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Top Forums UNIX for Beginners Questions & Answers Should I use a CoW filesystem on my PC if I only wanted snapshot capabilities ? Post 303044632 by Neo on Friday 28th of February 2020 09:22:40 AM
Old 02-28-2020
No.

I do not recommend those file systems.

Your are better off running ext4, a RAID configuration (I run RAID1, but do not depend on it), and doing regular backups on your data based on your risk management model (this is the most critical).

Nothing beats a strong filesystem and a very well thought out backup and recovery plan.

That is my view. YMMV

On the desktop, I run macOS and have a similar strategy. I make full backups often, based on the activity on the system. The more activity and files (and the nature of the files) created, the more frequent the backups.
 

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NetApp::Snapshot(3pm)					User Contributed Perl Documentation				     NetApp::Snapshot(3pm)

NAME
NetApp::Snapshot -- OO class for creating and managing snapshots SYNOPSIS
use NetApp::Filer; use NetApp::Snapshot; my $filer = NetApp::Filer->new( .... ); DESCRIPTION
This class encapsulates a single NetApp snapshot, and provides methods for querying information about the snapshot, as well as methods for managing it. METHODS
get_parent Returns the NetApp::Aggregate or NetApp::Volume object for the aggregate or volume for which object is a snapshot. get_name Returns a string representing the name of the snapshot. get_date Returns the date the snapshot was created. get_used Returns the percentage of space used by snapshot. get_total Returns the percentage of total space used by the snapshot. get_snapshot_deltas Returns an array of NetApp::Snapshot:Delta objects, each representing a single delta for this snapshot. get_reclaimable Returns the amount of reclaimable space, if the snapshot is deleted. Note that experimentally, this command has a lot of failure scenarios, most of which are reasonable (there are a lot of cases where you can't query this data). Therefore, unlike most of the methods in this API, it doesn't raise a fatal exception if it can't query the information, it simply generates warnings. rename( $newname ) Renames the snapshot to the specified name. restore( %args ) This method is an interface to the "snap restore" command. The argument syntax is: $snapshot->restore( type => 'vol' | 'file', # Defaults to vol from_path => $from_path, to_path => $to_path, ); The 'type' argument maps to the -t CLI argument, and the 'to_path' argument maps to the -r CLI argument. Refer to the na_snap(1) man page, and the "snap restore" documentation for further information. perl v5.14.2 2008-11-26 NetApp::Snapshot(3pm)
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