Based on our record, Kopia should be more popular than rdiff-backup. It has been mentiond 26 times since March 2021. We are tracking product recommendations and mentions on various public social media platforms and blogs. They can help you identify which product is more popular and what people think of it.
Rdiff-backup - close to what you do currently but at least provides versioning. Based on rsync. Source: over 1 year ago
As in just a copy of your files? This I would barely consider a backup, more of just a mirror from a point in time. What're you missing by doing this? Versions of files, deduplication, and encryption (last one being very important for the best kind of backups, which should be off-site). Just because it's not files doesn't mean it's proprietary. Proprietary would mean secret and undocumented. There are many great... Source: over 1 year ago
Rdiff Backup - Reverse differential backups that uses rsync, linking, and can tunnel via ssh. You get a full current backup with increments available to restore any version of the file with minimal storage space used. Source: over 1 year ago
Borg is great. we've been using it for the past 3 years to archive hundreds of file-level backups of servers, database dumps and VM images. Average size of each borg repo is few GB but there are few outliers up to few hundreds of GB. Borg replaced https://rdiff-backup.net/ for us and gave:. - Source: Hacker News / over 1 year ago
Robocopy is great if you don't have access to rsync. If rsync via WSL2 for instance is an option, I'd personally go with rdiffbackup. Source: over 1 year ago
I think Kopia would be great for your use case https://kopia.io/ It has a great system to snapshot files but only store data if it's changed. I use it in an environment where I can't use something like zfs to snapshot data because I don't have the ability to make decisions about what filesystem we're using. It's been amazing, love it so much! - Source: Hacker News / 19 days ago
I've been happy with: https://kopia.io/ Fairly easy to configure, does snapshots to S3 and has a icon in my tray I can watch :). - Source: Hacker News / 2 months ago
Btw, kopia is one fine backup tool. Apparently borgbackup is good too. Source: 5 months ago
I used their trial for a bit to test it out with Vorta [1] in a container. Vorta (and Borg) seemed to work fine, until I wanted to restore an archive and I noticed that my recent snapshots were completely empty. Probably because of a misconfiguration on my end though. But it made me look elsewhere. For me backups should be a fire, test and forget solution. Recently I made the switch to Kopia [2] which seems to... - Source: Hacker News / 9 months ago
Check kopia - https://kopia.io/ Duplicati was nice for me until my first Complete DR test.... Then I trash it , and burn it with fire.... Other comments already pint you to why so I will not extend to it.... Source: 10 months ago
Duplicati - Free backup software to store backups online with strong encryption. Works with FTP, SSH, WebDAV, OneDrive, Amazon S3, Google Drive and many others.
Restic - Easy: Doing backups should be a frictionless process, otherwise you are tempted to skip it.
Online Vault Backup - Online Vault Backup is a cloud storage service that allows you backup your data while having unlimited storage.
Duplicacy - A new generation cross-platform cloud backup tool
Rebel Backup - Rebel Backup lets you make encrypted backups of your important files to Dropbox or Google Drive.
SFTPGo - Fully featured and highly configurable SFTP server with optional HTTP/S, FTP/S and WebDAV support - S3, Google Cloud Storage, Azure Blob