> On Nov 18, 2020, at 3:27 AM, J Martin Rushton via CentOS <centos@xxxxxxxxxx> wrote: > > I'd agree with you John. I'm trying to get away from Amanda's unpredictability and go back to using scripts to drive dump (for ext2/3/4) and xfsdump (for xfs). > There is enterprise class open source backup software worth mentioning: bareos (and bacula which it forked from). I use them for over a decade, bacula first, then I switched over to bareos. I back up using bareos UNIXes (FreeBSD), Linuxes (CentOS), MS Windows. Valeri > Is there any easy way to tell rear to include xfsdump and dump capability? If the commands are there then its trivial to restore data. > > What I've done in the past is before the nightly backup write a small file to the root of each filesystem giving disk geometries. You can then use any recovery DVD to partition and reload the OS. If rear can do this for me it would be __much__ neater! > > On 18/11/2020 08:24, John Pierce wrote: >> I'm old school, but I always liked using dump/restore on unix file >> systems. e2dump or whatever for linux, zfs send/recieve for zfs, ufsdump >> on freebsd ufs, etc etc. >> then I just need to know what file systems they are, and where they should >> be mounted, and its trivial to set tha tup on new hardware. >> _______________________________________________ >> CentOS mailing list >> CentOS@xxxxxxxxxx >> https://lists.centos.org/mailman/listinfo/centos > > -- > J Martin Rushton MBCS > _______________________________________________ > CentOS mailing list > CentOS@xxxxxxxxxx > https://lists.centos.org/mailman/listinfo/centos _______________________________________________ CentOS mailing list CentOS@xxxxxxxxxx https://lists.centos.org/mailman/listinfo/centos