From ff40caa62ab4430b81e9c8d38d77d3b64814185e Mon Sep 17 00:00:00 2001 From: Paul Buetow Date: Tue, 30 Nov 2021 21:58:45 +0000 Subject: Publishing new version --- gemfeed/2016-04-03-offsite-backup-with-zfs.html | 2 +- 1 file changed, 1 insertion(+), 1 deletion(-) (limited to 'gemfeed/2016-04-03-offsite-backup-with-zfs.html') diff --git a/gemfeed/2016-04-03-offsite-backup-with-zfs.html b/gemfeed/2016-04-03-offsite-backup-with-zfs.html index baf126bc..4c0b809b 100644 --- a/gemfeed/2016-04-03-offsite-backup-with-zfs.html +++ b/gemfeed/2016-04-03-offsite-backup-with-zfs.html @@ -83,7 +83,7 @@ p.quote:after { | || | | | \____||__|_____|__| -

Written by Paul Buetow 2016-04-03

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Published by Paul Buetow 2016-04-03

Please don't lose all my pictures again!

When it comes to data storage and potential data loss, I am a paranoid person. It is due to my job and a personal experience I encountered over ten years ago: A single drive failure and loss of all my data (pictures, music, etc.).

A little about my personal infrastructure: I am running my own (mostly FreeBSD based) root servers (across several countries: Two in Germany, one in Canada, one in Bulgaria) which store all my online data (E-Mail and my Git repositories). I am syncing incremental (and encrypted) ZFS snapshots between these servers forth and back so either data can be recovered from the other server.

-- cgit v1.2.3