nightmareFluffy

joined 11 months ago
 

I'm currently using an incremental backup system for my business that copies files over at different intervals. The backups are daily, weekly, even month, odd month, etc, in different folders. It's using Goodsync, which is actually a file sync software, but it allows scheduled syncs. It doesn't create a disk image or something. The advantage is that I have access to old files without restoring a gigantic image. The clear disadvantage is that it takes a booty-ton of space because each backup interval duplicates the files.

Is there an easy-to-use backup solution that does incremental backups but I can comb through the directories and restore an individual file? It has to be easy to use (i.e. Windows with a GUI) because employees have to be able to use it, and they don't know jack about Linux.

I'm not planning on hiring an IT person to sort this out. For better or worse, I do all the IT stuff for my small business. Gives me full control and knowledge about how things work. I Docker-ified a lot of stuff, which helps tremendously, but I don't think backups is something that should be done in Linux or Docker for my particular needs. Should be easy-peasy Windows.

[โ€“] [email protected] 1 points 10 months ago

Yeah, Cloudflare tunnel takes care of the dynamic DNS. It has limitations, which is why I switched to Caddy and Nginx, but Cloudflare is relatively easy to set up for n00bs and I highly recommend it.

[โ€“] [email protected] 1 points 10 months ago

What I did, which probably applies to almost nobody: Downgraded my home servers to a single Beelink Mini PC; still gets the job done, though it is slower. Offloaded a bunch of stuff, including backups and video stuff, to my much more powerful work server and NAS. My work has a lease with electricity included. (It's my business, so I'm not doing anything fishy.) Old hardware is sitting unused. The one downside to this is that my older setup was using ~20% CPU all the time, whereas the new one uses like ~60% and goes to 100% at peaks. I don't notice it in practice.

Also, I added solar panels to my house. So even if I were paying for my older setup, it would've been covered.