Having almost lost a big box of photos to a fire in 1988, and many hard
drives dying over the years, call me paranoid. Pardon me if I weigh in on this somewhat off topic topic, but it is a passion of mine. While my experiences and practices are for Windows, surely the open source community has similar options. Backing up once a month is fine if you don't shoot anything in a month! Anytime I off load a camera to the computer, it gets backed up right away. /You hard drive WILL fail. Maybe not tomorrow, but eventually! /And I don't erase the camera card until those new images are in a third location. I have a second drive on the computer for backups. I just saw several local vendors selling 2 TB USB drives for $100. Cost is no longer an issue. I use a simple command box program called xxcopy. A few keystrokes, off it goes. I can either merely add new material (/bu) or clone the second drive to mirror the first (/clone). Once upon a time I kept a hard drive in my car and I would clone it at least twice a month - if I remembered!. For over a year I've been using Carbonite service. For $55/year, unlimited storage, automatic backing up, and off site retrieval. Usually in minutes, my new images are WAY off site. OK, now I can erase the camera card. One time I very accidentally erased, yes, my photo folder from both my primary and secondary hard drives while cleaning things up! In twelve hours it was all restored from Carbonite. It's not just fire or hard ware failure, there is the human component. Maybe there is a Linux equivalent of Carbonite, or you can use your own web hosting space to hold the back up. When I went on vacation this month, I took my second hard drive to my sister's in a plastic food box. My house could burn down (see opening sentence) and I would still have two copies of everything. If I were to ever lose all my (digital, there are still analog) photos, and my writings, I think I'd shoot myself. I hope this possibly saves a disaster for someone. Short of nuclear demolition, I think my photos are safe. Paul _______________________________________________ Digikam-users mailing list [hidden email] https://mail.kde.org/mailman/listinfo/digikam-users |
I'm just interrested by this post.
Carbonite service http://www.carbonite.com/en/online-backup-software/how-it-works is not too expensive : 54$ per computer... but for which capacity in Gb ??? Of course, service do not work under Linux, as usual (i'm sure that Linux is used in background by Carbonite) Somebody know an alternative, working under Linux, with attractive prize ? Gilles Caulier 2011/2/23 Paul Verizzo <[hidden email]>: > Having almost lost a big box of photos to a fire in 1988, and many hard > drives dying over the years, call me paranoid. Pardon me if I weigh in > on this somewhat off topic topic, but it is a passion of mine. While my > experiences and practices are for Windows, surely the open source > community has similar options. > > Backing up once a month is fine if you don't shoot anything in a > month! Anytime I off load a camera to the computer, it gets backed up > right away. /You hard drive WILL fail. Maybe not tomorrow, but > eventually! /And I don't erase the camera card until those new images > are in a third location. > > I have a second drive on the computer for backups. I just saw several > local vendors selling 2 TB USB drives for $100. Cost is no longer an > issue. I use a simple command box program called xxcopy. A few > keystrokes, off it goes. I can either merely add new material (/bu) or > clone the second drive to mirror the first (/clone). > > Once upon a time I kept a hard drive in my car and I would clone it at > least twice a month - if I remembered!. > > For over a year I've been using Carbonite service. For $55/year, > unlimited storage, automatic backing up, and off site retrieval. > Usually in minutes, my new images are WAY off site. OK, now I can erase > the camera card. One time I very accidentally erased, yes, my photo > folder from both my primary and secondary hard drives while cleaning > things up! In twelve hours it was all restored from Carbonite. It's > not just fire or hard ware failure, there is the human component. > > Maybe there is a Linux equivalent of Carbonite, or you can use your own > web hosting space to hold the back up. > > When I went on vacation this month, I took my second hard drive to my > sister's in a plastic food box. My house could burn down (see opening > sentence) and I would still have two copies of everything. If I were to > ever lose all my (digital, there are still analog) photos, and my > writings, I think I'd shoot myself. > > I hope this possibly saves a disaster for someone. Short of nuclear > demolition, I think my photos are safe. > > Paul > > > _______________________________________________ > Digikam-users mailing list > [hidden email] > https://mail.kde.org/mailman/listinfo/digikam-users > Digikam-users mailing list [hidden email] https://mail.kde.org/mailman/listinfo/digikam-users |
I don't know if you consider it attractice prize wize or comparable:
