Someone asked Quora community to share the craziest “rm -rf /” stories. There are quite a few good ones, including this video from Pixar about Toy Story 2 almost not happening.
[youtube=http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=EL_g0tyaIeE]
Someone asked Quora community to share the craziest “rm -rf /” stories. There are quite a few good ones, including this video from Pixar about Toy Story 2 almost not happening.
[youtube=http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=EL_g0tyaIeE]
These days I am once again improving my backup routines. After I ran out of all reasonable space on my Dropbox account last year, I’ve moved to homemade rsync scripts and offsite backup downloads between my server and my laptop. Obviously, with my laptop being limited on disk space, and not being always online, the situation was less than ideal. And finally I grew tired of keeping it all running.
A fresh look around at backup software brought in a new application that I haven’t seen before – HashBackup. It’s free, it has the simplest installation ever (statically compiled), it runs on every platform I care about and more, and it supports remote storage via pretty much any protocol. It also features nice backup rotation plans and an interesting way of pushing backups to remote storage with sensible security.
Once I settled with the software, I had to sort out my disk space issue. Full server backup takes about 15 GB and I want to keep a few of them around (daily, weekly, monthly, yearly, etc). And I want to keep them off the server. Not being too enthusiastic about having a home server on all the time, and not having enough space and uptime on my laptop, I’ve decided to check some of those storage solutions in the cloud. Yeah, I know…
My choice fell upon Amazon S3. Not for any particular reason either. They seem to be cheap, fast, reliable and quite popular. And HashBackup also supports them too. So I’ve spent a couple of days (nights actually) configuring all to my liking and now I see the backups are running smoothly without any intervention on my end.
Before I will finalize my decision, I want to see the actual Amazon charge. Their prices seem to be well within my budget, but there are many variables that I might be misinterpreting. If they will charge what they say they will charge, I might free up much more space across all my computers, I think.
As far as tips go, I have two, if you decide to follow this path:
VaultPress, “the world’s best WordPress security, backup and support”, has recently introduced a Lite plan. It’s only $5 per month and it covers most of the essentials:
- Daily backups that happen automatically, so you can focus on creating, not logistics.
- Automated site restores, so you can restore your entire site with a single click.
- Thirty days of saved backups, so you can go back in time to restore the last clean version of your site.
It’s cheap enough for small, personal blogs, and it’s more than perfect for start-ups and small businesses too. $60 per year for healthy full night sleep is nothing in my book.
This post is just a test. I’ve created a new personal recipe using IFTTT service, which will pull the RSS feed of this blog, and create a new note in a specific notebook of my Evernote account. This is not recommended as a backup solution of course (you should do a proper filesystem and database backups), but if it works as good as I imagine, then I can use it for part of my RSS aggregation. For example, I follow some blogs that I’d like to save most of the posts, but not all, and then search through those. With a similar recipe, RSS feeds can be pushed into my Evernote account, and I can then just delete those notes that I don’t need.
Anyways, if you haven’t tried out IFTTT or Evernote, I strongly recommend both. Those services are magical.