tech1 wrote:
If I use NFS to mount each server to be backed up to the backup server,
will that work.
NFS has issues of its own (unrelated to rdiff-backup), but there's no
reason I know of for this not to work in principle. For any backup
methodology you need to:
- check the status of the backup when it ends
- test restoring files / directories / entire servers from backup
If you do those two thing then you should be reasonably safe. If you don't
then don't be surprised when you find out the backups are not as usable as
you'd hoped.
> If someone has another way to
do it (without installing rdiff on each machine) please let me know.
I don't understand - and you don't explain - your reluctance to install
rdiff-backup on each client. Most distributions have it packaged so it
takes very little time. I would be reluctant to export all data from a
server via NFS simply to facilitate backups, but that's me. You know your
data and security considerations and are thus best placed to determine the
backup philosophy.
Also I am looking for a GUI or web interface to use with it. I found
this one:
http://freshmeat.net/projects/rdiffbackupweb/
There's been talk over the years of such an interface being available, and
I believe that there is one other as well. However, I've never used any of
them so I can't comment. rdiff-backup is pretty easy to drive from the
command line. Who are you aiming the web interface at: system
administrators or end users?