https://spideroak.com/ I use the free 2GB for documents and such. Not images though. Works under Linux . /Anders 2011/2/23 Gilles Caulier <[hidden email]>: > I'm just interrested by this post. > > Carbonite service > http://www.carbonite.com/en/online-backup-software/how-it-works > > is not too expensive : 54$ per computer... but for which capacity in Gb ??? > > Of course, service do not work under Linux, as usual (i'm sure that > Linux is used in background by Carbonite) > > Somebody know an alternative, working under Linux, with attractive prize ? > > Gilles Caulier > > 2011/2/23 Paul Verizzo <[hidden email]>: >> Having almost lost a big box of photos to a fire in 1988, and many hard >> drives dying over the years, call me paranoid. Pardon me if I weigh in >> on this somewhat off topic topic, but it is a passion of mine. While my >> experiences and practices are for Windows, surely the open source >> community has similar options. >> >> Backing up once a month is fine if you don't shoot anything in a >> month! Anytime I off load a camera to the computer, it gets backed up >> right away. /You hard drive WILL fail. Maybe not tomorrow, but >> eventually! /And I don't erase the camera card until those new images >> are in a third location. >> >> I have a second drive on the computer for backups. I just saw several >> local vendors selling 2 TB USB drives for $100. Cost is no longer an >> issue. I use a simple command box program called xxcopy. A few >> keystrokes, off it goes. I can either merely add new material (/bu) or >> clone the second drive to mirror the first (/clone). >> >> Once upon a time I kept a hard drive in my car and I would clone it at >> least twice a month - if I remembered!. >> >> For over a year I've been using Carbonite service. For $55/year, >> unlimited storage, automatic backing up, and off site retrieval. >> Usually in minutes, my new images are WAY off site. OK, now I can erase >> the camera card. One time I very accidentally erased, yes, my photo >> folder from both my primary and secondary hard drives while cleaning >> things up! In twelve hours it was all restored from Carbonite. It's >> not just fire or hard ware failure, there is the human component. >> >> Maybe there is a Linux equivalent of Carbonite, or you can use your own >> web hosting space to hold the back up. >> >> When I went on vacation this month, I took my second hard drive to my >> sister's in a plastic food box. My house could burn down (see opening >> sentence) and I would still have two copies of everything. If I were to >> ever lose all my (digital, there are still analog) photos, and my >> writings, I think I'd shoot myself. >> >> I hope this possibly saves a disaster for someone. Short of nuclear >> demolition, I think my photos are safe. >> >> Paul >> >> >> _______________________________________________ >> Digikam-users mailing list >> [hidden email] >> https://mail.kde.org/mailman/listinfo/digikam-users >> > _______________________________________________ > Digikam-users mailing list > [hidden email] > https://mail.kde.org/mailman/listinfo/digikam-users > Digikam-users mailing list [hidden email] https://mail.kde.org/mailman/listinfo/digikam-users |
I use Perfect Backup -- http://www.perfectbackup.co.uk/
there's a free 1Gb account (which I use) and you can buy bigger ones. seems very good to me! backups can be automated & easy to get files back (even previous versions) & runs on Linux DIL23 :) On Wednesday 23 Feb 2011 14:27:03 Stedtlund wrote: > I don't know if you consider it attractice prize wize or comparable: > https://spideroak.com/ > > I use the free 2GB for documents and such. Not images though. > > Works under Linux . > > /Anders > > 2011/2/23 Gilles Caulier <[hidden email]>: > > I'm just interrested by this post. > > > > Carbonite service > > http://www.carbonite.com/en/online-backup-software/how-it-works > > > > is not too expensive : 54$ per computer... but for which capacity in Gb > > ??? > > > > Of course, service do not work under Linux, as usual (i'm sure that > > Linux is used in background by Carbonite) > > > > Somebody know an alternative, working under Linux, with attractive prize > > ? > > > > Gilles Caulier > > > > 2011/2/23 Paul Verizzo <[hidden email]>: > >> Having almost lost a big box of photos to a fire in 1988, and many hard > >> drives dying over the years, call me paranoid. Pardon me if I weigh in > >> on this somewhat off topic topic, but it is a passion of mine. While my > >> experiences and practices are for Windows, surely the open source > >> community has similar options. > >> > >> Backing up once a month is fine if you don't shoot anything in a > >> month! Anytime I off load a camera to the computer, it gets backed up > >> right away. /You hard drive WILL fail. Maybe not tomorrow, but > >> eventually! /And I don't erase the camera card until those new images > >> are in a third location. > >> > >> I have a second drive on the computer for backups. I just saw several > >> local vendors selling 2 TB USB drives for $100. Cost is no longer an > >> issue. I use a simple command box program called xxcopy. A few > >> keystrokes, off it goes. I can either merely add new material (/bu) or > >> clone the second drive to mirror the first (/clone). > >> > >> Once upon a time I kept a hard drive in my car and I would clone it at > >> least twice a month - if I remembered!. > >> > >> For over a year I've been using Carbonite service. For $55/year, > >> unlimited storage, automatic backing up, and off site retrieval. > >> Usually in minutes, my new images are WAY off site. OK, now I can erase > >> the camera card. One time I very accidentally erased, yes, my photo > >> folder from both my primary and secondary