Backups start at 7PM and typically run for about 6 to 8 hours.

Hope that helps.

 - Michael Hogsett
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Re: Backup Solutions

2003-10-14 Thread Bob Collins
At 12:26 PM 10/14/2003, Stephane Raimbault wrote:
Hi,

I am curious as to what people using FreeBSD use for a Backup 
Solution.  Are there any Comercial software available for Tape Backup 
Solutions that run well on FreeBSD?

I'm looking at using a Dell PowerVault 110T LTO tape drive and was looking 
for software to utilize to backup the 10 servers and growing in my server farm.

Thank you,
Stephane.
In my small environment I am using Bacula (www.bacula.org) also it is 
available on sourceforge. It runs quite well, and the documentation is 
above the quality of any commercial software I have seen lately. Oh, BTW, 
it is open source. And the developer is only an email away. Response time 
for him is usually in an hour or so!

I am not related to, get no kickback from, nor even any attaboys from 
Bacula, but am pleased with the product and am quite happy to make mention 
of it!

Someone on the list recommended it to me, and I forgot to say thanks. It 
works well and will handle Windows clients as remote backup clients.

I cannot help you with commercial backup software.

Bob 

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Re: Backup Solutions

2003-10-14 Thread Jamie



   Try researching Amanda. http://www.amanda.org

   Amanda is also covered in O'Reilly's "Unix Backup and Recovery".

   - Jamie




On Tue, 14 Oct 2003, Stephane Raimbault wrote:

> Hi,
>
> I am curious as to what people using FreeBSD use for a Backup Solution.  Are there 
> any Comercial software available for Tape Backup Solutions that run well on FreeBSD?
>
> I'm looking at using a Dell PowerVault 110T LTO tape drive and was looking for 
> software to utilize to backup the 10 servers and growing in my server farm.
>
> Thank you,
> Stephane.
> ___
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Backup Solutions

2003-10-14 Thread Stephane Raimbault
Hi,

I am curious as to what people using FreeBSD use for a Backup Solution.  Are there any 
Comercial software available for Tape Backup Solutions that run well on FreeBSD?

I'm looking at using a Dell PowerVault 110T LTO tape drive and was looking for 
software to utilize to backup the 10 servers and growing in my server farm.

Thank you,
Stephane.
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Backup solutions

2003-03-31 Thread Erik Gustafson
Hello!

I'm supposed to setup a server with the following services:
Apache
MySQL
Email (smtp,pop,webmail)
DNS
ipfw
Filesharing with Samba

For this I have two identical equipped PC's, one DAT-writer and one additional
large harddisk. The load on the server will not be high so I will only
need the first PC to handle these services.

The databases for MySQL are small (about 30Mb)
/var/mail will be big (about 3Gb)
The websites are small (about 50-100Mb)
I expect the files to share with samba wont take more than 5Gb

Now to my questions:
1) I want daily backups of this, at lest mail and mysql must be backed up
daily. The files shared with samba are not that important so a weekly
backup is enough. It is not possible for me to change the tape in the
DAT-writer more than one time per week.

2) Because I have two computers it would be nice if I could use the
second one for redundancy so I can take any of the computers down and
do a 'make world'.


So. How would you accomplish this? 
My idea is to use pdumpfs to dump everything to the additional disk
every day, and as extra security compress and dump mail and databases
to DAT every week. In my solution I dont use the second computer at
all, I have no idea aout how to accomplish redundancy.

All ideas and tips are welcome!


 //Erik

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Fwd&Re: Backup Solutions

2002-12-28 Thread Alex

Dear/Beste Patrick,

Saturday, December 28, 2002, 4:37:26 PM, you wrote:

> Hello all,

> What do you use for a backup solution for your freebsd server?

> I've got a server running mail and web that I would like to back up
> on a  regular basis. Some of the ideas ive heard:

> o Buy a second server, and rsync the two
> o Tape backup (Whats a good freebsd friendly drive?)
> o DVD-RAM (Is it even supported in FreeBSD?)
> o USB hard drive

By a second disk. A RAID solution would keep them in sync every
second.

I let the machine make a zip file during the night. (You can block off
services to be sure no changes happen during the backup.) Because of
idprio/nice you can still work it can still work on it. (make install
or so)


> What works for you? More importantly: Am i sending this to
> the wrong list? And if so, could you point me in the right
> direction?

I would send this to the questions list. I adjusted the message
accordingly.

-- 
Best regards/Met vriendelijke groet,
Alex


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