Hi Brian,
For what it's worth, you might like to take a look at the following script which I run daily over a bunch of hosts. It's something that's evolved over time but provides what seems to be a relatively good incremental backup approach using rsync. Specifically it maintains a folder called "current" which "should" be a mirror of your target, then a bunch of other (dated) folders which contain changes / files updates as of the backup on that date.(9 times out of 10 I want access to the backup becaus...
Hi Brian,For what it's worth, you might like to take a look at the following script which I run daily over a bunch of hosts. It's something that's evolved over time but provides what seems to be a relatively good incremental backup approach using rsync. Specifically it maintains a folder called "current" which "should" be a mirror of your target, then a bunch of other (dated) folders which contain changes / files updates as of the backup on that date.(9 times out of 10 I want access to the backup becaus...
For what it's worth, you might like to take a look at the following script which I run daily over a bunch of hosts. It's something that's evolved over time but provides what seems to be a relatively good incremental backup approach using rsync. Specifically it maintains a folder called "current" which "should" be a mirror of your target, then a bunch of other (dated) folders which contain changes / files updates as of the backup on that date.(9 times out of 10 I want access to the backup becaus...