OSX Backups
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@BRRABill said in OSX Backups:
@BBigford said
As far as an online service... I know that certain places only allow for a certain amount, like 50GB, at a time. Want 1TB? It could take 30 days, and we'll send you a zip of it. It'll take a long time to download.
BackBlaze does up to 4TB on an external drive they ship next day (once the data is ready). CrashPlan no longer does this restore-to-door.
For $189.
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@BBigford said
For $189.
Well, you do get to keep the drive.
It really comes down to how quickly you need that data.
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@BRRABill said in OSX Backups:
@BBigford said
As far as an online service... I know that certain places only allow for a certain amount, like 50GB, at a time. Want 1TB? It could take 30 days, and we'll send you a zip of it. It'll take a long time to download.
BackBlaze does up to 4TB on an external drive they ship next day (once the data is ready). CrashPlan no longer does this restore-to-door.
I was just thinking of Amazon Glacier and OneDrive where if you want any data over about 50GB, you're not getting access to that amount of data without either waiting or paying a chunk of money every time you need to recover a whole disk. Maybe that portion has changed now, I'm not sure.
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@BRRABill said in OSX Backups:
@BBigford said
For $189.
Well, you do get to keep the drive.
It really comes down to how quickly you need that data.
"Need to restore 4 times? You get 4 drives! ...Which you can use as a direct attach for Time Machine for your 4 computers... Good day!"
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@BBigford said
"Need to restore 4 times? You get 4 drives! ...Which you can use as a direct attach for Time Machine for your 4 computers... Good day!"
4 times? That is what they call in soccer ... unlucky.
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Part of the issue I might run into when backing up data for Mac users is, "would you rather have BackBlaze which does file level backup, or Time Machine which takes a whole snapshot?" That would be followed with, "I just want my computer to be exactly the way it was, an hour ago."
I can just see it now. Not from the CEO, but from other higher ups. The CEO is actually the easiest one to deal with.
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Ifthe goal is to "roll the system back", that's Time Machine. If the goal is to keep from experiencing data loss, the BackBlaze is the choice.
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@scottalanmiller said in OSX Backups:
Ifthe goal is to "roll the system back", that's Time Machine. If the goal is to keep from experiencing data loss, the BackBlaze is the choice.
That's what I was thinking. I'm guessing all online services would be similar to BackBlaze in the end goal, which is overall data loss, rather than rolling back.
I'll just bring this by the boss and see what he prefers. After I do some research on breaking out user backups to separate areas of Time Machine. I'm guessing it has to be somewhat granular.
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@BBigford said in OSX Backups:
@scottalanmiller said in OSX Backups:
Ifthe goal is to "roll the system back", that's Time Machine. If the goal is to keep from experiencing data loss, the BackBlaze is the choice.
That's what I was thinking. I'm guessing all online services would be similar to BackBlaze in the end goal, which is overall data loss, rather than rolling back.
I'll just bring this by the boss and see what he prefers. After I do some research on breaking out user backups to separate areas of Time Machine. I'm guessing it has to be somewhat granular.
Yes, partially because roll back snapshots are not network efficient, a major factor for online services.
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Veeam Backup and Restore might be available for Mac as well. Free and powerful.
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@scottalanmiller said in OSX Backups:
Veeam Backup and Restore might be available for Mac as well. Free and powerful.
"Veeam Endpoint Backup is intended for x86 Windows-based desktops, laptops and tablets only."
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If that is the product you meant.
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I use Carbon Copy Cloner
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No needs to buy anything: you just spin a Linux VM with enough storage your server, and build a time machine server compatible service using Netatalk and Avahi. I've used this from years till today, it's perfectly realiable and very simple; it's enterprise-ready also, you can made this VM as big as you want, backup to tape or replicate as any other VM, and of course host it on enterprise-class hardware etc.
I've read somewhere that Apple's TM is just a linux or bsd machine with a tuned version of netatalk/avahi.
I've build my own "Time Capsule" in a CentOS VM hosted in a KVM environment, no issue at all from 2013. Just search "linux time machine netatalk" and you will find a bunch of tutorials. -
@Francesco-Provino said in OSX Backups:
I've read somewhere that Apple's TM is just a linux or bsd machine with a tuned version of netatalk/avahi.
Don't know about Avahi, but Apple's TM is definitely running on OSX, which is derived from FreeBSD (long ago.)
Are they still using Netatalk in TM? Apple officially moved to SMB as their standard for everything else a couple of OS releases ago.
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Would Time Capsule work? http://www.apple.com/airport-time-capsule/
I use an older model at home and it just works without any effort. And you can backup multiple macs to one. And it's less than half the price of Mac Mini. -
I'm another huge fan of Crashplan. I love their product and it has saved my hide a few times as well as some friends of mine.
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We have lots of clients with Macs as well as GroveSocial runs on Mac's. I use Unitrends (gotta love having like 3 Unitrends appliances in my office).
For one client we do Time Capsule and Crash-Plan. Another is Backblaze. All options are great. All options easy.
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@marcinozga said in OSX Backups:
Would Time Capsule work? http://www.apple.com/airport-time-capsule/
I use an older model at home and it just works without any effort. And you can backup multiple macs to one. And it's less than half the price of Mac Mini.I've been considering that. My thought was, that Time Capsule wouldn't allow for multiple Macs to be broken out so that users can only see their own restores. Also that OSX Server on a Mac Mini might be able to break out those restores completely isolated. I have used neither though so I haven't found anything concrete. Most people using Time Capsule are home users or SOHO, and anyone in enterprise I've found to be using something that doesn't involve a complete roll back in time.
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With time Machine, you can do file-level restores, you don't have to restore the whole system back to the snapshot that you need a few files from.