bees
btrbk
bees | btrbk | |
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21 | 79 | |
589 | 1,531 | |
- | - | |
4.0 | 6.7 | |
15 days ago | 5 months ago | |
C++ | Perl | |
GNU General Public License v3.0 only | GNU General Public License v3.0 only |
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bees
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Converted ext4 to btrfs, tried defrag and ran out of space
Btrfs defrag 'will break up the reflinks of COW data' and 'may cause considerable increase of space usage depending on the broken up reflinks'. To try to fix this, I would run bees to try and deduplicate the now duplicate reflinks. It may be worth doing this from e.g. a livedisk though as out of space errors can cause things to break (so don't upgrade packages till you fix this).
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Introducing Pins: Permanent Nix Binary Storage
Figuring out which paths are needed outside gcroots'ed closures is pretty complicated. If you're using flakes, the main issue is duplicates, so store optimization and bees may help. With channels, once you update a channel you might as well gc everything else.
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rule
bees
- Should you remove duplicate files?
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Poke holes in my git-annex + ZFS offline storage system
I felt more confident with the code/developer/docs. The author knows his stuff regarding btrfs. Like, look at this, it's amazing: https://github.com/Zygo/bees/blob/master/docs/btrfs-kernel.md
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Anyone running Bees? Or deduping data some other way?
I have some time again and wondering if anyone's got Bees, https://github.com/Zygo/bees, running on their Synology.
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The goal: Use Fedora 37 with Snapper to get a "riceable" Linux desktop that can be rolled back like a time machine (and some comments on why I don't use Silverblue)
Even if NixOS doesn't support sending deduplicating syscalls to the kernel, you could use the Btrfs deduping daemon called bees to slowly save space over time. There might be an equivalent for ZFS, too.
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Questions Regarding BTRFS, Suspend, and Data Integrity
This isn't much different than ext4. 0 length files can happen after a crash. You can avoid this by mounting with flushoncommit for the future. See here for details.
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Compression
Maybe BEES can help you to dedup any blocks, not file.
- Is Bees a after-solution to BTRFS defragmentation breaking reflinks ?
btrbk
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I accidentally programmed my server to back up all files... even backups
That's still easier using snapshots and something like btrbk. Snapshot the directory at start, prune if there are too many snapshots (or snapshots get too old).
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Ur best backup software
I'm on Arch, but you might still find it useful: Btrfs snapshots Arch Wiki - Incremental backup to external drive GitHub - btrbk
- Deduplication how to?
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Fast and comprehensive system backup. Can Linux software do it?
the smoothest backup tool i have seen for Linux is btrbk works real nice and is customizable for almost all use-cases BTRFS rocks :)
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Trying to understand the real impact of not having ECC
I recommend redundancy and regular verification is you want to insure your data against corruption. If you do that, you can forget about things like ECC. My setup is a NUC server running Ubuntu with a USB3-connected storage drive running BTRFS. I use btrbk to auto-snapshot and auto-replicate via incremental sends to my BTRFS backup drive, and RotKraken to track integrity of the data with a monthly verification run so that I notice corruption in time to correct it.
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BTRFS snapshots and btrbk as a backup solution
In pondering my backup strategy, I was wondering if I could use BTRFS snapshots and a backup tool like btrbk, which is a nice integrated snapshot/backup solution I've used happily on desktop Linux. BTRFS needs subvolumes for snapshots, so I couldn't backup the host itself (which wasn't installed with a / subvolume like other distributions I've used), but it could snapshot the VMs and containers, which have their own individual subvolumes. Then btrbk can send that snapshot in an incremental fashion to external storage.
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btrbk: subvolume has no UUID error
I then installed btrbk and tried to follow the instructions to create snapshots of root and home on the SSD and then send/receive those to the HDD. I mainly used https://github.com/digint/btrbk and https://mutschler.dev/linux/fedora-btrfs-35/, but I don't use luks.
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The various scripts I use to back up my home computers using SSH and rsync
For anyone using btrfs on their system, I heartily recommend btrbk, which has served me very well for making incremental backups with a customizable retention period: https://github.com/digint/btrbk
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incremental snapshot backup tool: which one should i go for?
btrbk is the best solution I know.
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how do you Backup your system?
I use BTRBK to make and copy the BTRFS snapshots to my HDD. I schedule it to run every 3 hours using a Sytemd unit file through my own script to avoid running the backup at inconvenient moments:
What are some alternatives?
dduper - Fast block-level out-of-band BTRFS deduplication tool.
snapper-gui - GUI for snapper, a tool for Linux filesystem snapshot management, works with btrfs, ext4 and thin-provisioned LVM volumes
duperemove - Tools for deduping file systems
TimeShift - System restore tool for Linux. Creates filesystem snapshots using rsync+hardlinks, or BTRFS snapshots. Supports scheduled snapshots, multiple backup levels, and exclude filters. Snapshots can be restored while system is running or from Live CD/USB.
yarn-deduplicate - Deduplication tool for yarn.lock files
snapper - Manage filesystem snapshots and allow undo of system modifications
jdupes - A powerful duplicate file finder and an enhanced fork of 'fdupes'.
grub-btrfs - Include btrfs snapshots at boot options. (Grub menu)
snap-sync - Use snapper snapshots to backup to external drive
BorgBackup - Deduplicating archiver with compression and authenticated encryption.
dedupe - :id: A python library for accurate and scalable fuzzy matching, record deduplication and entity-resolution.
vorta - Desktop Backup Client for Borg Backup