I have a proxmox+Debian+docker server and I’m looking to setup my backups so that they get backed up (DUH) on my Linux PC whenever it comes online on the local network.
I’m not sure if what’s best is backing up locally and having something else handling the copying, how to have those backup run only if they haven’t run in a while regardless of the availability of the PC, if it’s best to have the PC run the logic or to keep the control over it on the server.
Mostly I don’t want to waste space on my server because it’s limited…
I don’t know the what and I don’t know the how, currently, any input is appreciated.
You probably want to go into a bit more detail on exactly what you want to backup. Are you talking the entire system, flat files, databases…?
Docker configs, sensitive documents, pictures, a limited amount of video files…
Cron + rsync is always a bulletproof solution. Simple bash script that runs every X minutes to sync to a network target. Wouldn’t need to be only when the machine starts as you mentioned.
I will probably start with this approach and see where it leads me, thanks!
Since you’re interested in this kind of DIY, approach, I’d seriously consider thinking the whole process through and writing a simple script for this that runs from your desktop. That will make it trivial to do an automatic backup whenever you’re active on the network.
Instead of
cron
, look into systemd timers and you can fire off your script after, say, one minute of being on your desktop, using a monotonic timer likeOnUnitActiveSec=60
.Thinking through the script in pseudo code, it could look something like:
rsync -avzh $server_source $desktop_destination || curl -d "Backup failed" ntfy.sh/mytopic
This would pull the back from your server to your desktop and, if the backup failed, use a service such as ntfy.sh to notify you of the problem.
I think that would pretty much take care of all of your requirements and if you ever decided to switch systems (like using
zfs send/recv
instead ofrsync
), it would be a matter of just altering that one script.