Shawn Fertch wrote: > I looked at it a while ago, and was helpful. One which would be helpful to add, IMO, would be to show an option on how to compress data going through tar. > > A question I have about tar: Can it span tapes? If so, how and would it be worth the risks? I have an old DDS-1 drive. The old 4GB of compressed data limitation kind of sucks. man tar for answers to both of your questions: to compress files via tar: -z, --gzip, --ungzip filter the archive through gzip yes, it can span multiple tapes. I've done this without problems. As always YMMV. -M, --multi-volume create/list/extract multi-volume archive > Scot, can you show an example of your scripts? Would be good to see how you do it for ideas. I have some external machines to backup, so scp will be used instead. my scripts are complicated and require function libraries, etc. basically it goes like this: # full backup of /home; for partial (everything since the last full) use # a '1' instead of '0'; you can have up to 9 dump levels depending on # how complicated you want to get. /sbin/dump -0auf /<backup_partition>/home-full.dump /home # make a table of contents (TOC) /sbin/restore tvf /<backup_partition>/home-full.dump > \ /<backup_partition>/home-full.list # compress backup and TOC nice -15 gzip -f /<backup_partition>home-full.dump nice -15 gzip -f /<backup_partition>home-full.list man dump to see what the options all mean. as far as remote backups via scp, similar to above but dd is your friend: ssh remotehost -C "/sbin/dump -0auf - /home | \ dd of=/<backup_partition>/remotehost-home-full.dump this ssh's to remotehost and dumps the /home partition which is piped to the dd command (which runs on the host you want to store the backups on); dd writes the output file (of=). If you setup ssh keys to allow the host doing the backup to ssh to the remotehost without a password you can run this backup from cron without user intervention. > On a side note, I've been seeing an ad in the past couple of LJ's for a free personal edition of Storix. Never heard of them, but worth looking into: > > http://www.storix.com never heard of this product before. Interesting. Amanda and BRU are pretty popular backup software too. -- -scot