Having used it for years in 'trial mode' I forked up for a copy of
https://www.terabyteunlimited.com/image-for-linux/ Image for Linux.
It does great whole disk images. I could probably have found free software,
or done dd compressed dumps etc, but having tried a whole heap of things
this just did what I needed without being a PITA at any point in the
process.
Mark.
On Mon, 18 Oct 2021 at 16:53, Zane Healy <healyzh at avanthar.com> wrote:
On Oct 17, 2021, at 12:53 PM, Thomas DeBellis
<tommytimesharing at gmail.com>
wrote:
*Fourth* (and final) concerns RAID in an indirect way. My Tops-20
systems are backed up on a quarterly basis and those backups compressed and
moved to alternate storage. However, I have never backed up any of the
Ubuntu systems and, although I am running SSD media, some of this is quite
old and I'm starting to feel uncomfortable out it.
Were you aware of any winning backup solutions? I can restore Tops-20 to
bare metal, but I really don't remember how to do this for Unix (although I
did know it for Ultrix at one point). So I starting looking. D?j? Dup
looks like it won't quite do what I need, but since it uses duplicity, I
started looking at that.
Remember, even a RAID is no substitute for backup. This was probably more
true in the days where a hardware RAID controller error introduced a single
point of failure; it may still be true for a software RAID.
Take a look at Veeam, specifically the ?Community Edition?. You should
also be able to take a look at the "Veeam Agent for Linux?, as you can
simply run it on your Linux box, and point it at an NFS share or USB disk.
The community edition of Veeam Backup and Recovery allows you to backup 10
Physical or Virtual systems for free. It?s only downside is that it needs
to run on Windows.
I do nightly Veeam backups of all the VMware VM?s that run my virtual DEC
systems. This has saved me in at least one case.
Bare metal Veeam restores are an option, since you asked about ?Bare
Metal?, but that?s something I?ve not tested.
Zane
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