
I use spider oak for this. I believe there is a opensource non-hosted alternative. Google for open source alternatives to spider-oak one. SO1 has encryption, and its only client side placed, hosting co. doesn't even have key. This violates your "google results" stipulations, but this is a good email topic to intro people to SO1 and SO1 alternatives, and you may find exactly what you want. For now I am fine with hosted solution, as its also offsite. But eventually wouldn't mind non-hosted, and started to look for that, and there were some claims that there is stuff out there. -tl On Tue, Jun 27, 2017 at 9:23 PM, Scott Sullivan via talk <talk@gtalug.org> wrote:
I'm sure many of us have friends and family with Windows Machines. And the savvy among us run our own Linux Backup server / NAS boxes.
How do you get regular, automated copies of data off said Windows machines?
I would like to only hear from folks that actively using a solution. Not a list of 'exercise for the reader' google results.
# Goal:
To recover from a ransom-ware infection, by pulling the last clean snapshot of user data from the NAS.
# Assumptions:
Snapshots are handled by the Backup Server / NAS at a FS layer (ZFS / BTRFS), or by the server side backup software.
# Nice to haves:
* In-transit encryption.
# Not an Acceptable Answers:
Open Samba on the windows box, mounting it on the backup server, and running rsync regularly.
Thanks in advance! -- Scott Sullivan --- Talk Mailing List talk@gtalug.org https://gtalug.org/mailman/listinfo/talk