There has been an interesting development in this month’s Linux Mint news segment regarding the future of the backup utility Timeshift which has become a core part of the distro in recent years. It turns out that Tony George, the developer behind the project doesn’t have time to work on Timeshift any longer and has agreed for the Mint team to take over. As part of the plans, Timeshift will now become a XApp, a suite of apps developed by the Mint team. . A core principle of Linux Mint is that things just work. To ensure things keep working after updates and upgrades, the Mint team started pushing, quite aggressively, for people to begin making system backups so they could restore their computers to an earlier state if anything went wrong. The tool of choice for backups in Mint was Timeshift and that utility has been bundled with the distro for quite a while now. Unfortunately, the developer of Timeshift, Tony George, said he no longer has time to work on Timeshift and after reaching out to him, the Mint team says both parties agreed that the latter will adopt the project and make it into a XApp. This will allow the Mint team to better adapt Timeshift to the Linux Mint environment and integrate it more deeply into the operating system should they decide to go down this route. . Explore the ways in which Linux Mint is improving the Timeshift backup utility for enhanced synchronization and user satisfaction.. Linux Mint, Timeshift, Backup Tool, XApp Development, System Restore. . LinuxSecurity.com Team
In the quest for world domination it's important not to forget your backups. And, in the world of backup software, Amanda rocks. Amanda runs from the inetd daemon and can backup multiple clients to a single backup server. It streams backup . . . . In the quest for world domination it's important not to forget your backups. And, in the world of backup software, Amanda rocks. Amanda runs from the inetd daemon and can backup multiple clients to a single backup server. It streams backup data from all of its clients to a holding disk (or directory) before writing the data to tape. This has the dual benefit of not only creating a backup if you forget to change the tape but also accelerating the entire backup process itself. With a Quantum DLT 8000 tape drive, I commonly backed up about 12GB/hour from 13 servers (and this was with no tuning whatsoever. My restores were fast as hell as well.) Amanda uses native utilities to backup the clients thus allowing you to customize whether you want to use dump or tar on a per-client basis, the amount of compression to use, and the amount of bandwidth on your network you are willing to allocate to the backup process. By using native backup utilities, amanda allows you get the benefit of not only having a backup utility which is always available on your platform but also the benefit of being able to restore your data even if Amanda is completely unavailable. One of the nice things about Amanda is that it will never screw you out of your data by using closed and proprietary formats or forcing you to dig up a licensing diskette while under stress. The link for this article located at FrankenLinux is no longer available. . Protect your important information by taking advantage of robust open-source backup solutions such as Bacula with precision.. Amanda Backup, Data Management Tools, Open Source Backup Solutions. . LinuxSecurity.com Team
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