When I back up via YAST, I specify the following options --
*) Search files that do not belong to any packages *) Back up hard disk system areas
I have done a complete recovery of some entire high-level directory that I had originally created myself (for example, the Oracle database software directory and the Oracle database data directory). I'm hoping I have everything that way. I have deleted the Oracle software directory, done a full recovery of that directory, and everything is there and works just
before. I am hoping by doing a backup this way that I have everything
By the way, this device is somewhat pricey. I paid $403.95 for it in early '03. There may be cheaper networked devices around that have the same functionality. Greg -----Original Message----- From: Greg Wallace [mailto:jgregw@acsalaska.net] Sent: Wednesday, July 07, 2004 11:33 PM To: 'Carlos E. R.' Cc: 'suse-linux-e@suse.com' Subject: RE: [SLE] Backups I have a Linksys EFG80, which is an Ethernet networked storage device. It is a Unix based operating system running Samba, which is designed to be used on a Windows network or workgroup set-up. If you install Samba on Linux, you can back-up directly to it. It comes with one 80G drive and a slot for a second drive up to 120G. I used to back up directly to it, but my backups got so big that CP would crap out about 2/3 of way through (maybe I was overflowing buffers on the Linksys). The device also has an FTP and Print server. I now log into it via FTP and do a "send". That way, it controls how fast it wants to move the data and I've never had any problems. I have both a Windows and a Linux machine on my network. My printer is hooked up to this device and I can print to it from either printer. It's a pretty handy device for a small home network. Just an FYI. Greg W -----Original Message----- From: Carlos E. R. [mailto:robin1.listas@tiscali.es] Sent: Wednesday, July 07, 2004 9:10 AM To: suse-linux-e@suse.com Subject: RE: [SLE] Backups The Tuesday 2004-07-06 at 18:31 -0800, Greg Wallace wrote: like that
has changed since my initial installation.
Yes, you do get a backup of modified files. But those not modified, that came from an rpm on CD are no copied. It is a kind of incremental restore, such a one that a full restore can be a real pain. I know, it happened to me.
All this I tell from memory; but I was caught by it before.
I prefer a really full backup to CD or DVD.
No CD or DVD will hold all of my data. It's like 6 or 7 gigabytes. But I have a networked storage device with an 80G capacity, so I save it over there. One you "backup to CD", are you saying you point YAST to the CD, or are you using some other software to do a byte by byte image copy?
I do my backups manually. I use "mkzftree" to create a compressed tree of files and directories which are a copy of everything on the HDs I want to backup. Then I break them in chunks roughly 4.7 GB (using mc). Those compressed trees I convert to images using "mkisofs -z -R ...", which I finally burn to DVD using xcdroast. The result is two DVDs with a full compressed backup of my Linux filesystem, which can be mounted normally (mount...) and explored or restored using any standard Linux tool, like konkeror, midnight commander (mc), cp, whatever: zisofs compressed CDs/DVDs can be read transparently by the Linux kernel, they are decompressed on the fly. It is a complicated way of doing a backup, and needs about 160% of your fs as free space. But the end result is very usable. -- Cheers, Carlos Robinson -- Check the headers for your unsubscription address For additional commands send e-mail to suse-linux-e-help@suse.com Also check the archives at http://lists.suse.com Please read the FAQs: suse-linux-e-faq@suse.com