Post by account_disabled on Mar 14, 2024 4:18:32 GMT
On the Windows client everything is a little more complicated because you first have to install the Scoop console installer. This is done using PowerShell commands Set Execution Policy Execution Policy Remote Signed Scope Current User Invoke Rest Method Uri get.scoop.sh Invoke Expression And restic is installed from it scoop install restic In restic terminology the backup storage is called a repository. But before you create initialize the repository you need to create an SFTP server or REST server instance. The second option is more efficient because communication is carried out via HTTP via REST API and not via SSH and the server itself is accessible via rest links like these resthtt puserpassw.
Like in our case. To initialize the repository on the server run the command restic init r dir specifying the directory This Buy Email List can be done remotely from a client via HTTP restic r resthttprootpassw. The documentation says that local and remote access are possible even simultaneously. In the future backup copies snapshots are created on the client using the restic backup command restic r repositoryfolder backup sourcefolder Lets check the compression level and speed by taking a snapshot of the docs folder with documents of about GB files. The exact size of the folder on disk is bytes. The files are stored in uncompressed form that is in native formats.
Archive the docs folder into the docs repository restic r docs verbose backup docs scanned an archive of MiB in size for new or changed files and wrote a snapshot of MiB in size to the repository. The speed of work is especially pleasing here. Since the document archive is constantly updated with new files the incremental backup function will be very relevant. Lets look at performance. Just add three files to the docs folder and repeat the operation This time the procedure took less than a second. These snapshots can be sent directly to the REST server by simply specifying its rest URL instead of the local folder. Incremental backups even to a remote server occur almost instantly.
Like in our case. To initialize the repository on the server run the command restic init r dir specifying the directory This Buy Email List can be done remotely from a client via HTTP restic r resthttprootpassw. The documentation says that local and remote access are possible even simultaneously. In the future backup copies snapshots are created on the client using the restic backup command restic r repositoryfolder backup sourcefolder Lets check the compression level and speed by taking a snapshot of the docs folder with documents of about GB files. The exact size of the folder on disk is bytes. The files are stored in uncompressed form that is in native formats.
Archive the docs folder into the docs repository restic r docs verbose backup docs scanned an archive of MiB in size for new or changed files and wrote a snapshot of MiB in size to the repository. The speed of work is especially pleasing here. Since the document archive is constantly updated with new files the incremental backup function will be very relevant. Lets look at performance. Just add three files to the docs folder and repeat the operation This time the procedure took less than a second. These snapshots can be sent directly to the REST server by simply specifying its rest URL instead of the local folder. Incremental backups even to a remote server occur almost instantly.