start page | rating of books | rating of authors | reviews | copyrights

Unix Power ToolsUnix Power ToolsSearch this book

Chapter 38. Backing Up Files

Contents:

What Is This "Backup" Thing?
tar in a Nutshell
Make Your Own Backups
More Ways to Back Up
How to Make Backups to a Local Device
Restoring Files from Tape with tar
Using tar to a Remote Tape Drive
Using GNU tar with a Remote Tape Drive
On-Demand Incremental Backups of a Project
Using Wildcards with tar
Avoid Absolute Paths with tar
Getting tar's Arguments in the Right Order
The cpio Tape Archiver
Industrial Strength Backups

38.1. What Is This "Backup" Thing?

Making copies of critical files in case the originals become inaccessible is called backing them up or making backups. Backups are insurance. They are time and effort you spend protecting yourself from things that might never happen. Your hard drive might never crash, but what vital things would you lose if it did?

Exactly what "making a backup" means varies depending on your circumstances. All of the following examples are ways to make backups applicable to some specific environment:

If you are just trying to protect your files on your personal machine, simply making sure that critical files have copies on multiple physical disks or occasionally copying files onto another machine or removable storage is probably sufficient. If you're administering a machine that has multiple users, regular backups are almost certainly a necessity. If those users are doing business-critical tasks, very regular backups and off-site copies are a requirement to protect the investment of time involved.

-- DJPH



Library Navigation Links

Copyright © 2003 O'Reilly & Associates. All rights reserved.