

In 2020, what about your backup method is worth bragging about?.

#Openzfs carbon copy cloner Pc
Im gonna go ahead and guess this is a Mac OR PC universal issue. There are usually quite a few additional options for tailoring backups there (including possibility to retain several versions of backup versions, like in TM).īesides NAS you can of course also consider some slower tier backup to cloud service like Backblaze or Amazon Glacier, if you don't want to deal with local devices, but you need serious uplink internet bandwidth to make that work smoothly. Can be something like Carbon Copy Cloner, Get Backup or so. So for some work folders on Mac OS, I'd rather use some complementary tool to TM. IMO it's rather useful for generic system drive backups. Tools can range from standard Time Machine on Mac, it can work well, but that's issue for cross platform compatibility, if you need that and also there's quite cumbersome work with it, if you have just couple of important locations for backup (as you can only exclude, but not include locations). You can do it manually, but it's usually error prone.
#Openzfs carbon copy cloner software
There's quite broad variety of usable software tools for that. That's often used for video editing scenarios, where you might have magnitude more data to deal with. So even if you don't want to wait there for finish, you can just start the backup job and pretty much walk away, it will make backup and shut the computer down. If computers are still turned on, that's non issue (you can schedule it automatically on some night hours), possibly for certain tools you can add also some manually running backup task, which has automatic shutdown (or sleep mode, hibernate) after the task is successfully done.

Maybe bit more, when you record multitracks for all day long, but still it's typically matter of minutes for typical backup of project drive. In typical audio work scenario, you really don't have so much changes or added data per day, usually just a few GBs at max. So transferred size is just difference from last backup. That first backup takes longer (well you can do it overnight or so), but after that, you typically deal just with incremental or differential backups. It's not much of concern, because you rarely transfer all data after initial backup is made. Raw transfer speed is usually not much concern, although it's of course typically much lower than some internal drives and often bounded by network (say 110 MB/s for standard gigabit network or in another words roughly 6 GB per min). Lot of such NASes (like QNAP or Synology) also supports Time Machine target for Macs out of box. You can typically dedicate shares there for generic sharing and backups (that's the one which gets connected only during file sync for security). If you have multiple computers to backup or share data, it's also much more comfortable and safer than directly connected external drive (although it can also work well in small setup for backup, if you keep disconnecting it). Maybe I'm being a fuss bucket, but the time it takes to copy files from the HDD is a lot compared to the nearly instantaneous transfers from SSD to SSD.Ī NAS with bigger spinning drives in RAID seems to be good option to me. Especially if its something worth bragging about. I would love to hear what some of you are using for local backup of your precious work. I want so bad to just pull out the credit card and buy another SSD, but for backups, it really needs to be a large capacity drive, and those damn 2 and 3 TB SDD's cost $$$ Time Machine works great, and it gives me a great sense of relief when I click on the backup folder in the Lacie, and see everything, nice and tidy, work from today to way back in 2017! Oldest backups are deleted as the disk becomes full, which is great, meaning it will never stop doing its job. With the need for a dedicated backup drive to have lots of room, so as to be able to hook it up, and forget about it. Right now, Ive got Time Machine backing up to a 3TB Lacie HDD. That said, Im not so sure about my choice for a "backup" drive. With direct injection to the PCIe slot, its as if these external drives are internal, with lightning fast speed. I can say, without a doubt, these next level external SSD's have matched anything you could ever put inside your DAW.
#Openzfs carbon copy cloner pro
I have a Imac Pro and use various Thunderbolt 3 SSD's (NVMe) for my audio files. Machines break, and files get corrupted, or lost, or deleted.

I have personally learned from experience that this will be an issue we will all face someday, if you already haven't. In 2020, what about your backup method is worth bragging about? Seriously.
