Backup Windows with UrBackup
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@dustinb3403 how much is it? Does it include support?
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@aaronstuder said in Backup Windows with UrBackup:
@dustinb3403 how much is it? Does it include support?
It's really cheap, like $17 IIRC.
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Yeah it's $17USD/client.
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@dustinb3403 said in Backup Windows with UrBackup:
Yeah it's $17USD.
Per client. Not correcting you, just pointing that out.
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@stacksofplates said in Backup Windows with UrBackup:
@dustinb3403 said in Backup Windows with UrBackup:
Yeah it's $17USD.
Per client. Not correcting you, just pointing that out.
Yeah I went back and edited my post as you posted.
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@scottalanmiller are you testing CBT with this client?
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@dustinb3403 said in Backup Windows with UrBackup:
@scottalanmiller are you testing CBT with this client?
No, mostly only need SQL backups, not system backups.
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@stacksofplates said in Backup Windows with UrBackup:
@obsolesce said in Backup Windows with UrBackup:
@emad-r said in Backup Windows with UrBackup:
UrBackup is too heavy for my taste, I tested it but the interface was too 1980s
saltstack + robocopy + 7za
How do you do incremental backups with change block tracking? That method doesn't do it. So you're doing full backups and copying full backups every time?
I can't answer for him because I have no idea how he's using it. But that does work if you're only copying data from the data volumes. That's pretty much what ReaR does, just replace 7za with tar.
I use ReaR, and it does do incrementals. However, I only use it for a few one-off physical Linux systems for disaster recovery purposes.
I like the way MBS (as how Microsoft defines as "Modern Backup Solutions") work. Most do CBT very well, like Veeam, SC-DPM, and other modern solutions.
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@obsolesce said in Backup Windows with UrBackup:
@stacksofplates said in Backup Windows with UrBackup:
@obsolesce said in Backup Windows with UrBackup:
@emad-r said in Backup Windows with UrBackup:
UrBackup is too heavy for my taste, I tested it but the interface was too 1980s
saltstack + robocopy + 7za
How do you do incremental backups with change block tracking? That method doesn't do it. So you're doing full backups and copying full backups every time?
I can't answer for him because I have no idea how he's using it. But that does work if you're only copying data from the data volumes. That's pretty much what ReaR does, just replace 7za with tar.
I use ReaR, and it does do incrementals. However, I only use it for a few one-off physical Linux systems for disaster recovery purposes.
I like the way MBS (as how Microsoft defines as "Modern Backup Solutions") work. Most do CBT very well, like Veeam's Free Endpoint, SC-DPM, and other modern solutions.
Sure they're great. My point is if you're not doing system backups, it's kind of not worth it.
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@stacksofplates said in Backup Windows with UrBackup:
@obsolesce said in Backup Windows with UrBackup:
@stacksofplates said in Backup Windows with UrBackup:
@obsolesce said in Backup Windows with UrBackup:
@emad-r said in Backup Windows with UrBackup:
UrBackup is too heavy for my taste, I tested it but the interface was too 1980s
saltstack + robocopy + 7za
How do you do incremental backups with change block tracking? That method doesn't do it. So you're doing full backups and copying full backups every time?
I can't answer for him because I have no idea how he's using it. But that does work if you're only copying data from the data volumes. That's pretty much what ReaR does, just replace 7za with tar.
I use ReaR, and it does do incrementals. However, I only use it for a few one-off physical Linux systems for disaster recovery purposes.
I like the way MBS (as how Microsoft defines as "Modern Backup Solutions") work. Most do CBT very well, like Veeam's Free Endpoint, SC-DPM, and other modern solutions.
My point is if you're not doing system backups, it's kind of not worth it.
Yeah, for sure.
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@obsolesce said in Backup Windows with UrBackup:
I like the way MBS (as how Microsoft defines as "Modern Backup Solutions") work. Most do CBT very well, like Veeam, SC-DPM, and other modern solutions.
I literally refer to these as legacy backups, lol.