this post was submitted on 08 May 2025
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I've got a whole bucket full of old hard drives, CDs and DVDs, and I'm starting the process of backing up as much as still works to a 4TB drive.

It's gonna be a long journey and lots of files, many prone to being duplicates from some of the drives.

What sorts of software do you Linux users recommend?

I'm on Linux Mint MATE, if that matters much.

Edit: One of the programs I'm accustomed to from my Windows days is FolderMatch, which is a step above simple duplicate file scanning, it scans for duplicate or semi-duplicate folders as well and breaks down individual file differences when comparing two folders.

I see I've already gotten some responses, and I thank everyone in advance. I'm on a road trip right now, I'll be checking you folks recommend software later this evening or as soon as I can anyways.

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[–] over_clox@lemmy.world 1 points 1 day ago (1 children)

These 4+4+2TB drives are fresh new to me, amazing they all seem to check out.

Right now, the drives I'll be pulling data from range anywhere from 40GB to 320GB, from a variety of different file systems. And that's not counting the many optical discs that need to be archived before disc rot sets in (I'm sure some have already, but looking better than I expected).

I don't necessarily need a 20TB, just one of these 4TB drives ought to do the trick. Besides, its already gonna take me months to pull all my backups from the Internet Archive..

[–] kylian0087@lemmy.dbzer0.com 2 points 9 hours ago

Sounds like you are a data hoarder haha. Can't blame you. But for such hobby's perhaps a ZFS system with deduplication and a second ZFS system to use for backup of the first system is what you want.

Does get costly though.