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Based on our record, Vorta should be more popular than UrBackup. It has been mentiond 6 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.
I'm currently using Urbackup (urbackup.org) which worked great on my windows server, but I made the switch to linux recently (command line only) and Urbackup seems to crash every few minutes/hours. I'm looking for everyone else's suggestions. I would love if the application created a full image back up for easy restoring, and be compatible with Windows clients at least. Source: 11 months ago
If you want client/server backups, urbackup is the easiest thing I've found. Does image-based backups for Windows, supports several snapshot options for Linux filesystems, and they have a Mac agent in beta. Source: over 2 years ago
You can add that to a cron job. Alternatively, I think the Vorta GUI also has a way to easily schedule it[1]. I'll add that one thing I like to do once in a blue-moon is to spin-up a VM and try to recover a few random files. While the check command checks that the data is there and theoretically recoverable, nothing really beats proving to yourself that you can, in a clean environment, recover your files. [0]... - Source: Hacker News / 4 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 / 10 months ago
Take it from a researcher in computer storage systems who uses three different backup methods to multiple media (iCloud, Time Machine, Vorta/Borg). You’re likely fine with just two, but I’m paranoid about my data because I know how the sausage is made. Source: 12 months ago
I use the program Vorta for this. It encrypts and compresses your files locally and then backs them up to wherever you specify, such as your NAS or a cloud service or whatever. Much like your current solution, compressing it makes the transfer faster, but one improvement over your current setup is that it also deduplicates the backup, so it only has to backup changes to your vault not the whole vault every time.... Source: 12 months ago
For backups I use Borg myself. If you need a GUI, you can use Vorta or Pika. With borgmatic, there is also a wrapper that extends the range of functions of Borg. Source: about 1 year 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.
Borg Backup - Deduplicating backup program with compression and authenticated encryption
rsync - rsync is a file transfer program for Unix systems. rsync uses the "rsync algorithm" which provides a very fast method for bringing remote files into sync.
Duplicacy - A new generation cross-platform cloud backup tool
Bacula - Bacula is a set of Open Source, enterprise ready, computer programs that permit you (or the system...