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Date:      Wed, 01 Jul 2015 12:10:33 -0500
From:      Brandon J. Wandersee <brandon.wandersee@gmail.com>
To:        freebsd-questions@freebsd.org
Subject:   Re: Clarification on simple, incremental ZFS backup
Message-ID:  <86y4izajna.fsf@WorkBox.Home>
In-Reply-To: <55940F2E.6060009@freebsd.org>
References:  <861tgsaruw.fsf@WorkBox.Home> <55940F2E.6060009@freebsd.org>

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Matthew Seaman writes:

> Yes, for *backup* using ZFS snapshots, you don't really want to use the
> replication stream form of 'zfs send' -- just sending an incremental
> update from a previous snapshot or bookmark means you can
>
>     - save the data on your backup server to a different path
>     - keep a lot more snapshots (ie. history) on your backup server
>     - not have to keep the snapshots for old backups on the source
>       server
>
> So long as the source and backup machines have a snapshot in common, or
> even just a bookmark[*] on the source side corresponding to a snapshot
> on the server side, then you're golden.

Sure, but then what happens in the worst-case scenario, where the source pool
needs to be clobbered and replaced? That's what I understood the purpose
of replication to be--a means of completely restoring a system that's
beyond recovery. If I were to create a snapshot and then send it to the
backup drive, I couldn't later restore a complete filesystem from it,
could I?  I'd need a complete replica to make that happen, correct?

-- 
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   		      :: Brandon Wandersee ::
                  :: brandon.wandersee@gmail.com ::
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