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This is, frankly, a bonkers default to have. If it takes you longer than a month to notice data corruption, sorry! You're screwed. By default, Backblaze will only keep 30 days of data.
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A dedicated restore software could do this. Is it the challenge of a 3-way merge? Data is more than just the bytes it's the metadata, the permissions, this is just not captured in the archives you download from the web.
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Why not? All the other backup software offers in-place restores. zip from a web UI, or requesting a delivery of a disk. Your only restore options are downloading the data as. Backblaze has no option to 'restore in place'.But I don't like Backblaze's software offering: Backblaze: The Market Leaderīackblaze is the best left after Crashplan exited. But then they shut down their consumer offering, leaving only a too-expensive small business offering. The price point was great and the software mostly just worked. Crashplan: The Good Old DaysĬrashplan used to be good. Overall, I would weakly recommend it as the best of a bad bunch.īut Arq doesn't run on Linux. And I worry a little that it's closed-source, but I'm reassured by them documenting the storage format. And the UX is a little awkward to find things. It mostly works, although I do worry when I hear about the developer breaking backwards compatibility between versions. It uses a modern, content-addressed storage format. Arq: It's OK Arq screenshot, from my mac.Īrq is decent, and I use it for my Macbook. Spoiler: Ultimately, I use Arq to backup my Macs, and Duplicacy for my Synology Network-Attached-Storage (NAS) device.
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I'm looking for software that will run on the NAS (Linux, Synology), at a reasonable cost for 1TB of backups, client-side encrypted, maybe with a year's worth of version retention. So, not really backups! Time to re-evaluate cloud backup software. Cloud Sync is not revisioned – only the latest version is kept, so a corrupted source would overwrite the sync. My macbook's backups are all good, having revisioned daily backups on Arq.īut my big files that live only on the Synology NAS (mostly disk images taken from disks inherited from a deceased estate) were only "synced" to Google Cloud Storage, by Synology Cloud Sync. I have data on my macbook, and on my Synology NAS. After my last blogpost, where one of my hard drives was maybe taken out by lightning, I was reminded to reevaluate my backup strategy.
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