[OS X TeX] OT: Backup software
Claus Gerhardt
gerhardt at math.uni-heidelberg.de
Tue Oct 10 08:01:10 EDT 2006
I have two backup strategies:
(1) A clone of my main drive, done by SuperDuper!, to be on the safe
side, in case of a hard drive failure or a botched OS update.
(2) Daily incremental backup to a third external hard drive (LaCie
Triple extreme 300GB, fast, silent, excellent) using ChronoSync: the
backup looks like a copy of your original files (for the latest
incremental backup) with a few additional folders containing the
older versions of the files.
With regard to Bruno's dilemma with his mail:
- Either have your mail on the server deleted only by your PowerBook,
or delete the read mail after a longer period, e.g., a week.
- Cc your sent mail from your MacPro to your account.
Claus
On Oct 10, 2006, at 12:36, Bruno Voisin wrote:
> Le 10 oct. 06 à 11:56, Rick Zaccone a écrit :
>
>> Personally, I'm waiting for Time Machine <http://
>> www.computerworld.com/action/article.do?
>> command=viewArticleBasic&articleId=9003885&pageNumber=1>. If you
>> haven't seen the WWDC demo of it, take a look. It's impressive.
>
> Same here.
>
> For the moment I'm sticking to Apple's Backup: I make a full backup
> of my home directory to an external hard drive, once a month say
> (actually it tends to be once every three months, due to lack of
> time, but that's clearly not often enough), and one incremental
> backup every day. But a .Mac subscription is required, otherwise
> you're limited to 100 MB in one go.
>
> I'm very impressed by Gary's backup strategy: if I understood
> correctly, incremental backups every hour to different hard drives
> in the day and in the evening, plus a bootable clone of the whole
> hard drive every day. Unfortunately that doesn't seem possible
> here: first, it requires several different hard drives, which
> moneywise isn't possible; and it requires configuring several
> pieces of software rather precisely, which I'm not sure I can manage.
>
> Another concern is size and time: my home directory is about 20 GB,
> and making a full backup with Backup takes already about 2 hours,
> which is why I am not able to do it as often as advisable. And even
> doing a daily incremental backup takes most of my PowerBook's CPU
> while the backup is being performed. That's why I'm skeptical about
> attempting to backup more often. Not even to say cloning the entire
> hard drive!
>
> Two more things:
>
> - With the MacPro in which you can put several hard drives, I think
> I've read somewhere it's possible to create a software RAID with
> these drives. I've no idea how this can be done, or whether it's
> built-in somewhere in OS X or requires 3rd-party software, but that
> might also serve as backup. The only problem would be, of course,
> the fact that all the backups would live within the same machine,
> so that if something bad happens to that machine (theft, fire,
> water, ...) then all the backups are lost.
>
> - Last week I just got a MacPro. Given the difference in speed with
> my venerable PowerBook G4, I will move to the MacPro as my main
> computer. The only significant problem is email: when all my mail
> was living on the PowerBook, I could read and send mail from
> everywhere (home, McDonald's, ...), having all the past
> correspondence available all the time. Now that I'm reading and
> sending mail from work on the MacPro during the day, this means I
> don't have most of the correspondence of the day at home in the
> evening on the PowerBook: I can't see the Sent messages, stored on
> the MacPro, and all the messages that were transferred upon arrival
> to local mailboxes through filtering rules (like moving all OS X
> TeX messages to a local OS X TeX mailbox) are also stored on the
> MacPro.
>
> This is certainly a trivial problem, but I haven't yet figured out
> a satisfactory solution -- other than forgetting about email at
> home in the evening, which on the other hand turns out quite good
> for my social life ;-) Given my email directories sum up to about
> 2.5 GB, I doubt OS X synchronization could deal with it
> transparently: for sure it would take ages to synchronize mailboxes
> on two computers every day?
>
> Bruno Voisin
>
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