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Special Forums Hardware Filesystems, Disks and Memory Help finding a Unix friendly RAID 1 backup Post 302505152 by c.wakeman on Wednesday 16th of March 2011 11:12:33 AM
Old 03-16-2011
Help finding a Unix friendly RAID 1 backup

First time poster and a very new Unix user, so I'll just pre-apologize for stupid questions now.

Does anybody know of a good RAID 1 hard drive backup that is Unix friendly? I want to avoid any hardcore programming. Can you recommend both NAS and non-NAS options? I need to do nightly backups from a Unix data server running SAMBA/SWAT that currently has ~300 of 420 GB used split between public and user folders. This is for an office and involves sensitive data so I need a safe and secure option.

This is what I was able to find online that seems to fit what I'm looking for:
Buffalo Technology TeraStation Duo TS-WX2.0TL/R1 2x1 TB 368.98

Synology DiskStation DS211 21002x1 TB550.99

Netgear ReadyNAS Duo 2-Bay RND2210 2x1 TB 393.6
Data Dock II DDQ-2000 2x1 TB 269.95
Do any of the above make sense? From what I can tell, only the Netgear is out of the box Unix friendly; the tech guys at Fantom couldn't tell me whether the data dock II was or not. Can you recommend any of these or other models? I don't really think I need the NAS option and it seems you pay considerably more for that. Should I be looking at an entirely different type of data storage? (Cloud storage is not an option)

In the meantime, while I figure this out, my boss wants me to backup the data asap. I was thinking about getting a consumer grade 500 GB or 1 TB external with an ethernet port and simply manually backing up the data via windows. I was thinking this would provide a good stop gap and, once the RAID 1 is setup, could simply be manually backed up weekly and provide essentially an additional disk to the RAID 1 array.

For this I was looking between these two:
Iomega Home Media 34337 1 TB 99.99
Buffalo LS-CH1.0TL 1 TB 99.99
Any help is greatly appreciated. Thank you.
 

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RADWHO(1)							 FreeRADIUS Daemon							 RADWHO(1)

NAME
radwho - show online users SYNOPSIS
radwho [-c] [-d raddb_directory] [-F radutmp_file] [-i] [-n] [-N nas_ip_address] [-p] [-P nas_port] [-r] [-R] [-s] [-S] [-u user] [-U user] [-Z] DESCRIPTION
The FreeRADIUS server can be configured to maintain an active session database in a file called radutmp. This utility shows the content of that session database. OPTIONS
-c Shows caller ID (if available) instead of the full name. -d raddb_directory The directory that contains the RADIUS configuration files. Defaults to /etc/raddb. -F radutmp_file The file that contains the radutmp file. If this is specified, -d is not necessary. -i Shows the session ID instead of the full name. -n Normally radwho looks up the username in the systems password file, and shows the full username as well. The -n flags prevents this. -N nas_ip_address Show only those entries which match the given NAS IP address. -p Adds an extra column for the port type - I for ISDN, A for Analog. -P nas_port Show only those entries which match the given NAS port. -r Outputs all data in raw format - no headers, no formatting, fields are comma-separated. -R Output all data in RADIUS attribute format. All fields are printed. -s Show full name. -S Hide shell users. Doesn't show the entries for users that do not have a SLIP or PPP session. -u user Show only those entries which match the given username (case insensitive). -U user Show only those entries which match the given username (case sensitive). -Z When combined with -R, prints out the contents of an Accounting-Request packet which can be passed to radclient, in order to "zap" that users session from radutmp. For example, $ radwho -ZRN 10.0.0.1 | radclient -f - radius.example.net acct testing123 will result in all an Accounting-Request packet being sent to the RADIUS server, which tells the server that the NAS rebooted. i.e. It "zaps" all of the users on that NAS. To "zap" one user, specifiy NAS, username, and NAS port: $ radwho -ZRN 10.0.0.1 -u user -P 10 | radclient -f - radius.example.net acct testing123 Other combinations are also possible. SEE ALSO
radiusd(8), radclient(1), radiusd.conf(5). AUTHOR
Miquel van Smoorenburg, miquels@cistron.nl. 17 Feb 2013 RADWHO(1)
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