raidisnotabackup/content/3.md

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title = "So how do I back up?"
description = "Backups are a contentions and complicated subject, but these simple rules should help guide you."
weight = 3
type = "post"
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2016-09-29 13:33:00 -04:00
* Always back up in _some way_. While a copy of the data on the same array won't protect you against all problems, it will protect you against some.
* A _backup on the same server_ is susceptable to the _same failures as the original data_ set (hardware failure, natural disasters, and the like).
* A good rule of thumb is _three copies_ (the RAID is only one copy for this purpose): the _original_, one _onsite copy_, and one _offsite copy_. Store the offsite copy in the cloud, or at a friend's house.
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* _Make backups regularly_, at least once a week, and automate if possible; the day you need a backup is the day you realize you hadn't run it in 6 months and what you need isn't backed up.
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* _Test backups regularly_, at least once a month; _a backup is worthless if you can't restore from it_. Just because you have a backup doesn't mean you're protected; always test them.
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There are dozens of backup utilities out there; I'm not going to prosthelytize for any one of them, but I personally use [BackupPC](http://backuppc.sourceforge.net/) for my server and workstation backups.
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Do you need to back up everything? Of course not. That's up to you to decide. Some data is replaceable, some isn't. If it isn't, back it up!