Hi,
Just wanted to let you know that CrashPlan has been made beta this week.
App page:
http://www.amahi.org/apps/crashplan
More details & instructions:
http://wiki.amahi.org/index.php/Crashplan
This last link is displayed in the Special Instructions on install.
It explains how you can use CrashPlan, and it gives different options for how you can configure the CrashPlan daemon running on your HDA.
Comments about the doc. / corrections / questions are welcome.
Thanks.
Ready for testing: CrashPlan
Ready for testing: CrashPlan
- Guillaume Boudreau
Re: Ready for testing: CrashPlan
hmmm looks promising
Thanks!
Thanks!
echo '16i[q]sa[ln0=aln100%Pln100/snlbx]sbA0D2173656C7572206968616D41snlbxq' | dc
Galileo - HP Proliant ML110 G6 quad core Xeon 2.4GHz, 4GB RAM, 2x750GB RAID1 + 2x1TB RAID1 HDD
Galileo - HP Proliant ML110 G6 quad core Xeon 2.4GHz, 4GB RAM, 2x750GB RAID1 + 2x1TB RAID1 HDD
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- Posts: 3
- Joined: Fri Feb 26, 2010 12:34 am
Re: Ready for testing: CrashPlan
Hi,
I just did some Tests with CrashPlan. And i love it.
i installed Fedora 12 / Amahi today from scratch (my first install). I did not install
any updates from the fedory repo and directly installed CrashPlan.
Installation ran error free and worked like charm.
I did a test backup of the local box to a separate Folder. OK.
I then did a backup of my notebook (over WLAN). OK.
The only thing i am missing with CrashPlan is, that it can't update several important
Windows System Files / Userprofile Files. But thats a limitation of the software, not amahi.
To keep it short.
For me it is perfect for daily backing up Documents, Pictures etc.
For a Barematal Image i will use Products like Acronis or CloneZilla on a weekly basis.
I think, it can be made officialy available to all amahi users.
I just did some Tests with CrashPlan. And i love it.
i installed Fedora 12 / Amahi today from scratch (my first install). I did not install
any updates from the fedory repo and directly installed CrashPlan.
Installation ran error free and worked like charm.
I did a test backup of the local box to a separate Folder. OK.
I then did a backup of my notebook (over WLAN). OK.
The only thing i am missing with CrashPlan is, that it can't update several important
Windows System Files / Userprofile Files. But thats a limitation of the software, not amahi.
To keep it short.
For me it is perfect for daily backing up Documents, Pictures etc.
For a Barematal Image i will use Products like Acronis or CloneZilla on a weekly basis.
I think, it can be made officialy available to all amahi users.
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- Posts: 4
- Joined: Wed Mar 10, 2010 11:31 am
Re: Ready for testing: CrashPlan
So far I have had no issues with my testing of crashplan. My windows clients were able to backup to my my HDA with little issue. The next test is to configure the HDA to back up to crashplan central to verify my DR plan.
The only down fall to this is the amount of data I have to upload but that is not the fault of the application.
But, from the HDA side of things the app installed and ran without any issue and did not present a performance hit or anything.
I will submit bug reports as I find them though.
The only down fall to this is the amount of data I have to upload but that is not the fault of the application.
But, from the HDA side of things the app installed and ran without any issue and did not present a performance hit or anything.
I will submit bug reports as I find them though.
Re: Ready for testing: CrashPlan
You want to backup the HDA data to CP Central, not the data you backed up from clients, right?The next test is to configure the HDA to back up to crashplan central to verify my DR plan.
To backup clients data to CP Central, that would be configured on the clients themselves.
You can't have clients backed up to the HDA, and use your CP Central only on your HDA to backup that same clients data remotely.
If that was your intention, I can elaborate on why this would not be practical, while technically feasible.
- Guillaume Boudreau
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- Posts: 4
- Joined: Wed Mar 10, 2010 11:31 am
Re: Ready for testing: CrashPlan
Sorry I have been tied up with work lately. Actually, why would that not be a feasable plan? It would give you both an onsite and a offsite location for your backups?
Thanks
Thanks
Re: Ready for testing: CrashPlan
When you backup clients to the HDA, the result are big (4GB) files, which contain encrypted data.
If you'd backup those offsite, to restore a single client file from the cloud, you need to first restore ALL the encrypted 4GB data files to a local computer, then manually link those to the client computer in CrashPlan, and finally restore your file from that.
If the client has a 100GB backup, and you want to restore a 100K file, that's a lot of overhead!
Also, I'm not sure the CrashPlan client will allow you to select it's own backup data files as the source for backups.
Like I said, it's technically possible, but not really usable.
If you'd backup those offsite, to restore a single client file from the cloud, you need to first restore ALL the encrypted 4GB data files to a local computer, then manually link those to the client computer in CrashPlan, and finally restore your file from that.
If the client has a 100GB backup, and you want to restore a 100K file, that's a lot of overhead!
Also, I'm not sure the CrashPlan client will allow you to select it's own backup data files as the source for backups.
Like I said, it's technically possible, but not really usable.
- Guillaume Boudreau
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- Posts: 4
- Joined: Wed Mar 10, 2010 11:31 am
Re: Ready for testing: CrashPlan
So perhaps a dual approach then....
HDA is the onsite master for backups. With the clients doing a backup offsite to crashplan central?
I am trying to cover my data incase some explodes so any suggestions are welcome.
HDA is the onsite master for backups. With the clients doing a backup offsite to crashplan central?
I am trying to cover my data incase some explodes so any suggestions are welcome.
Re: Ready for testing: CrashPlan
All clients should backup to both the HDA and a remote location.
The remote location can be CrashPlan Central, a friend that allows you to back to his PC/HDA, or a random person you're willing to swap HDD space with (you backup to his CP, he backups to yours).
The remote location can be CrashPlan Central, a friend that allows you to back to his PC/HDA, or a random person you're willing to swap HDD space with (you backup to his CP, he backups to yours).
- Guillaume Boudreau
Re: Ready for testing: CrashPlan
I am using the Amahi to store most of my files instead of local storage. This allows for a couple of things. 1. Amahi apps can use them. 2. they are accessable for others on the network and available remotely using VPN. 3. The crashplan can back them up remotely.
If you use a friend's amahi (like gboudreau is suggesting) then they are available whenever you need to restore to the Amahi. If the data is large then you can create a local copy to a USB drive and sneakernet it to your friends to seed the CrashPlan backup save the large initial upload.
Amahi will be even MORE redundant once greyhole is finished alpha testing making the Amahi the best choice for storing your files
Would be nice to see a web interface to manage the crashplan client. Has anyone approached crashplan to see if this is in the works or to suggest it?
If you use a friend's amahi (like gboudreau is suggesting) then they are available whenever you need to restore to the Amahi. If the data is large then you can create a local copy to a USB drive and sneakernet it to your friends to seed the CrashPlan backup save the large initial upload.
Amahi will be even MORE redundant once greyhole is finished alpha testing making the Amahi the best choice for storing your files
Would be nice to see a web interface to manage the crashplan client. Has anyone approached crashplan to see if this is in the works or to suggest it?
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