I’ve always heard that you folks like to keep tons of backups of your stuff. I have also heard that there is this 3-2-1 rule about keeping you backups. My question is: do you follow it personally or is it something that people just tell you to follow?

  • markshelbyperry@alien.topB
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    1 year ago

    I’m a photographer with almost 25TB of photographs.

    Primary storage: diy truenas On-site backup: off the shelf branded nas Off-site backup: cloud storage.

    Just a note: any automated backup you need to be 100% sure you have set it up to not sync deletions.

  • smstnitc@alien.topB
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    1 year ago

    My music, photos, and documents are backed up remotely (Dropbox).

    Everything else is just backed up to another machine.

    For me it’s cost. 80tb wouldn’t be cheap enough for me.

  • okokokoyeahright@alien.topB
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    1 year ago

    I get down on my knees every month just to pray that I don’t need to use my back ups. Then, when the inevitable happens, I get down on my knees and pray thanks that I have my back ups.

    More religious than anything else in my life. I have had numerous events occur over the past 2 decades and can confirm that restoring is so much easier and better than installing from scratch. Also data( in my case the usual pictures/movies/documents/etc) are at least duplicated on other media/devices/etc.

  • ProbablePenguin@alien.topB
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    1 year ago

    3-2-1 is the minimum I follow for anything important.

    1 copy is the working data, 1 copy is a full system image stored on a NAS with incremental backups done nightly with Veeam, and 1 copy is on Backblaze B2 with incremental backups done nightly with Restic,

  • snatch1e@alien.topB
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    1 year ago

    I follow it for the most critical data, other data get just one copy (but those data is not important to me)

  • uraffuroos@alien.topB
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    1 year ago

    Not yet. My 2nd form of media will be Blu-ray 100GB Discs, and second location will probably be another house 30 minutes away. I DO have about 3-4 copies of my most important data.

  • Rataridicta@alien.topB
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    1 year ago

    Locally, I have RAID on my NAS, my sentimental stuff is mostly synced with other systems through seafile (similar to nextcloud), and is also backed up to backblaze.

    For everything else, it’s just RAID.

  • Tooch10@alien.topB
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    1 year ago

    I do main data at home, external HD as backup offsite (I update maybe 1-2x a year otherwise it’s turned off/unplugged), and any new files not on the backup are in cloud storage + local HD, separate from main data.

    If either drive failed I’d just order a new one since the odds of both failing within a couple days would be low.

  • chrisprice@alien.topB
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    1 year ago

    There are excellent articles that go over all this. Do a something search.

    Bottom line, yes, you should at least do 3-2-1 methodology. More than that is gravy.

  • RockyX123@alien.topB
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    1 year ago

    I have a 2-2-0 for now. The problem is with 100 TB of data, it’s hard to find an offsite back up that is reasonable priced.
    Everyone else seems to have parents or these things called “friends” that they can ask to hold onto. Wonder where I can find them.