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Technically that would mean that one copy of the file is no longer updated when the other is.
You should consider using
ln bkp.tar.gz bkp2.tar.gz
instead.16 0 Replyloop { rsync -tu bkp.tar.gz bkp2.tar.gz rsync -tu bkp2.tar.gz bkp.tar.gz }
6 0 Replythat just keeps the data in one physical location though
7 0 Replythatsthejoke.gif
8 0 Reply
Shouldn't you copy the file to another drive?
17 0 ReplyThat would be Raid 2, a totally unnecessary amount of Raids
43 0 ReplyTru fax
5 0 Reply
Hackerman!
6 0 Replybackup-2024-06-27
3 0 ReplyBtrfs:
sudo btrfs -m raid1 -d raid1 /dev/sda1 /dev/sdb1
ZFS:
zpool create mypool mirror /dev/sda /dev/sdb
3 0 ReplyThis isn't even meme, this is exactly how it is. I run this script once a day on my Raspberry Pi NAS:
rsync -va /media/pi5tb/ /media/pi5tb_backup/
1 0 Reply
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