kopia
Rsnapshot
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kopia | Rsnapshot | |
---|---|---|
224 | 72 | |
6,270 | 3,073 | |
5.8% | 1.2% | |
9.6 | 6.0 | |
5 days ago | 4 months ago | |
Go | Perl | |
Apache License 2.0 | GNU General Public License v3.0 only |
Stars - the number of stars that a project has on GitHub. Growth - month over month growth in stars.
Activity is a relative number indicating how actively a project is being developed. Recent commits have higher weight than older ones.
For example, an activity of 9.0 indicates that a project is amongst the top 10% of the most actively developed projects that we are tracking.
kopia
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DwarFS – The Deduplicating Warp-Speed Advanced Read-Only File System
I think Kopia would be great for your use case
https://kopia.io/
It has a great system to snapshot files but only store data if it's changed. I use it in an environment where I can't use something like zfs to snapshot data because I don't have the ability to make decisions about what filesystem we're using. It's been amazing, love it so much!
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Ask HN: Open-source Windows 11 backup solutions
Thanks for the tip on Kopia. Setting it up now, looks perfect.
https://github.com/kopia/kopia
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Building a Managed Service Provider Business With Open Source
Kopia - GitHub
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I Backup
I've been happy with: https://kopia.io/
Fairly easy to configure, does snapshots to S3 and has a icon in my tray I can watch :)
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Very strange behavior/bug - devices stuck together
Btw, kopia is one fine backup tool. Apparently borgbackup is good too.
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Kopia: Open-Source, Fast and Secure Open-Source Backup Software
Kopia is great, though it's worth noting for folks on Linux: non-UTF-8 paths aren't stored correctly [1] and xattrs aren't stored [2]. While most folks probably won't care about the former, the latter can could cause issues (eg. losing SELinux labels makes it difficult to restore a backup of the root filesystem on distros that use SELinux).
[1] https://github.com/kopia/kopia/issues/1764
[2] https://github.com/kopia/kopia/issues/544
- Kopia: Open-Source Backup Software
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How I backup my servers (2023)
I think Kopia [1] is on its way to be that. I am sticking to Restic for now but it seems like the strongest contender.
[1]: https://github.com/kopia/kopia
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Borgbase backups have been unavailable for 3 days – recovery is at 26%
I used their trial for a bit to test it out with Vorta [1] in a container. Vorta (and Borg) seemed to work fine, until I wanted to restore an archive and I noticed that my recent snapshots were completely empty. Probably because of a misconfiguration on my end though. But it made me look elsewhere. For me backups should be a fire, test and forget solution.
Recently I made the switch to Kopia [2] which seems to have feature parity with Borg (and Restic [3]). It also has a web UI which is way easier to work with than Vorta. And I can easily view, extract and restore individual files or folders from there. This gave me way more confidence about this solution. The only thing I really miss is that I cannot chose different targets for different paths. For instance, with Borg I was able to backup a partial of my Docker appdata to an external source. And I haven't found a way to do this with Kopia. Besides that I'm pretty happy with this solution and I would recommend it.
1. https://vorta.borgbase.com/
2. https://kopia.io/
3. https://restic.net/
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Show HN: Gdańsk AI – full stack AI voice chatbot (STT, LLM, TTS, auth, payments)
There's a few. Off the top of my head
https://github.com/kopia/kopia
Rsnapshot
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Escaping Surveillance Capitalism, at Scale
Two things I want to try this month are:
https://mastodon.social/@chromakode/110936177254839251
https://rsnapshot.org/
- Backup software that continuously monitors changes but runs only once a month
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Not openSUSE specific but what's the best backup utility?
I'm using rsnapshot. It's based on rsync. It's fully automated and I make daily and monthly backups backup to my NAS. The biggest benefit of rsnapshot is that it uses hardlinks. So only changed files are backed up. It doesn't have a GUI though, you have to set a configuration file.
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Criticize my backup strategy
For backups, I'm using rsnapshot.
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Newbie - How to (image) Backup a rasberry PI
It's been a while but I think rsnapshot is what you're looking for.
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Python Port of 600 Line Bash Script: rsync-time-machine.py for Rsync Backups
The description sounds like it does largely the same job as rsnapshot (https://rsnapshot.org/). What does yours do differently from rsnapshot?
- Redundancy and bit-rot protection on a single drive
- The fastest rm command and one of the fastest cp commands
- Do you perform offline backups for your NAS?
- Question: Backups anti ransomware
What are some alternatives?
restic - Fast, secure, efficient backup program
BorgBackup - Deduplicating archiver with compression and authenticated encryption.
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.
Duplicati - Store securely encrypted backups in the cloud!
UrBackup - UrBackup - Client/Server Open Source Network Backup for Windows, MacOS and Linux
rclone - "rsync for cloud storage" - Google Drive, S3, Dropbox, Backblaze B2, One Drive, Swift, Hubic, Wasabi, Google Cloud Storage, Yandex Files
restic-wrapper - Simple bash wrapper to source .env configuration files for Restic. Facilitates both manual CLI execution and scheduled (cron) execution.
Rdiff-backup - Reverse differential backup tool, over a network or locally.