Sponsored Content
Top Forums UNIX for Dummies Questions & Answers Backup Software for UNIX systems Post 302107122 by gzs553 on Wednesday 14th of February 2007 12:12:50 PM
Old 02-14-2007
Networker - EMC backup

I find the EMC product very reliable and user friendly. One of the features that it has that it will allow you to do full backups, as well as incremental and consolidated migration backups. Not like Netbacku..where it is incremental forever.
 

9 More Discussions You Might Find Interesting

1. UNIX for Advanced & Expert Users

Enterprise backup software

My company has been an OmniBack shop for about 2 years now. We use it to backup both Unix and NT servers as well as a Network Appliance Filer. For the most part it has sufficed for what we do. However, management is considering changing to another backup software. We are considering either staying... (2 Replies)
Discussion started by: keelba
2 Replies

2. Filesystems, Disks and Memory

Backup Linux file systems

Hi, I need to backup files on our Solaris machines onto a windows machine. I have Samba installed. Is it possible to backup these files on Solaris/Linux machines onto a Windows machine. Thanks Aravind (1 Reply)
Discussion started by: aravind_mg
1 Replies

3. UNIX for Dummies Questions & Answers

Backup Software

I am new to unix. The backup software is not working on my unix server. If I try to open the software app, the window opens then closes right away. This machine was built by and setup by someone else. Does unix have its own backup software, and is there something I can try to access the backup... (2 Replies)
Discussion started by: anthonyp
2 Replies

4. AIX

Installing software on a large number of Systems

Hi, I'm new to the unix world and I would like to know if anyone can give me some pointers as to how to install and run a program on a large number of servers easily. Can anyone offer any pointers please? F.y.i I have developed a program in C to collect performance data from AIX systems. ... (1 Reply)
Discussion started by: StuBob
1 Replies

5. UNIX for Dummies Questions & Answers

Installing Software on Multiple Systems

I have been given the task of installing subversion on rhe4 32 and 64 bit, suse9 ia64, hpux 11.22 ia64, hpux 11.11 pa_risc, solaris 2.8 sparc, and irix 6.5. How can I do this? I know that rhe5 and debian have things like yum and apt for packages. What are the equivalents for these systems? ... (4 Replies)
Discussion started by: ldb88
4 Replies

6. Solaris

backup software

dear friends, i am not a expert in solaris 10, i want to practice backup software . where from i can download backup software free . (EBS, legato or any ) please help me (4 Replies)
Discussion started by: sijocg
4 Replies

7. Solaris

backup software

Anyone have a recommendation for backup software either built in or third party? Simple is good. (1 Reply)
Discussion started by: Kjons76
1 Replies

8. AIX

How to exclude directory from (File Systems) backup?

Hello AIX experts, I have a file system called /bossapp Its size = 77.5 GB I want to take a File Systems backup for this one using smitty, it is very easy, but the problem is I want to exclude one directory called (ORIGIN). How? The steps are very easy to take a File Systems backup,... (2 Replies)
Discussion started by: Mohannad
2 Replies

9. Infrastructure Monitoring

Monitoring file systems backup

Hello, I have some questions. There are some File systems which are located on a SAN. There are two scenarios: 1) Some file systems are permanently mounted on certain servers 2) Others are part of a high availability cluster In case of a cluster the needed file... (1 Reply)
Discussion started by: frhling
1 Replies
BACKUPNINJA(1)							backupninja package						    BACKUPNINJA(1)

NAME
BACKUPNINJA - A lightweight, extensible meta-backup system "a silent flower blossom death strike to lost data." SYNOPSIS
backupninja [ -h ] [ -d ] [ -n ] [ -t ] [ -f filename ] [ --run filename ] DESCRIPTION
Backupninja allows you to coordinate system backups by dropping a few simple configuration files into /etc/backup.d/. Most programs you might use for making backups don't have their own configuration file format. Backupninja provides a centralized way to configure and coor- dinate many different backup utilities. FEATURES
- easy to read ini style configuration files. - you can drop in scripts to handle new types of backups. - backup actions can be scheduled. - you can choose when status report emails are mailed to you (always, on warning, on error, never). - console-based wizard (ninjahelper) makes it easy to create backup action configuration files. - passwords are never sent via the command line to helper programs. - in order to backup a db or sql database, you cannot simply copy database files. backupninja helps you safely export the data to a format which you can backup. - works with Linux-Vservers. Backup types include: - secure, remote, incremental filesytem backup (via rdiff-backup). incremental data is compressed. permissions are retained even with an unpriviledged backup user. - basic system and hardware information. - encrypted remote backups (via duplicity). - safe backup of MySQL, PostgreSQL, OpenLDAP, and subversion databases. - burn CD/DVDs or create ISOs. OPTIONS
-h, --help Show summary of options -d, --debug Run in debug mode, where all log messages are output to the current shell. -f, --conffile CONF_FILE Use CONF_FILE for the main configuration instead of /etc/backupninja.conf -t, --test Run in test mode, no actions are actually taken. -n, --now Perform actions now, instead of when they might be scheduled. --run ACTION_FILE Runs the action configuration ACTION_FILE and exits. CONFIGURATION
General settings are configured in /etc/backupninja.conf. In this file you can set the log level and change the default directory loca- tions. See backupninja.conf(5). To preform the actual backup actions, backupninja processes each action configuration file in /etc/backup.d according to the file's suffix. See backup.d(5). EXAMPLE USAGE
Backupninja can be used to implement whatever backup strategy you choose. It is intended, however, to be used like so: First, databases are safely copied or exported to /var/backups. Often, you cannot make a file backup of a database while it is in use, hence the need to use special tools to make a safe copy or export into /var/backups. Then, vital parts of the file system, including /var/backups, are nightly pushed to a remote, off-site, hard disk (using rdiff-backup). The local user is root, but the remote user is not privileged. Hopefully, the remote filesystem is encrypted. In order for this to work (ie for diff-backup to run unattended), you must create ssh keys on the source server and copy the public key to the remote user's authorized keys file. For example: root@srchost# ssh-keygen -t rsa -b 4096 root@srchost# ssh-copy-id -i /root/.ssh/id_dsa.pub backup@desthost Now, you should be able to ssh from user 'root' on srchost to user 'backup' on desthost without specifying a password. When prompted for a password by ssh-keygen, just leave it blank by hitting return. The "wizard" ninjahelper(1) will walk you through these steps. FILES
/usr/sbin/backupninja main script /etc/backupninja.conf main configuration file; general options /etc/cron.d/backupninja runs main script hourly /etc/logrotate.d/backupninja rotates backupninja.log /etc/backup.d directory for configuration files /usr/share/backupninja directory for handler scripts /usr/share/doc/backupninja/examples example action configuration files. SEE ALSO
ninjahelper(1), backupninja.conf(5), backup.d(5), AUTHOR
BACKUPNINJA was written by the riseup.net collective. riseup October 10, 2005 BACKUPNINJA(1)
All times are GMT -4. The time now is 08:24 PM.
Unix & Linux Forums Content Copyright 1993-2022. All Rights Reserved.
Privacy Policy