“UbuntuHelp:BackupYourSystem”的版本间的差异
来自Ubuntu中文
小 (新页面: {{From|https://help.ubuntu.com/community/BackupYourSystem}} {{Languages|UbuntuHelp:BackupYourSystem}} Backing up your system is an important thing for everyone to do. You never know when ...) |
小 |
||
第1行: | 第1行: | ||
{{From|https://help.ubuntu.com/community/BackupYourSystem}} | {{From|https://help.ubuntu.com/community/BackupYourSystem}} | ||
{{Languages|UbuntuHelp:BackupYourSystem}} | {{Languages|UbuntuHelp:BackupYourSystem}} | ||
− | |||
+ | Backing up your system important, since you never know when your hard drive will die or some other disaster will strike. Several backup methods are listed below. | ||
− | == | + | == Archival backup == |
− | + | === From the command line === | |
− | + | ==== Using the TAR command ==== | |
+ | Suitable for backing up your home directory. Open a terminal and enter the command: | ||
− | + | <pre><nowiki> | |
− | + | tar cvfz output input | |
− | + | </nowiki></pre> | |
− | + | ||
− | + | ||
− | + | ||
− | + | ||
− | + | ||
− | + | ||
− | + | ||
− | + | ||
− | + | The compressed image created can be broken into smaller chunks for copying to removeable media using the split command. | |
− | + | More information can be found here: [[UbuntuHelp:BackupYourSystem/TAR]] | |
− | === dd === | + | ==== Creating disc images using dd ==== |
− | + | Suitable for backing up entire disks. Open a terminal (in the examples you will need to replace hda with the partition you wish to backup). | |
− | + | ||
− | + | ||
+ | Create a hard disk image: | ||
+ | <pre><nowiki> | ||
+ | dd if=/dev/hda1 of=/home/hda1.bin | ||
+ | </nowiki></pre> | ||
+ | Create a compressed disk image | ||
+ | <pre><nowiki> | ||
+ | dd if=/dev/hda1 | gzip > /home/hda1.bin.gz | ||
+ | </nowiki></pre> | ||
+ | Back up the MBR | ||
+ | <pre><nowiki> | ||
+ | dd if=/dev/hda of=/home/hda.boot.mbr bs=512 count=1 | ||
+ | </nowiki></pre> | ||
+ | Restore MBR (from a Live CD) | ||
+ | <pre><nowiki> | ||
+ | dd if=/mnt/hda1/home/hda.boot.mbr of=/dev/hda bs=512 count=1 | ||
+ | </nowiki></pre> | ||
+ | Backup a drive to another drive | ||
+ | <pre><nowiki> | ||
+ | dd if=/dev/hda of=/dev/hdb conv=noerror,sync bs=4k | ||
+ | </nowiki></pre> | ||
The command: | The command: | ||
<pre><nowiki> | <pre><nowiki> | ||
第42行: | 第53行: | ||
dd -if partitionimage.dd -of /dev/hda1 | dd -if partitionimage.dd -of /dev/hda1 | ||
</nowiki></pre> | </nowiki></pre> | ||
− | |||
You can use the "loopback device" to mount this partition image, making it easy to read the old version of files and still keep your current version untouched. | You can use the "loopback device" to mount this partition image, making it easy to read the old version of files and still keep your current version untouched. | ||
第48行: | 第58行: | ||
by Jason Boxman | by Jason Boxman | ||
− | + | == From the Desktop == | |
− | + | ||
− | + | ||
− | + | ||
− | + | ||
− | + | ||
− | + | ||
− | + | === Using Simple Backup Suite === | |
− | + | Simple Backup Suite is a program that was created during the Google Summer of Code 2005. Using a familiar GNOME interface, you can specify how often it backs up, the destination, what to exclude and what to back up. | |
− | + | ||
− | + | ||
− | + | ||
− | + | Simple Backup Suite also makes incremental backups, after creating the initial backup, only the files that have changed are backed up. | |
− | + | ||
− | + | For more information see: BackupYourSystem/SimpleBackupSuite | |
+ | |||
+ | === UbuntuHomeBackup === | ||
+ | |||
+ | Ubuntu/UbuntuHomeBackup | ||
+ | |||
+ | === duplicity === | ||
+ | |||
+ | DuplicityBackupHowto | ||
+ | |||
+ | === BackupPC === | ||
+ | [[UbuntuHelp:BackupPC]] | ||
+ | |||
+ | == Incremental Backup == | ||
=== rsync === | === rsync === | ||
第82行: | 第96行: | ||
<code><nowiki>-vv</nowiki></code> increases the verbosity of the reporting process | <code><nowiki>-vv</nowiki></code> increases the verbosity of the reporting process | ||
− | == | + | == See also == |
− | + | ||
− | + | ||
− | + | ||
− | + | ||
− | + | ||
− | + | ||
− | + | ||
− | + | ||
− | + | ||
− | + | ||
− | + | ||
You might also want to check out these backup programs which will help you to make automated backups of your system: | You might also want to check out these backup programs which will help you to make automated backups of your system: | ||
第100行: | 第103行: | ||
* [http://www.mondorescue.org/ Mondo Rescue] | * [http://www.mondorescue.org/ Mondo Rescue] | ||
* [http://www.rsnapshot.org/ rsnapshot] | * [http://www.rsnapshot.org/ rsnapshot] | ||
− | |||
* [http://www.bacula.org/ Bacula] | * [http://www.bacula.org/ Bacula] | ||
− | + | ||
Other wiki discussing various Linux backup techniques: | Other wiki discussing various Linux backup techniques: | ||
第119行: | 第121行: | ||
(But they don't help when the hard drive fails, so they are complementary to these other forms of backup that only store occasional snapshots, but also survive hardware failures). | (But they don't help when the hard drive fails, so they are complementary to these other forms of backup that only store occasional snapshots, but also survive hardware failures). | ||
− | ContinuousBackups and HomeUserBackup and MigrateAndBackup have some interesting ideas about making backups completely automated. | + | Ubuntu:ContinuousBackups and Ubuntu:HomeUserBackup and Ubuntu:MigrateAndBackup have some interesting ideas about making backups completely automated. |
− | BackupOfPackageUserData and UbuntuDownUnder/BOFs/SimpleBackupSolution also still needs help. | + | Ubuntu:BackupOfPackageUserData and Ubuntu:UbuntuDownUnder/BOFs/SimpleBackupSolution also still needs help. |
+ | |||
+ | What exactly does Ubuntu:SessionBackup do? | ||
− | + | ---- | |
+ | [[category:CategoryDocumentation]] [[category:CategoryNeedsExpansion]] | ||
[[category:UbuntuHelp]] | [[category:UbuntuHelp]] |
2007年11月22日 (四) 12:04的版本
Backing up your system important, since you never know when your hard drive will die or some other disaster will strike. Several backup methods are listed below.
