I have a confession to make.

I’ve been working in IT for about 6/7 years now and I’ve been selfhosting for about 5. And in all this time, in my work environment or at home, I’ve never bothered about backups. I know they are essential for every IT network, but I never cared to learn it. Just a few copies of some harddisks here and there and that is actually all I know. I’ve tried a few times, but I’ve often thought the learning curve to steep, or the commandline gave me some errors I didn’t want to troubleshoot.

It is time to make a change. I’m looking for an easy to learn backup solution for my home network. I’m running a Proxmox server with about 8 VMs on it, including a NAS full of photos and a mediaserver with lots of movies and shows. It has 2x 8TB disks in a RAID1 set. Next to that I’ve got 2 windows laptops and a linux desktop.

What could be a good backup solution that is also easy to learn?

I’ve tried Borg, but I couldn’t figure out all the commandline options. I’m leaning towards Proxmox Backup Server, but I don’t know if it works well with something other than my Proxmox server. I’ve also thought about Veeam since I encounter it sometimes at work, but the free version supports only up to 10 devices.

My plan now is to create 2 backup servers, 1 onsite, running on something like a raspberry pi or an HP elitedesk. The other would be an HP microserver N40L, which I can store offsite.

What could be the perfect backup solution for me?

EDIT:

After a few replies I feel the need to mention that I’m looking for a free and centrally managed option. Thanks!

  • lemmyvore@feddit.nl
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    1 year ago

    I use the daily/weekly/monthly pattern for machine backups:

    • Use a rsync job to copy whatever you deem important from the target machine to a backup dir. Run this once a day.
    • Once a week, sync the daily dir to a weekly dir.
    • Once a month, take a snapshot of the weekly dir as a tarball.

    In addition to that I use Pika Backup (it's a very user friendly GUI for Borg) to make incremental backups of the monthly dir to a couple of external HDDs.

    • spez_@lemmy.world
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      1 year ago

      I use Restic, for the incremental backups and deduplication. I feel tar balls won't factor in those two cases.

      • lemmyvore@feddit.nl
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        1 year ago

        If you use a backup solution that does incremental/deduplication you can probably replace the monthly tarball with a monthly deduplicative backup.

        Tarballs are useful in repetitive backups, like for example long term archiving to optical media (burning Blu Rays).