hard drives while cleaning > >> things up! In twelve hours it was all restored from Carbonite. It's > >> not just fire or hard ware failure, there is the human component. > >> > >> Maybe there is a Linux equivalent of Carbonite, or you can use your own > >> web hosting space to hold the back up. > >> > >> When I went on vacation this month, I took my second hard drive to my > >> sister's in a plastic food box. My house could burn down (see opening > >> sentence) and I would still have two copies of everything. If I were to > >> ever lose all my (digital, there are still analog) photos, and my > >> writings, I think I'd shoot myself. > >> > >> I hope this possibly saves a disaster for someone. Short of nuclear > >> demolition, I think my photos are safe. > >> > >> Paul > >> > >> > >> _______________________________________________ > >> Digikam-users mailing list > >> [hidden email] > >> https://mail.kde.org/mailman/listinfo/digikam-users > > > > _______________________________________________ > > Digikam-users mailing list > > [hidden email] > > https://mail.kde.org/mailman/listinfo/digikam-users > > _______________________________________________ > Digikam-users mailing list > [hidden email] > https://mail.kde.org/mailman/listinfo/digikam-users Digikam-users mailing list [hidden email] https://mail.kde.org/mailman/listinfo/digikam-users |
In reply to this post by Anders Stedtlund
I use Perfect Backup -- http://www.perfectbackup.co.uk/
there's a free 1Gb account (which I use) and you can buy bigger ones. seems very good to me! backups can be automated & easy to get files back (even previous versions) & runs on Linux DIL23 :) On Wednesday 23 Feb 2011 14:27:03 Stedtlund wrote: > I don't know if you consider it attractice prize wize or comparable: > https://spideroak.com/ > > I use the free 2GB for documents and such. Not images though. > > Works under Linux . > > /Anders > > 2011/2/23 Gilles Caulier <[hidden email]>: > > I'm just interrested by this post. > > > > Carbonite service > > http://www.carbonite.com/en/online-backup-software/how-it-works > > > > is not too expensive : 54$ per computer... but for which capacity in Gb > > ??? > > > > Of course, service do not work under Linux, as usual (i'm sure that > > Linux is used in background by Carbonite) > > > > Somebody know an alternative, working under Linux, with attractive prize > > ? > > > > Gilles Caulier > > > > 2011/2/23 Paul Verizzo <[hidden email]>: > >> Having almost lost a big box of photos to a fire in 1988, and many hard > >> drives dying over the years, call me paranoid. Pardon me if I weigh in > >> on this somewhat off topic topic, but it is a passion of mine. While my > >> experiences and practices are for Windows, surely the open source > >> community has similar options. > >> > >> Backing up once a month is fine if you don't shoot anything in a > >> month! Anytime I off load a camera to the computer, it gets backed up > >> right away. /You hard drive WILL fail. Maybe not tomorrow, but > >> eventually! /And I don't erase the camera card until those new images > >> are in a third location. > >> > >> I have a second drive on the computer for backups. I just saw several > >> local vendors selling 2 TB USB drives for $100. Cost is no longer an > >> issue. I use a simple command box program called xxcopy. A few > >> keystrokes, off it goes. I can either merely add new material (/bu) or > >> clone the second drive to mirror the first (/clone). > >> > >> Once upon a time I kept a hard drive in my car and I would clone it at > >> least twice a month - if I remembered!. > >> > >> For over a year I've been using Carbonite service. For $55/year, > >> unlimited storage, automatic backing up, and off site retrieval. > >> Usually in minutes, my new images are WAY off site. OK, now I can erase > >> the camera card. One time I very accidentally erased, yes, my photo > >> folder from both my primary and secondary hard drives while cleaning > >> things up! In twelve hours it was all restored from Carbonite. It's > >> not just fire or hard ware failure, there is the human component. > >> > >> Maybe there is a Linux equivalent of Carbonite, or you can use your own > >> web hosting space to hold the back up. > >> > >> When I went on vacation this month, I took my second hard drive to my > >> sister's in a plastic food box. My house could burn down (see opening > >> sentence) and I would still have two copies of everything. If I were to > >> ever lose all my (digital, there are still analog) photos, and my > >> writings, I think I'd shoot myself. > >> > >> I hope this possibly saves a disaster for someone. Short of nuclear > >> demolition, I think my photos are safe. > >> > >> Paul > >> > >> > >> _______________________________________________ > >> Digikam-users mailing list > >> [hidden email] > >> https://mail.kde.org/mailman/listinfo/digikam-users > > > > _______________________________________________ > > Digikam-users mailing list > > [hidden email] > > https://mail.kde.org/mailman/listinfo/digikam-users > > _______________________________________________ > Digikam-users mailing list > [hidden email] > https://mail.kde.org/mailman/listinfo/digikam-users Digikam-users mailing list [hidden email] https://mail.kde.org/mailman/listinfo/digikam-users |
In reply to this post by Gilles Caulier-4
Am Mittwoch, den 23.02.2011, 14:39 +0100 schrieb Gilles Caulier:
> Somebody know an alternative, working under Linux, with attractive prize ? Just did a "fast" search with google (since I'm also interested in such a thing...). Found: www.crashplan.com Looks pretty fine... regards bernhard _______________________________________________ Digikam-users mailing list [hidden email] https://mail.kde.org/mailman/listinfo/digikam-users |
In reply to this post by DIL23-2
Le 23/02/2011 15:50, DIL23 a écrit :
Dropbox is another possibility. 2Gb free at registration and up to 10Gb with the invitation mechanism. 9,99€/month for 50GB. Linux, MacOS, Windows. No operation needed for sync local data with dropbox cloud and other computer you use with dropbox installed... G. > I use Perfect Backup -- http://www.perfectbackup.co.uk/ > > there's a free 1Gb account (which I use) and you can buy bigger ones. > > seems very good to me! backups can be automated& easy to get files back (even > previous versions)& runs on Linux > > DIL23 > :) > > On Wednesday 23 Feb 2011 14:27:03 Stedtlund wrote: > >> I don't know if you consider it attractice prize wize or comparable: >> https://spideroak.com/ >> >> I use the free 2GB for documents and such. Not images though. >> >> Works under Linux . >> >> /Anders >> >> 2011/2/23 Gilles Caulier<[hidden email]>: >> >>> I'm just interrested by this post. >>> >>> Carbonite service >>> http://www.carbonite.com/en/online-backup-software/how-it-works >>> >>> is not too expensive : 54$ per computer... but for which capacity in Gb >>> ??? >>> >>> Of course, service do not work under Linux, as usual (i'm sure that >>> Linux is used in background by Carbonite) >>> >>> Somebody know an alternative, working under Linux, with attractive prize >>> ? >>> >>> Gilles Caulier >>> >>> 2011/2/23 Paul Verizzo<[hidden email]>: >>> >>>> Having almost lost a big box of photos to a fire in 1988, and many hard >>>> drives dying over the years, call me paranoid. Pardon me if I weigh in >>>> on this somewhat off topic topic, but it is a passion of mine. While my >>>> experiences and practices are for Windows, surely the open source >>>> community has similar options. >>>> >>>> Backing up once a month is fine if you don't shoot anything in a >>>> month! Anytime I off load a camera to the computer, it gets backed up >>>> right away. /You hard drive WILL fail. Maybe not tomorrow, but >>>> eventually! /And I don't erase the camera card until those new images >>>> are in a third location. >>>> >>>> I have a second drive on the computer for backups. I just saw several >>>> local vendors selling 2 TB USB drives for $100. Cost is no longer an >>>> issue. I use a simple command box program called xxcopy. A few >>>> keystrokes, off it goes. I can either merely add new material (/bu) or >>>> clone the second drive to mirror the first (/clone). >>>> >>>> Once upon a time I kept a hard drive in my car and I would clone it at >>>> least twice a month - if I remembered!. >>>> >>>> For over a year I've been using Carbonite service. For $55/year, >>>> unlimited storage, automatic backing up, and off site retrieval. >>>> Usually in minutes, my new images are WAY off site. OK, now I can erase >>>> the camera card. One time I very accidentally erased, yes, my photo >>>> folder from both my primary and secondary hard drives while cleaning >>>> things up! In twelve hours it was all restored from Carbonite. It's >>>> not just fire or hard ware failure, there is the human component. >>>> >>>> Maybe there is a Linux equivalent of Carbonite, or you can use your own >>>> web hosting space to hold the back up. >>>> >>>> When I went on vacation this month, I took my second hard drive to my >>>> sister's in a plastic food box. My house could burn down (see opening >>>> sentence) and I would still have two copies of everything. If I were to >>>> ever lose all my (digital, there are still analog) photos, and my >>>> writings, I think I'd shoot myself. >>>> >>>> I hope this possibly saves a disaster for someone. Short of nuclear >>>> demolition, I think my photos are safe. >>>> >>>> Paul >>>> >>>> >>>> _______________________________________________ >>>> Digikam-users mailing list >>>> [hidden email] >>>> https://mail.kde.org/mailman/listinfo/digikam-users >>>> >>> _______________________________________________ >>> Digikam-users mailing list >>> [hidden email] >>> https://mail.kde.org/mailman/listinfo/digikam-users >>> >> _______________________________________________ >> Digikam-users mailing list >> [hidden email] >> https://mail.kde.org/mailman/listinfo/digikam-users >> > _______________________________________________ > Digikam-users mailing list > [hidden email] > https://mail.kde.org/mailman/listinfo/digikam-users > _______________________________________________ Digikam-users mailing list [hidden email] https://mail.kde.org/mailman/listinfo/digikam-users |
In reply to this post by Bernhard Schweighofer
Am Mittwoch, den 23.02.2011, 16:04 +0100 schrieb Bernhard Schweighofer:
> www.crashplan.com > Forgot to mention the prices: 50$/year or 35$/year if you make a 4 years contract... They mention an "unlimited storage" - whatever that means. On their website I couldn't find any "hard limits"... regards Bernhard _______________________________________________ Digikam-users mailing list [hidden email] https://mail.kde.org/mailman/listinfo/digikam-users |
Another option is to use CD/DVD as a third option instead of foreign