目录
Archival backup
From the command line
Using the TAR command
Suitable for backing up your home directory. Open a terminal and enter the command:
tar cvfz output input
The compressed image created can be broken into smaller chunks for copying to removeable media using the split command.
More information can be found here: UbuntuHelp:BackupYourSystem/TAR
Creating disc images using dd
Suitable for backing up entire disks. Open a terminal (in the examples you will need to replace hda with the partition you wish to backup).
Create a hard disk image:
dd if=/dev/hda1 of=/home/hda1.bin
Create a compressed disk image
dd if=/dev/hda1 | gzip > /home/hda1.bin.gz
Back up the MBR
dd if=/dev/hda of=/home/hda.boot.mbr bs=512 count=1
Restore MBR (from a Live CD)
dd if=/mnt/hda1/home/hda.boot.mbr of=/dev/hda bs=512 count=1
Backup a drive to another drive
dd if=/dev/hda of=/dev/hdb conv=noerror,sync bs=4k
The command:
dd -if /dev/hda1 > partitionimage.dd
will backup "/dev/hda1", the first partition on hda1. A whole drive (including the MBR) could be backed up using just /dev/hda as the input "file". Restoring is done by:
dd -if partitionimage.dd -of /dev/hda1
You can use the "loopback device" to mount this partition image, making it easy to read the old version of files and still keep your current version untouched. Mounting disks with Linux's loopback device by Jason Boxman
From the Desktop
Using Simple Backup Suite
Simple Backup Suite is a program that was created during the Google Summer of Code 2005. Using a familiar GNOME interface, you can specify how often it backs up, the destination, what to exclude and what to back up.
Simple Backup Suite also makes incremental backups, after creating the initial backup, only the files that have changed are backed up.
For more information see: BackupYourSystem/SimpleBackupSuite
UbuntuHomeBackup
Ubuntu/UbuntuHomeBackup
duplicity
DuplicityBackupHowto
BackupPC
Incremental Backup
rsync
Rsync updates the copies the files that have changed and even then only transfers the parts of those files that have changed. That is useful for saving bandwidth when backing up over the network. For safety, transfer between two machines is done via SSH. Rsync is especially good for backing up home directories.
The command for transfering to a remote machine is:
sudo rsync --delete -azvv -e ssh /home [email protected]:./backupdirectory
-z
compresses the data
--delete
deletes files that don't exist on the system being backed up. Maybe you want this, maybe not.
-a
preserves the date and times of the files (same as -t
), descends recursively into all directories (same as -r
), copies symlinks as symlinks (same as -l
), preserves file permissions (same as -p
), preserves groups (same as -g
), preserves file ownership (same as -o
), and preserves devices as devices (same as -D
).
-vv
increases the verbosity of the reporting process
See also
You might also want to check out these backup programs which will help you to make automated backups of your system:
Other wiki discussing various Linux backup techniques:
See the full discussion in these threads on the Ubuntu forums:
- http://www.ubuntuforums.org/showthread.php?t=70566
- http://www.ubuntuforums.org/showthread.php?t=35087 Howto: Backup and restore your system! (very long thread; but all the good bits have (hopefully) already been summarized on this page.)
- http://ubuntuforums.org/showthread.php?t=295
"Backup and Restore Your Ubuntu System using Sbackup" has nice step-by-step instructions (with screenshots) of using sbackup.
Systems like UbuntuHelp:Subversion and Wayback and CopyFS are useful when you want to see how things were a week ago -- they let you see *every* change to a file. (But they don't help when the hard drive fails, so they are complementary to these other forms of backup that only store occasional snapshots, but also survive hardware failures).
Ubuntu:ContinuousBackups and Ubuntu:HomeUserBackup and Ubuntu:MigrateAndBackup have some interesting ideas about making backups completely automated. Ubuntu:BackupOfPackageUserData and Ubuntu:UbuntuDownUnder/BOFs/SimpleBackupSolution also still needs help.
What exactly does Ubuntu:SessionBackup do?