this post was submitted on 13 Nov 2024
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Piracy: ꜱᴀɪʟ ᴛʜᴇ ʜɪɢʜ ꜱᴇᴀꜱ
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I wouldn't.
Use a proper backup tool for this, like restic. BackBlaze has reasonable rates, especially of you're mostly write-only, and restic has built-in support for B2 and encrypts everything by default. It also supports compression, but you won't get much out of that on media files. restic is also cross-platform and a single executable, so you can throw binaries for OSX, Linux, and Windows on a USB stick and know you can get to your backups from anywhere. It also allows you to mount a remote repository like a filesystem (on Linux, at least), and browse a backup and get at individual files without having to restore everything. It's super handy if you screw up a single file or directory.
Is it rsync in general you wouldnt or rsync.net?
Never heard of restic so i will definitely need to check this out. I was not planning on having a solution that is continuously running but rather dumping everything there once and then sync new file maybe once a month or something.
I have no opinion about rsync.net. I'd check which services restic supports; there are several, and it is it supports rsync.net and that's what you want to use, you're golden. Or, use another backup tool that has encryption-by-default and does support rsync.net - there are a couple of options.
I would just never store any data that wasn't meant for public consumption unencrypted on someone else's servers. I make an exception for my VPS, but that's only because I'm more paranoid about exposing my LAN that putting my email on a VPS.
restic, and other backup tools, are generally not always on. You run them; they back up. If you run them only one a month, that's how often they run. The remote mounting is just a nice feature when you want to grab a single file from one of the backups.
What you're describing is a classic backup use-case. I'm recommending the easiest, cheapest, most reliable offsite solution I've used. restic has been around for years, and has a lot of users and a lot of eyeballs look at it, and it's OSS. There are even GUIs for it, if you're not comfortable with the CLI. B2 is generally well-regarded, is fairly easy to figure out, and has also been around for ages. Together, they make a solid combo. I also backup with restic to a local disk and use that for accessing history - B2 is just, as you say, in case of a fire, or theft, I suppose.
thanks, thats very helpful!
One (maybe stupid) question - since restic encrypts, does it do this in transfer or would i need to have additional space on my local hard drives for the encrypted archive?
edit: got an answer to this above: does not require intermediate storage! :)