Free Backup Solutions for ESXi
-
Ya all of the ones I listed are "agent" based.
I like rsnapshot a lot because of the hard links. You could lose all of the incrementals except the most recent and you would still be able to fully restore (but only with the most recent data).
-
@johnhooks said:
Ya all of the ones I listed are "agent" based.
I like rsnapshot a lot because of the hard links. You could lose all of the incrementals except the most recent and you would still be able to fully restore (but only with the most recent data).
Same with Unitrends and Veeam Endpoint.
-
@Dashrender said:
@johnhooks said:
Ya all of the ones I listed are "agent" based.
I like rsnapshot a lot because of the hard links. You could lose all of the incrementals except the most recent and you would still be able to fully restore (but only with the most recent data).
Same with Unitrends and Veeam Endpoint.
Don't you need the original full backup for the incremental to restore to?
-
@johnhooks said:
@Dashrender said:
@johnhooks said:
Ya all of the ones I listed are "agent" based.
I like rsnapshot a lot because of the hard links. You could lose all of the incrementals except the most recent and you would still be able to fully restore (but only with the most recent data).
Same with Unitrends and Veeam Endpoint.
Don't you need the original full backup for the incremental to restore to?
I guess I quoted to much of your statement. The part I was applying to was
@johnhooks said:
Ya all of the ones I listed are "agent" based.
That said - does Veeam Endpoint do incrementals?
-
@Dashrender said:
@johnhooks said:
@Dashrender said:
@johnhooks said:
Ya all of the ones I listed are "agent" based.
I like rsnapshot a lot because of the hard links. You could lose all of the incrementals except the most recent and you would still be able to fully restore (but only with the most recent data).
Same with Unitrends and Veeam Endpoint.
Don't you need the original full backup for the incremental to restore to?
I guess I quoted to much of your statement. The part I was applying to was
@johnhooks said:
Ya all of the ones I listed are "agent" based.
That said - does Veeam Endpoint do incrementals?
Yes it does.
-
@johnhooks said:
Ya all of the ones I listed are "agent" based.
I like rsnapshot a lot because of the hard links. You could lose all of the incrementals except the most recent and you would still be able to fully restore (but only with the most recent data).
hard links? how does that bring data forward from an old incremental into the most recent one?
-
@Dashrender said:
@johnhooks said:
Ya all of the ones I listed are "agent" based.
I like rsnapshot a lot because of the hard links. You could lose all of the incrementals except the most recent and you would still be able to fully restore (but only with the most recent data).
hard links? how does that bring data forward from an old incremental into the most recent one?
With a hard link, it's basically just a pointer to where the data lives on the disk. The data isn't actually really and truly deleted until ALL of the pointers are deleted.
-
@Dashrender said:
@johnhooks said:
Ya all of the ones I listed are "agent" based.
I like rsnapshot a lot because of the hard links. You could lose all of the incrementals except the most recent and you would still be able to fully restore (but only with the most recent data).
hard links? how does that bring data forward from an old incremental into the most recent one?
What @dafyre said. You could delete the original plus all but one copy and the inode still exists so the data is still there.
-
Interesting - by that same token, good backup software should not allow you to delete and previous portions of a backup as long as any other backup references files contained in said backup.
i.e. FB - i1 - i2 - i3 - i4
A good backup package won't let you just delete FB and allow you to keep i4 because i4 would be worthless.
-
@Dashrender said:
Interesting - by that same token, good backup software should not allow you to delete and previous portions of a backup as long as any other backup references files contained in said backup.
i.e. FB - i1 - i2 - i3 - i4
A good backup package won't let you just delete FB and allow you to keep i4 because i4 would be worthless.
But in this case i4 isn't worthless. You could completely restore from it. Just not have the old data from FB. So for DR is really nice.