Of course, I wanted something that was designed to tackle all of these things with ease. ![]() support for backing up to a major cloud provider.no weird user intervention required to maintain backup health.no nasty surprises when I had to restore something.I had a list of wishes that grew with every deficiency I came across: Retrospective □įor reasons unknown to me, most backup programs for Linux fall short in one crucial way. I used Timeshift once to backup a server but was unable to actually restore the data afterwards. This said, it was straight forward to use and I enjoyed being able to backup data to Google Drive. I briefly used Duplicacy but I wasn’t comfortable paying licensing fees to solve a problem that ought to have a free and open-source solution. There are some horror stories circulating around various forums about Duplicati corrupting data or just displaying poor restore performance, so over time I got frustrated with my unreliable experience with Duplicati and decided to move on. Unfortunately, the UI was often unresponsive or loaded an empty dashboard, which was alarming since I feared my data was lost.įrequent crashes furthered my distrust of the program in case I ever needed to rely upon it to restore data. Seeking something better, I then discovered Duplicati, another backup utility that comes with a web UI. Multithreading is also not supported, which strangled my upload throughput to roughly 2 Mbps. This adds unneeded complexity to a script. You then have to delete your full backups to prevent them from bloating space. The big catch is that you can’t run incremental backups indefinitely without compromising the performance of restoring files, so every once in a while you will need to run a full backup. Indeed, the program has been around since August 2002, so one of my early obstacles learning how to use Duplicity was navigating stale 20 year old documentation. ![]() I first used Duplicity, but it felt rather dated. However, I suspect that my goals will resonate with other homelab enthusiasts. None of the programs that I’m about to describe are necessarily poor choices, they’re just incompatible with my specific use case and requirements. To me, Kopia is to backups as WireGuard is to VPNs.īut things were a lot rougher before I smoothened my process out. ![]() 1 Kopia is an incredibly powerful and underappreciated tool that should be equipped more often in the toolbelts of amateur sysadmins and open-source nerds. If you think something is valuable, then you should back it up.įor over a year now, I’ve been using Kopia to back up my Nextcloud installation and other important homelab files into S3.
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