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backups

Backups

Take regular backups, automatically

If you have to think about taking backups, there's a good chance that you will not do them, no matter how good your intentions are.

Whenever you make use of a new system, or get a new device, set up automated backups as part of your configuration process.

Test your backups

Test your backups.

Taking backups is all well and good, but there is little point if you do not test that you are able to recover from them.

Schedule in testing of restoration of backups from different systems as part of your firm's business continuity plan.

Protect your backups

Protect your backups to at least the same standard as you protect the data which you are backing up.

Use the type of backup which suits your needs

Backups can take different forms.

Syncing data onto multiple devices

If you have an automatic synchronisation system (such as Nextcloud, or Dropbox), you have a measure of protection.

If you lose one of your devices, you will have all the synchronised data on another device (and, probably, on the server too). When you replace your lost device, you set up synchronisation on it, and all your synchronised data will come back.

This setup may also be helpful if you delete something important from one device and realise quickly, as you may be able to restore it from a different device. You will probably need to act very quickly, and disconnect that other device from the Internet, so that the unwanted deletion is not propagated to that other device.

This is unreliable, but might work at a pinch.

Versioning

A versioning backup system creates an initial complete copy of the data being backed up, and each subsequent backup picks up only the changes that have been made.

This should lead to faster backups than taking a complete, fresh backup each time.

An example of this is Apple's Time Machine backup system.

Full images / snapshots

A full image or snapshot backup takes a complete copy of the system at the point in time at which the backup was made. This means that you can restore everything which was backed up to exactly how it was at that point in time.

A bootable snapshot of your computer can be very useful. If you take regular bootable snapshots, and one day your hard drive or SSD fails, and you cannot boot your computer, you can plug in the disc containing your bootable snapshot, and boot straight into it.

You should also be able to copy the bootable image straight onto your new hard drive or SSD, re-imaging your computer to exactly the same state it was in when your backup was taken.

For example, for macOS, SuperDuper!.

Keep a backup disconnected from your network

Some attacks β€” such as ransomware β€” attempt to attack devices connected to your computer and your network. If your backup is connected to the network which is being attacked, it may suffer the same fate as your computer.

There is a trade-off to be struck between having regular, automated backups, and disconnecting them from your network. You might want to alternative between backup discs, always keeping one isolated from your network, so that you always have a good, tested, offline backup available.

This could be as simple as a USB key which you have encrypted, onto which you copy your most important files (both β€œworking” files and key settings/configuration files) on a regular, diarised basis. When you want to use it, you plug it into your computer, copy the files across, unmount, and then remove it - you do not keep it plugged into your computer.

Because USB keys are cheap, this is a simple, cost effective, mitigation.

You might want to attach a keyring to the USB key, with the name of your machine on it, so that you remember that that USB key is your backup key.

If you want to make things easier for yourself, you could write a small script to copy across the files that you want automatically.

A tool like `rsync` means that you will only need to copy across new files or files which have changed (and, depending on how you set it, it may remove deleted files, or keep them). The first run of it copies everything, and then subsequent runs only transfer the delta, making it faster.

Keep a backup in a different physical location

Imagine a scenario in which your office is burgled, or burns down: if your computer, and all your backups, are in that office, having regular, tested backups will not help you.

Consider moving backup discs to a different physical location, to minimise the chances of this happening.

backups.txt Β· Last modified: 2022/07/19 08:04 by neil