I just got my home server up and running and was wondering what you guys recommend for backups. I figure it will probably be worth having backups on cloud servers tjay are external, are there any good services yall use for that?

  • Qu4ndo@discuss.tchncs.de
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    3 years ago

    Borgbase with Borgmatic (Borg) as the Software. As far as I know the whole Borgbase Service is from a Homelab guy (with our needs in mind).

    Also 3-2-1 rule!

    • witten@lemmy.world
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      3 years ago

      Ehhh I would say then you have probabilistic backups. There’s some percent chance they’re okay, and some percent chance they’re useless. (And maybe some percent chance they’re in between those extremes.) With the odds probably not in your favor. 😄

    • pacjo@lemmy.world
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      3 years ago

      Not so much about testing, but one time I really needed to get to my backups I lost password to the repository (I’m using restic). Luckily a copy of it was stored in bitwarden, but until I remembered it, were perhaps one of the worst moments.

      Needless to say, please test backups and store secrets in more then one place.

  • wibo@lemmy.world
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    3 years ago

    I use restic to backup my raspberry Pi’s to my Synology NAS and backup my NAS to backblaze.

    • pacjo@lemmy.world
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      3 years ago

      It’s the first time I hear about resticprofile and it looks nice. So far I’ve been using crestic for configuration files. Do you know how they compare?

  • Revan343@lemmy.ca
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    3 years ago

    rsync.net and learn to use Borg; they’re stupid cheap if you’re technically proficient enough to handle the Borg setup yourself. Like, charge by the gigabyte, but it’s 1.5¢/GB at the most expensive, and cheaper in bulk

  • GustavoM@lemmy.worldBanned from community
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    3 years ago

    As dumb/simple/boring as this may be…? An external hard drive.

    …what? It doesn’t require you to be online 24/7, works at any™ PC, and the speed is really great – even on a potato.

    Unless you work at NASA or at IBM or similars – then feel free to call me dum.

    • raiun@lemmy.world
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      3 years ago

      While I agree with you, hard drives do have a shelf life. How many years seems to be up for debate but it does exist. If you don’t have multiple drives that are of different ages you may be in a world of hurt one day.

      • randombullet@lemmy.world
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        3 years ago

        I have a hot storage NAS that backups to a warm storage NAS.

        I backup every week and scrub every month.

        I have 2 x ZFS1 pools that contains 3 x 20TB disks each.

        With ECC ram, scrubbing, and independent pools, it’ll take a house fire to kill my local storage.

        I also have a constant backing to Backblaze and yearly encrypted backup that I ship to a friend across the world.

    • Arrayrepairman@lemmy.world
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      3 years ago

      That is great for hardware failures, but what about disasters? I would hate to lose my house to a fire and all the data (including things not replaceable, like family photos) I have on my server at the same time because my primary and backup were both destroyed.

      • GustavoM@lemmy.worldBanned from community
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        3 years ago

        Eh…you’ve got a point there. Then again, there is always pendrives and other extremely small devices where you can copy your (mostly important/crucial) files in and carry it along with your house/car keys or something like that.

  • kalleboo@lemmy.world
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    3 years ago

    Backblaze B2 for automatic syncing of all the little files

    Glacier for long term archiving of old big files that never change

  • hollyberries@lemmy.blahaj.zone
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    3 years ago

    I use Duplicati connected to Storj with data volumes that incrementally get backed up once per month. My files don’t change very often, so monthly is a good balance. Not counting my Jellyfin library, those backups are around 1 TB. With the Jellyfin library, almost 15 TB.

    Earlier this year, I recovered from a 100% data loss scenario, as I didn’t (and still don’t) have space for physical backups. I have a 25 TB allowance, so my actual cost was €0. If I had to pay, it would have been under €1.

  • beerclue@lemmy.world
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    3 years ago

    I used to have everything backed up to a 2TB USB drive. Which I accidentally dropped down the stairs. I lost thousands of family photos and documents. That changed my backup perspective.

    I now have a Synology NAS, with 12TB in a RAID5 array (for a bit of disk redundancy). All my home devices, Proxmox servers etc back up here. The NAS also holds a few TB of media. Attached to it I have a USB hard drive (also 12TB). The NAS gets fully backed up to the USB drive nightly.

    I also have a remote Raspberry Pi with a smaller USB drive (4TB) attached to it at my brother’s house (in another country), where I backup most of the contents of my home NAS. I don’t back up the media, just the important stuff. I might have to upgrade to a larger drive…

  • traches@sh.itjust.works
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    3 years ago
    • restic > backblaze b2, nightly & automatic
    • restic > normally unplugged drive, every couple weeks (manual, recurring reminder)