Answers to: which backup tool ?http://linuxexchange.org/questions/126/which-backup-tool<p>Hello,</p> <p>I'm looking for a backup tool on my (arch)linux.</p> <p>On the archlinux wiki, I've found this list : <a href="http://wiki.archlinux.org/index.php/Backup" rel="nofollow">backup programs</a>. There is so many program I don't know which one choose and when I search review on the web I still found several others which looks great.</p> <p>I'm looking for something to do incremental backup (save disk space and time), easy to recover and manipulate the backups. I'd like something easily customisable to do stuff (with bash script maybe) like "save my system every week, delete after two months", "save my home folder every day except the following folders, don't follow the links (to the partition or another) but keep them", "do incremental backup every x and a full backup every y", "save x every day, delete after after a week but keep one backup one week, two weeks, one month and three months old",...</p> <p>I'm using only linux so I don't need a cross-system solution.</p> <p>I tried <strong>rsync</strong> some times ago. It's a great tool but I had problems to keep the users and permissions. Also rsync doesn't allow to recover something else than the last backup (stop me if I'm wrong).</p> <p>I heard a lot about <strong>rdiff-backup</strong> but never tried. Advantage to be able to recover previous backup.</p> <p>In the wiki, there is <strong>link-backup</strong>. Never heard about it but it looks great, I may test it. Someone knows it ?</p> <p><strong>Unison</strong> : seen some good reviews. It has bidirectionnal synchronisation (feature, I don't really need).</p> <p><strong>rdup</strong> : another unknown program (based on hdup, like duplicity but looks more powerfull). I like <a href="http://www.miek.nl/projects/rdup/index.html" rel="nofollow">the spirit</a> of the program "not invent the wheel again and again" so instead of doing the backup, it uses another unix tool to do that. It can do compression and encryption. Problem, it copy the full file and not the difference (but if one backup fail, it's not so much a problem them). If someone has tested it, I'd really like to heard comments.</p> <p>What do you use and why ? Thank you to develop your point and explain the main feature of the program compare to another.</p>enSun, 03 Mar 2013 20:03:00 -0500Answer by Ronhttp://linuxexchange.org/questions/126/which-backup-tool/3055<p>Simple Backup for local HDD to external HDD and CrashPlan Pro to go from your local PC to the cloud. $7.99 a month for unlimited space.</p>RonSun, 03 Mar 2013 20:03:00 -0500http://linuxexchange.org/questions/126/which-backup-tool/3055Answer by Ronhttp://linuxexchange.org/questions/126/which-backup-tool/2965<p>Try Simple Backup ( sbackup ) it works wonders for me.</p>RonSun, 04 Nov 2012 10:13:17 -0500http://linuxexchange.org/questions/126/which-backup-tool/2965Answer by rantonhttp://linuxexchange.org/questions/126/which-backup-tool/2960<p>I would recommend Duplicity which is by same primary author as rdiff-backup. It does incremental backups nicely and it supports S3 storage on the backend which is how I am currently using it. Plus restoration is pretty straightforward.</p> <p>This is the site <a href="http://duplicity.nongnu.org/index.html">http://duplicity.nongnu.org/index.html</a></p>rantonWed, 31 Oct 2012 14:53:12 -0400http://linuxexchange.org/questions/126/which-backup-tool/2960