servers. I am strongly considering DAR as a tool for this, which is a Linux tool to make multiple DVDs, if necessary, and allow for incremental backups and indexing. However, I didn't get around to it; any opinions/experiences welcome, or I'll report back if I implement it. http://dar.linux.free.fr/ -- Johnny _______________________________________________ Digikam-users mailing list [hidden email] https://mail.kde.org/mailman/listinfo/digikam-users |
In reply to this post by Paul Verizzo
On Wed Feb 23 8:27 , Paul Verizzo [hidden email]> sent: > ... >Backing up once a month is fine if you don't shoot anything in a >month! Anytime I off load a camera to the computer, it gets backed up > ... >I have a second drive on the computer for backups. I just saw several >local vendors selling 2 TB USB drives for $100. Cost is no longer an >issue. I use a simple command box program called xxcopy. A few > ... >For over a year I've been using Carbonite service. For $55/year, >unlimited storage, automatic backing up, and off site retrieval. >Usually in minutes, my new images are WAY off site. OK, now I can erase > ... I would be sad if my photo collection disappeared. My solution is a different from Mr. Verizzo's. It costs more but I don't have to worry about a third party who holds my valuable assets remaining in business. Also, it's a general backup solution, so I can protect more than my pictures. I manage my photos using my computer and a pair of NAS boxes. One of the NAS box is in my home and the other is at a friend's house several miles away. When I copy pictures from my camera to my computer, I also copy them to the local NAS box. This gives me a second, local copy. Every night, the local NAS box copies the new and changed files to the remote NAS box using rsync. This gives me off-site backup. Once in a while, I rsync all of my pictures between my computer and the local NAS box to be sure that any metadata I might have changed in them gets backed up, too. I minimized the pain of the initial rsync between the two NAS boxes by doing it at home. Dave _______________________________________________ Digikam-users mailing list [hidden email] https://mail.kde.org/mailman/listinfo/digikam-users |
In reply to this post by Johnny
donc think backup, think recovery.
is what you do a true backup (daily, weekly, monthly, rotating) to protect against hardware failure? (mass restore if necessary) is it a copy to protect from accidental erase? (idividual file restore a la trash can) is it an archive of all your work for the time beeing? (high capacity hard drive and multi Blu-Ray disk write) jdd -- http://www.dodin.net http://www.dailymotion.com/video/xgxog7_clip-l-ombre-et-la-lumiere-3-bad-pigeons_music http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=FGgv_ZFtV14 _______________________________________________ Digikam-users mailing list [hidden email] https://mail.kde.org/mailman/listinfo/digikam-users |
In reply to this post by Johnny
-----BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE-----
Hash: SHA1 Hi, Am 23.02.2011 19:33, schrieb Johnny: > Another option is to use CD/DVD as a third option instead of foreign > servers. I am strongly considering DAR as a tool for this, which is a > Linux tool to make multiple DVDs, if necessary, and allow for > incremental backups and indexing. > > However, I didn't get around to it; any opinions/experiences welcome, or > I'll report back if I implement it. I use dar, however not with CDs/DVDs, that would require an awful lot of disks (the initial backup requires about 1 TB of space). I attach eSATA disks to the PC and start a script which I have written that identifies the external drive and starts either an incremental backup or a full backup, depending on whether I enter the date of the last increment or not. With darGUI you have an easy to use graphical interface. My harddisk I put away after the backup has completed in a fireproof box. Once I had to restore all data because the internal hard disk crashed - no problem at all. Martin -----BEGIN PGP SIGNATURE----- Version: GnuPG v1.4.10 (GNU/Linux) iEYEARECAAYFAk1mAbQACgkQUmmuY48ByEgeywCeMWPGsYvIiH+d1D0wZ4N3Zr1C ud4An0IM6W9R12eCV9AoPkx6FpSJ3SrZ =JCn1 -----END PGP SIGNATURE----- _______________________________________________ Digikam-users mailing list [hidden email] https://mail.kde.org/mailman/listinfo/digikam-users drmartinus.vcf (383 bytes) Download Attachment |
In reply to this post by Gilles Caulier-4
Il giorno 23/feb/2011, alle ore 14.39, Gilles Caulier ha scritto: > I'm just interrested by this post. > > Carbonite service > http://www.carbonite.com/en/online-backup-software/how-it-works > > is not too expensive : 54$ per computer... but for which capacity in Gb ??? > > Of course, service do not work under Linux, as usual (i'm sure that > Linux is used in background by Carbonite) > > Somebody know an alternative, working under Linux, with attractive prize ? Since i's part of KDE, I strongly suggest you to give a look at ownCloud: http://owncloud.org You can install it anywhere you want (it needs apache, php5 and mysql or sqlite), and get cloud storage features you need, on your hardware (I don't know of you, but I worry about privacy on cloud services), or just buy such a service from a vendor like this: https://www.packagecloud.com/?au=owncloud (it's 5 euros/month for unlimited space, so you have a lot of data it's not bad at all) Another important