Skip site navigation (1)Skip section navigation (2)
Date:      Thu, 15 Oct 2009 17:42:00 -0700
From:      Nerius Landys <nlandys@gmail.com>
To:        Jerry McAllister <jerrymc@msu.edu>
Cc:        questions@freebsd.org
Subject:   Re: Best procedure for full backup of live system
Message-ID:  <560f92640910151742h33393131j9974c23db37602b8@mail.gmail.com>
In-Reply-To: <20091015143947.GB54613@gizmo.acns.msu.edu>
References:  <560f92640910142042tc46f1e3lb81ac1e4528a44ab@mail.gmail.com> <20091015143947.GB54613@gizmo.acns.msu.edu>

next in thread | previous in thread | raw e-mail | index | archive | help
Thanks for your help guys.  I have decided to attempt the following.
With a filesystem snapshot, take a dump 0 of all filesystems.  Back up
these dumps to a 500GB disk I have sitting at home (the server I'm
backing up is in a data center).  Perform this maybe once a week or
once a month.

I am now looking at this:
http://www.freebsd.org/doc/en/books/handbook/backup-basics.html#AEN25994

For step 1, I'm a little unsure what they are talking about.  I assume
that to begin with I would do this:

  > bsdlabel ad4s1

Since that is my disk and it has one partition.

I would probably also want to do this:

  > dd if=/dev/ad4 of=MBR_backup bs=512 count=1

to back up the MBR, so I can recontruct the boot program and partition
table.  But they don't mention that in the Handbook.

Then it says to back up /etc/fstab, but I'm not quite sure how I'd use
this in a restore.

Lastly, it says save all boot messages.  Do they mean the output of
dmesg?  Why is this useful?

Of course I would complement all of these things with the actual dump
0 of all sectors on the primary partition of the single hard drive
that I have.


My server should boot fine with the FreeBSD CDROM (fixit), because it
uses a subset of the GENERIC kernel device drivers.  So I probably
don't need to pay attention to the instuctions talking about floppies.





Am I correct in all of this?



Want to link to this message? Use this URL: <https://mail-archive.FreeBSD.org/cgi/mid.cgi?560f92640910151742h33393131j9974c23db37602b8>