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Date:      Wed, 29 Jan 2003 21:14:42 +1100
From:      Brett Harris <bsdbrett@optushome.com.au>
To:        Francisco Reyes <lists@natserv.com>
Cc:        mwm-dated-1044121467.43bfa2@mired.org, questions@FreeBSD.ORG
Subject:   Re: Which files and directories to backup?
Message-ID:  <20030129211442.215a0c7d.bsdbrett@optushome.com.au>
In-Reply-To: <20030128112459.C57135-100000@zoraida.natserv.net>
References:  <20030128173947.46630490.bsdbrett@optushome.com.au> <20030128112459.C57135-100000@zoraida.natserv.net>

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On Tue, 28 Jan 2003 11:25:57 -0500 (EST)
Francisco Reyes <lists@natserv.com> wrote:

> On Tue, 28 Jan 2003, Brett Harris wrote:
> > The best way that I've found to back my machine's configs up, is to
> >create a directory such as /etc/config , *move* all my important
> >configuration files to it (firewall, syslogd, rc.conf etc -
> >basically anything i'd want to keep for a new machine),
> >and then symlink them to their proper locations.
> 
> But don't you want to also have an external copy outside the machine?
> What if the whole HD dies?
> 

You didn't include it in your reply, but in that email I also wrote:

"That way, if it comes time for a backup, all you do is tar and zip that one /etc/config directory, and move it somewhere safe. "

"Somewhere safe" being a CDROM/Backup Tape/remote server/remote location.

Do you think you'd really keep a backup on the same machine? Wouldn't that defeat the entire point of backing something up?

-Brett Harris

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