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Volume Shadow Copy For Linux?

An anonymous reader writes "I was asked to manage a number of Linux servers at work. I would like to use volume snapshots to improve my backup scripts and keep recent copies of data around for quick restore. I normally manage Windows servers and on those I would just use Microsoft's Volume Shadow Copy for this. I tried Linux LVM snapshots, but most of the servers I manage run regular partitions with ext3 file systems, so LVM snapshots will not work. I found some versioning file systems out there like ext3cow and Tux3. Those look interesting, but I need something I can use on my existing ext3 file systems. I also found the R1Soft Hot Copy command-line utility, but it does not yet support my older 2.4 Linux servers. What are you using to make snapshots on Linux?"

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  1. Re:no offense, but what a windows mentality by Unoti · · Score: 5, Interesting

    Sweet, I'm going to install Linux on all my systems. I didn't know that Linux could prevent natural and man made disasters as well as being a stable operating system. We've been wasting all this money on backup for all these years.

    There's a mix of humor and catty vitriol here all around, but here is something that addresses the serious point made in Grandparent's statement about it being a "Windows" way of thinking.

    Take a look at Infrastructures.org which describes a whole way of thinking about server reliability and configuration. Where I work we essentially use this approach. The fundamental concepts around this approach concentrate more on system configuration, ability to pick a random server and drop it out the window and have another one just like it online in moments. It's less about backups, and far more about a more comprehensive disaster recovery/prevention type of thing. The types of approaches described there are probably more easily implemented using Unix/Linux, but is probably also possible with Windows boxes.