I am currently using Freefilesync Flatpak, but that app is not great at all. I dont want weird archives or anything, just to copy my filesystem to another drive.

Also, I want to mirror with the possibility to exclude folders. Mirroring means that the backup should be updated to look like my disk, including deletion of files.

I tested many tools in the Past and for some reason came back to FFS.

Best would be to have automatic backups once I plug in and decrypt the backup drive.

Thanks!

  • atzanteol@sh.itjust.works
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    8 months ago

    rsync is ubiquitous and the standard for this type of job.

    rsync -rav --delete --progress --exclude=ignore_dir source-dir user@host:remote_dir

    SSH is used to connect. Ownership, symlinks, etc. are preserved. Add more “excludes” to filter out more directories. Do your first run without " delete" to make sure things are going where you want.

    If you want “backups” I would suggest something more sophisticated. But for just cloning this is the way.

  • Atemu@lemmy.ml
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    8 months ago

    I dont want weird archives or anything, just to copy my filesystem to another drive.

    For proper backups, you do want “weird archives” with integrity checks, versioning, deduplication and compression. Regular files cannot offer that (at least not efficiently so).

  • bushvin@lemmy.world
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    8 months ago

    The question is not which tool should I use?

    The question is what is it that you want to achieve? That will drive your choice of tools.

    I want to mirror my drive can be achieved by a lot of tools. But I want to be able to restore a file I accidentally deleted up to 24 hours with a 1 hour interval is a totally different game.

    For backups I am very fond of restic as it does a lot of things in a simple way: encryption, (incremental) snapshots, mounting of said snapshots, support various storage backends, policy based purging, tagging, …

    Your tool may not be able to do all you need, like automated scheduled backups, so you will need to also learn cron (or whatever scheduler you may have)

    And finally, what about maintenance? What should happen to all those files you’ve synced? How long do you want to keep them?

  • Holzkohlen@feddit.de
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    8 months ago

    Just setup an rsync script. I use that KDE backup tool instead. It’s just a gui to setup auto rsync backups.

  • ChojinDSL@discuss.tchncs.de
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    8 months ago

    So many options. As others have mentioned, rsync, borg, restic, etc. You might want to look into filesystem snapshots. If you use something like BTRFS you can create instant snapshots and send them to a second BTRFS formatted disk or even a remote system with a BTRFS filesystem.

    ZFS would also work here.

    I use btrbk for automatic BTRFS snapshots and backing them up to remote systems.

    If you want built-in encryption you can use Borg or Restic, which also has the advantage of deduplicating within a single backup set. Restic can also backup to an s3 bucket, in case you want to use a cloud service.

    • Pantherina@feddit.deOP
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      8 months ago

      Thanks! I have a local drive, does btrbk work there too?

      I am on Fedora so BTRFS ftw

      • ChojinDSL@discuss.tchncs.de
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        8 months ago

        Yes of course. On the btrbk homepage they even describe how to set it up so that a backup gets triggered automatically when you plug in a designated backup drive.

        My setup is to create local snapshots and keep X amount of local snapshots. Copy snapshots to a remote server and keep a different amount of snapshots there. Finally I also have a backup drive and btrbk is setup to copy all my local snapshots to that backup drive when it’s plugged in.