thing to keep in mind is that a lot of those cloud services are proprietary software, and you really can't know anything about the risks for your privacy or your data. The aim with owncloud is to give you back control. At the moment not all the planned features are ready, but it's a matter of months. I think that it would be really great if KDE projects like digikam and owncloud could interoperate more tightly. Another open source cloud storage service is Sparkleshare: http://sparkleshare.org/ It has less features than owncloud, but it seems to be more "user-ready" than owncloud. It needs only git and ssh on the server, so one can self-host it on his/her own hardware (keeping data private), or get free hosting using github or gitorious (but this way anything will be public). regards gerlos -- "Fairy tales are more than true, not because they tell us that dragons exist, but because they tell us that dragons can be beaten." G. K. Chesterton <http://gerlos.altervista.org> gerlos +- - - > gnu/linux registred user #311588 _______________________________________________ Digikam-users mailing list [hidden email] https://mail.kde.org/mailman/listinfo/digikam-users |
In reply to this post by Paul Verizzo
Il giorno 23/feb/2011, alle ore 14.27, Paul Verizzo ha scritto: > Having almost lost a big box of photos to a fire in 1988, and many hard > drives dying over the years, call me paranoid. Pardon me if I weigh in > on this somewhat off topic topic, but it is a passion of mine. While my > experiences and practices are for Windows, surely the open source > community has similar options. Maybe is worth pointing this interesting discussion from KDE brainstorm: http://ur1.ca/3bs7m They are discussing about the possibility to integrate a backup tool in the KDE Plasma desktop. Another KDE integrated tool in development (or not? it's some months that there's not commits...) worth looking is TimeVault: http://gitorious.org/timevault http://blog.chatonka.com/ regards gerlos -- "Fairy tales are more than true, not because they tell us that dragons exist, but because they tell us that dragons can be beaten." G. K. Chesterton <http://gerlos.altervista.org> gerlos +- - - > gnu/linux registred user #311588 _______________________________________________ Digikam-users mailing list [hidden email] https://mail.kde.org/mailman/listinfo/digikam-users |
In reply to this post by Paul Verizzo
If you are using digiKam on Linux, I highly recommend rsync.net. It's not the
cheapest solution out there, but their support is exceptional, and you can use good old rsync with it. I store all my photos on a B3 personal server (http://excito.com/), and I back them up to rsync.net and another B3 using a simple Bash script and a cron job. Further info: http://wiki.excito.org/wiki/index.php/Tutorials_and_How-tos/Backup_with_rsync_and_rsync.net Best, Dmitri ----- Original Message ---- From: Paul Verizzo <[hidden email]> To: [hidden email] Sent: Wed, February 23, 2011 2:27:12 PM Subject: [Digikam-users] On backing up Having almost lost a big box of photos to a fire in 1988, and many hard drives dying over the years, call me paranoid. Pardon me if I weigh in on this somewhat off topic topic, but it is a passion of mine. While my experiences and practices are for Windows, surely the open source community has similar options. Backing up once a month is fine if you don't shoot anything in a month! Anytime I off load a camera to the computer, it gets backed up right away. /You hard drive WILL fail. Maybe not tomorrow, but eventually! /And I don't erase the camera card until those new images are in a third location. I have a second drive on the computer for backups. I just saw several local vendors selling 2 TB USB drives for $100. Cost is no longer an issue. I use a simple command box program called xxcopy. A few keystrokes, off it goes. I can either merely add new material (/bu) or clone the second drive to mirror the first (/clone). Once upon a time I kept a hard drive in my car and I would clone it at least twice a month - if I remembered!. For over a year I've been using Carbonite service. For $55/year, unlimited storage, automatic backing up, and off site retrieval. Usually in minutes, my new images are WAY off site. OK, now I can erase the camera card. One time I very accidentally erased, yes, my photo folder from both my primary and secondary hard drives while cleaning things up! In twelve hours it was all restored from Carbonite. It's not just fire or hard ware failure, there is the human component. Maybe there is a Linux equivalent of Carbonite, or you can use your own web hosting space to hold the back up. When I went on vacation this month, I took my second hard drive to my sister's in a plastic food box. My house could burn down (see opening sentence) and I would still have two copies of everything. If I were to ever lose all my (digital, there are still analog) photos, and my writings, I think I'd shoot myself. I hope this possibly saves a disaster for someone. Short of nuclear demolition, I think my photos are safe. Paul _______________________________________________ Digikam-users mailing list [hidden email] https://mail.kde.org/mailman/listinfo/digikam-users _______________________________________________ Digikam-users mailing list [hidden email] https://mail.kde.org/mailman/listinfo/digikam-users |
Yes, this service sound like better than other....
