Am 12. Jul, 2008 schwätzte Alex Dean so: > I need backup software for a home network. Mix of Linux and OSX machines. > Will be using an external HDD for backup media. The backup server will run > on one of the OSX machines, since it's the only non-laptop I have. I'm > mainly looking for something that's easy to configure and has minimal > resource consumption. I don't know if BackupPC works on OS!X. Maybe you can run it on GNU/Linux in VirtualBox or something :). > I've read a bit about BackupPC and Bacula. So far, BackupPC seems preferable > because it looks much simpler. (No client software to install. Cool!) I'm > interested in any opinions about these 2 packages, or recommendations on > other programs I ought to have a look at. I'm using BackupPC. It works well. It was a bit of a pain to setup, but some of that was definitely self-induced. I'm using it to backup on local networks as well as across the Net. I'm also not allowing it to connect as root. That's the self-induced pain. Then again, it shouldn't require connecting as root! BackupPC will keep only one copy of a distinct file, even across multiple machines[0]. That can save a lot of space when backing up multiple machines. It does a pretty good job of keeping various daily, weekly, etc snapshots. I haven't tested what happens if you change the timestamp without changing the file. [0] That might be a policy violation in some environments. ciao, der.hans -- # http://www.LuftHans.com/ https://LOPSA.org/ # A Polish friend of mine got an offer for a free account from AOL. The # login ID was "HELLO" and the passwd "CYMBAL". She says "cymbal" is like # a Polish word for "sucker". 'Hello sucker', a greeting from AOHell :).