Backup strategies

michael d hoskins michael.d.hoskins at mail.sprint.com
Fri Mar 31 16:27:20 CST 2000


If you don't mind paying for it, there's Microlite BackupEDGE
http://www.microlite.com/

They automate a self-booting recovery process, and it's seems very
configurable.

It worked very well for a SCO box I had to admin.

Sprint ESSSG, IBM RS/6000 Systems Support Group.
913-534-4475
michael.d.hoskins at mail.sprint.com
<mailto:michael.d.hoskins at mail.sprint.com>

 

-----Original Message-----
From: madengr [mailto:madengr at swbell.net]
Sent: Thursday, March 30, 2000 7:46 PM
To: kclug
Cc: madengr
Subject: kclug - Backup strategies

While the subject of tape backup is discussed, what is the best strategy
for quick recovery?  It seems that most of these tape programs are good
for automated backup, but what about restoration.  Who wants to do a
full installation just to get the backup program working again, then do
a restore over an installation (sounds like a messy windoze solution).
I would think the following strategy would be ok:

1) Make multiple partitions on you drive, for example:
/
/home
/usr
/usr/local
/usr/src
/boot

2) Use plain old "tar -cf /dev/st0 ?"  where ? is each of your
partitions.  If they are all under 2 GB then you can fit each on a
single 2 GB tape.

3)  Keep an emergency floppy, such as TomsRootBoot with the SCSI tape,
and any additional drivers, compiled in the kernel.  Boot the system off
floppy, create the new partitions, and un-tar from the tape.

Any comments?  What are your solutions?
Lou






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