Gilles Caulier 2011/2/24 Dmitri Popov <[hidden email]>: > If you are using digiKam on Linux, I highly recommend rsync.net. It's not the > cheapest solution out there, but their support is exceptional, and you can use > good old rsync with it. I store all my photos on a B3 personal server > (http://excito.com/), and I back them up to rsync.net and another B3 using a > simple Bash script and a cron job. Further > info: http://wiki.excito.org/wiki/index.php/Tutorials_and_How-tos/Backup_with_rsync_and_rsync.net > > > Best, > Dmitri > > > ----- Original Message ---- > From: Paul Verizzo <[hidden email]> > To: [hidden email] > Sent: Wed, February 23, 2011 2:27:12 PM > Subject: [Digikam-users] On backing up > > Having almost lost a big box of photos to a fire in 1988, and many hard > drives dying over the years, call me paranoid. Pardon me if I weigh in > on this somewhat off topic topic, but it is a passion of mine. While my > experiences and practices are for Windows, surely the open source > community has similar options. > > Backing up once a month is fine if you don't shoot anything in a > month! Anytime I off load a camera to the computer, it gets backed up > right away. /You hard drive WILL fail. Maybe not tomorrow, but > eventually! /And I don't erase the camera card until those new images > are in a third location. > > I have a second drive on the computer for backups. I just saw several > local vendors selling 2 TB USB drives for $100. Cost is no longer an > issue. I use a simple command box program called xxcopy. A few > keystrokes, off it goes. I can either merely add new material (/bu) or > clone the second drive to mirror the first (/clone). > > Once upon a time I kept a hard drive in my car and I would clone it at > least twice a month - if I remembered!. > > For over a year I've been using Carbonite service. For $55/year, > unlimited storage, automatic backing up, and off site retrieval. > Usually in minutes, my new images are WAY off site. OK, now I can erase > the camera card. One time I very accidentally erased, yes, my photo > folder from both my primary and secondary hard drives while cleaning > things up! In twelve hours it was all restored from Carbonite. It's > not just fire or hard ware failure, there is the human component. > > Maybe there is a Linux equivalent of Carbonite, or you can use your own > web hosting space to hold the back up. > > When I went on vacation this month, I took my second hard drive to my > sister's in a plastic food box. My house could burn down (see opening > sentence) and I would still have two copies of everything. If I were to > ever lose all my (digital, there are still analog) photos, and my > writings, I think I'd shoot myself. > > I hope this possibly saves a disaster for someone. Short of nuclear > demolition, I think my photos are safe. > > Paul > > > _______________________________________________ > Digikam-users mailing list > [hidden email] > https://mail.kde.org/mailman/listinfo/digikam-users > > > > > _______________________________________________ > Digikam-users mailing list > [hidden email] > https://mail.kde.org/mailman/listinfo/digikam-users > Digikam-users mailing list [hidden email] https://mail.kde.org/mailman/listinfo/digikam-users |
In reply to this post by Dr. Martin Senftleben
"Dr. Martin Senftleben" <[hidden email]> writes:
> I use dar, however not with CDs/DVDs Great to hear an acutal user, could you please review it's advantages a bit more, as you're not using space restricted media? In my mind, I thought the main advantage to dar is you can specify a maximum repository size (e.g. 4.7 GB for DVD) and get a grouping of the data as such, with a usable index, and additionally incremental updates. > that would require an awful lot of disks (the initial backup requires > about 1 TB of space). I agree and have not yet estimated number of disks I would need... OK, I use only 100 GB so far, so only.... 20 DVDs roughly! Yes, it is quite a lot, but I like the idea of having a third backup in a non-erasable media, as after all, any hard disks can be overwritten accidentally (however I would agree it is unlikely to happen simultaneously, but assume one would fiddle up the back-up script, so when backing up, actually both locations are overwritten? SPOF.) > I attach eSATA disks to the PC and start a script which I have written > that identifies the external drive and starts either an incremental > backup or a full backup, depending on whether I enter the date of the > last increment or not. With darGUI you have an easy to use graphical > interface. My harddisk I put away after the backup has completed in a > fireproof box. Once I had to restore all data because the internal > hard disk crashed - no problem at all. What in your opinion do you achieve that cannot be done with rsync by using dar in this way? -- Johnny _______________________________________________ Digikam-users mailing list [hidden email] https://mail.kde.org/mailman/listinfo/digikam-users |
