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Important files on Yandex disk.
Working projects on github / gitlab.
And what for to back up the system itself? She collapsed the other day for the first time in 8 years. Well rolled on a new one and figs with it.
A strategic backup is an image of the system drive C using Norton Ghost and/or Acronis TI about once every six months. At the same time, all user information was transferred from the system to disk D (and a lot of other things were transferred there), so that the image turns out to be compact and, if necessary, does not unfold for long.
And in a tactical aspect, I hope for restore points created automatically by the OS (for them, I allocated 8% of the volume of disk C).
Windows has built-in archiving. She even bothers with constant pop-ups demanding backups.
Share a secret, how did you turn it off?
Cobian backup. An old, proven tool. Supports shadow copy. Works stably and does not interfere with work. Lots of settings. From the scheduler, to events and running scripts before and after archiving.
I backed up the mysql database through it, calling the database dump script and archiving it later. Well, not counting the backup of simple directories.
Beyond that, the death of an SSD is not the end of the data. The death of an SSD is the inability to change more data on the media. And you can read them without problems. So when the SSD dies, go buy a new one, clone the old one without any problems and keep working. But backup is still worth doing, because. he can die not only from old age.
I use console winrar + cron (free nnCronlite for Windows) to create backups and SyncBackup to synchronize with an external drive
I have a home Windows virtual machine on a host with ProxMox, so I make backups, as well as deployment using hypervisor tools, because it is easier, more convenient, more reliable.
This is how it looks like
https://m.youtube.com/watch?v=wjlmWHJiEug
Important data in Raid10 with a backup using Windows to a neighboring disk nearby...
Nothing :)
Documents on the network on a server with RAID10. The rest to back up - nakua? Windu? Toys? If the system collapses, the problem will not be the loss of data, but the need to start all over again .
User folder, including %appdata% - daily differential backup via Macrium Reflect.
The file history and other Windows tools work better in places - you can set up a continuous backup, not on a schedule - but it tends to die silently (for example, the network share fell off, then returned, and backups have not been made for a week already - "check the settings", well, class) so not an option.
I tried Acronis, but they have some kind of absolutely stubborn container operation scheme - I had a recent full (!) Backup swearing that it could not find a neighbor almost a year ago - as a result, again, I was left without backups ...
The last 10 years have been nothing for the system. Previously, especially when I studied and experimented a lot, Acronis was very convenient and fast.
Important data - by clouds, dropbox, google, yandex. Strongly important - I duplicate.
Here's a free one for you
and which is at the level of acronis, if not better
https://www.aomeitech.com/aomei-backupper.html
I tried a lot of things:
Acronis - stashed some of the backups, maybe they fixed it later, but the sediment remained.
Paragon - fell off when updating
Windows backups - ate tons of space, you can certainly reap, and even on the fly - but it turns out either for a long time or capaciously
Veeam agent - ate a lot of space (just amazingly a lot).
Aomei - I use now. It eats little space, there are increments, not a single backup has failed yet, there is a free version.
I don't remember well:
Norton Ghost - had some bugs.
I also tried a bunch of other software - but of course I don’t remember.
Veeam Agent fir Windows Free.
Enough for the eyes. Can both a system disk, and a computer entirely.
To another disk, to a network share. I have already helped out several times when disks crashed at users in the office. Reverse recovery - from a flash drive on which Veeam's recovery is installed.
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