FWIW, you could try using a storage manager and archiving your file servers 
to a bank of storage devices ( tapes, CDROM, other files, etc ). A good 
storage manager will run encryption & compression on the files it archives, 
as well as allowing incremental archives. Since you're going to a bank of 
storage devices, you'll run the archives in parallel. Hope this suggestion 
helps.

Brice


>From: "Austad, Jay" <austad at marketwatch.com>
>Reply-To: tclug-list at mn-linux.org
>To: "'tclug-list at mn-linux.org'" <tclug-list at mn-linux.org>
>Subject: [TCLUG] backup
>Date: Mon, 19 Feb 2001 13:19:58 -0600
>
>Ok, with all the talk of buying huge hard drives and setting up huge file
>servers, does anyone have any suggestions for backing them up?  Between me
>and my roomie, we have over 300GB of drives with data that we'd rather not
>lose.  Tape drives are expensive, and the cheap ones only hold like 4 or 
>8GB
>worth of data per tape.  Even if I did find a cheap AIT drive, the tapes 
>are
>still about $100 each.
>
>What is the best solution for this?  When I only had 20GB worth of data,
>burning it to 30 CD's wasn't too much of pain in the ass to do once a month
>or so, but now it's a monumental task.  I know we could buy a couple extra
>drives and set up some of the volumes using RAID-5, but that doesn't 
>protect
>us against file system corruption, it only protects against a drive 
>failure.
>So, we really do need some sort of backup scheme, but everything I find
>seems to get very expensive in one way or another.
>
>Jay
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>tclug-list at mn-linux.org
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