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Hash: SHA1 Hi, Am 24.02.2011 18:51, schrieb Johnny: > "Dr. Martin Senftleben" <[hidden email]> writes: > >> I use dar, however not with CDs/DVDs > Great to hear an acutal user, could you please review it's advantages a > bit more, as you're not using space restricted media? I also use slices, but it wouldn't be necessary. They are all 4 GB in size. I have quite a long config file in which I note down which paths and file(-types) to exclude and what compression it should use. I figured out that there is a big difference in speed when using compression on already compressed files, so I excluded also quite a few file types from compression. It's a good thing that dar has these options. Among them are most of the photos. Still, if I do a full backup, it takes about 24 hours. However, i can change the priority of dar, then it's a bit faster. >> that would require an awful lot of disks (the initial backup requires >> about 1 TB of space). > I agree and have not yet estimated number of disks I would need... OK, I > use only 100 GB so far, so only.... 20 DVDs roughly! Yes, it is quite a > lot, but I like the idea of having a third backup in a non-erasable > media, as after all, any hard disks can be overwritten accidentally > (however I would agree it is unlikely to happen simultaneously, but > assume one would fiddle up the back-up script, so when backing up, > actually both locations are overwritten? SPOF.) Well, i have of course checked my backup script for any possible faults. I think it's safe, I hadn't had any problems and use it already for a few years. I take the hard drives out of the fire proof box only for the backup, so there is no danger of mixing it up and doing the wrong thing. And dar warns you, if anything happens like attempt of overwriting the existing archive or other such things. The backup is done with an automatically attached date in the archive's filename, which works just fine. The archives have filenames which make it impossible to overwrite the original data. They are just different. So if someone fiddles with the script, then the only thing that could happen is that the archive is placed on your hard drive in the PC, and not on the external one. Unless, that someone gives a name for the archive file that exists on the hard drive already. But then, dar will prompt you for input on what to do - whether overwrite, abort or I don't know what else ;-). >> I attach eSATA disks to the PC ... > What in your opinion do you achieve that cannot be done with rsync by > using dar in this way? no idea. I don't trust rsync the way I trust dar, because I always fear that rsync, as it syncs files, might overwrite the wrong files... I really haven't worked much with rsync. Hope that helps Martin -----BEGIN PGP SIGNATURE----- Version: GnuPG v1.4.10 (GNU/Linux) iEYEARECAAYFAk1mrekACgkQUmmuY48ByEhs7ACgpsBPP4ODoJoQ0geSjSMEqt3u q6IAoLWA4aHooL9FBwqavMF2uQItL2l/ =Xkx6 -----END PGP SIGNATURE----- _______________________________________________ Digikam-users mailing list [hidden email] https://mail.kde.org/mailman/listinfo/digikam-users drmartinus.vcf (383 bytes) Download Attachment |
"Dr. Martin Senftleben" <[hidden email]> writes:
> Hope that helps Yes, thanks for your views! I'll try DAR sometime soon, as it seems to be the good and AFAIK the only application doing slices of the data. -- Johnny _______________________________________________ Digikam-users mailing list [hidden email] https://mail.kde.org/mailman/listinfo/digikam-users |
In reply to this post by Dr. Martin Senftleben
Dr. Martin Senftleben píše v Čt 24. 02. 2011 v 20:13 +0100:
> Am 24.02.2011 18:51, schrieb Johnny: > > What in your opinion do you achieve that cannot be done with rsync by > > using dar in this way? > > no idea. I don't trust rsync the way I trust dar, because I always fear > that rsync, as it syncs files, might overwrite the wrong files... I > really haven't worked much with rsync. I would be interested in answers to that original question, too. Here is how I see them compare: 1) rsync gets easily over networks (dar too, but with some hassle) 2) rsync does not (cannot) compress the backup, while dar does so. (Not much useful for images, though) 3) rsync may have troubles with some file attributes (ACL, ...) if the target file system does not support them. Dar should be without problems here. 4) rsync can also do kind of incremental backup (on filesystem supporting hard links): http://www.mikerubel.org/computers/rsync_snapshots/ (lot of info) http://www.gentoo-wiki.info/Simple_snapshot_style_backup (just a script) 5) restoring files from rsync'ed backup is way easier (those are just regular files) than from dar (even though dar_manager, dargui, kdar exist) 6) rsync would not work for backup to exchangeable media of small size. Regards, Milan -- http://www.milan-knizek.net/ _______________________________________________ Digikam-users mailing list [hidden email] https://mail.kde.org/mailman/listinfo/digikam-users |
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