At the moment I'm doing primarily hopes and prayers
Selfhosted
A place to share alternatives to popular online services that can be self-hosted without giving up privacy or locking you into a service you don't control.
Rules:
-
Be civil: we're here to support and learn from one another. Insults won't be tolerated. Flame wars are frowned upon.
-
No spam posting.
-
Posts have to be centered around self-hosting. There are other communities for discussing hardware or home computing. If it's not obvious why your post topic revolves around selfhosting, please include details to make it clear.
-
Don't duplicate the full text of your blog or github here. Just post the link for folks to click.
-
Submission headline should match the article title (don’t cherry-pick information from the title to fit your agenda).
-
No trolling.
Resources:
- selfh.st Newsletter and index of selfhosted software and apps
- awesome-selfhosted software
- awesome-sysadmin resources
- Self-Hosted Podcast from Jupiter Broadcasting
Any issues on the community? Report it using the report flag.
Questions? DM the mods!
I had to upgrade to Hopes&Prayers+ after I ran out of hope and my prayers kept getting return to sender.
I was in the same boat, until my prayers weren't listened and my hopes are now dead.
I lost some important data from my phone a few days ago. My plan was to backup at night but chaos was that same day in the morning.
I've been using Borg to back my stuff up. It gets backed up to rsync.net, which has good support for Borg:
https://www.rsync.net/products/borg.html
If you're good enough at computers, you can even set up a special borg account with them that's cheaper and has no tech support.
I was a rsync.net user for many years and recently switched to borgbase, because of how easy it is to manage multiple backup targets.
I'm on the same boat right now, borg and borgbase.
That looks cool, and they've got some other nifty looking things like https://www.pikapods.com/. Any idea how stable the company is? I partially like rsync.net because it's pretty unlikely to just disappear someday.
Seconding this. On my unRAID host, I run a docker container called “Vorta” that uses Borg as its backend mechanism to backup to my SynologyNAS over NFS. Then on my Syno, run two backup jobs using HyperBackup, one goes to my cousin’s NAS connected via a Site-to-Site OpenVPN connection on our edge devices (Ubiquity Unifi Security Gateway Pro <-> UDM Pro), the other goes to Backblaze B2 Cloud Storage.
OP, let me know if you need any assistance setting something like this up. Gotta share the knowledge over here on Lemmy that we’re still used to searching evil Reddit for.
Love Borg and the associated docker containers and the like. Really is set and forget!
Local backup to my Synology NAS every night which is then replicated to another NAS at my folks house through a secure VPN tunnel. Pretty simple and easy to deploy.
Restic for backup - can send backups to S3 and SFTP amongst other target options.
There are S3 (block storage) compatible services, such as Backblaze's B2, which are very affordable for backups.
For app data, Borg as backup/restore software. Backup data is then stored on Hetzner as an offsite backup - super easy and cheap to setup. Also add healthchecks.io to get notified if a backup failed.
Edit: Backup docker compose files and other scripts (without API keys!!!) with git to GitHub.
my 20 TB storage is currently hosted by Hetzner on a SMB Share with a acompanying server The storage is accessable via NFS/SMB i have a Windows 10 VPS running Backblaze Personal Backup for 7$/Month with unlimited storage while mounting the SMB share as a "Physical Drive" using Dokan because Backblaze B1 doesn't allow backing up Network shares If your Storage is local you can use the win Backup Agent in a Docker container
I've had excellent luck with Kopia, backing up to Backblaze B2.
At work, I do the same to a local directory in my company provided OneDrive account to keep company data on company resources.
I doubt your using NixOS so this config might seem useless but at its core it is a simple systemd timer service and bash scripting.
To convert this to another OS you will use cron to call the script at the time you want. Copy the part between script="" and then change out variables like the location of where docker-compose is stored since its different on NixOS.
Let me explain the script. We start out by defining the backupDate variable, this will be the name of the zip file. As of now that variable would be 2023-07-12. We then go to each folder with a docker-compose.yml file and take it down. You could also replace down with stop if you don't plan on updating each night like I do. I use rclone to connect to Dropbox but rclone supports many providers so check it out and see if it has the one you need. Lastly I use rclone to connect to my Dropbox and delete anything older than 7 days in the backup folder. If you end up going my route and get stuck let me know and I can help out. Good luck.
systemd = {
timers.docker-backup = {
wantedBy = [ "timers.target" ];
partOf = [ "docker-backup.service" ];
timerConfig.OnCalendar= "*-*-* 3:30:00";
};
services.docker-backup = {
serviceConfig.Type = "oneshot";
serviceConfig.User = "root";
script = ''
backupDate=$(date +'%F')
cd /docker/apps/rss
${pkgs.docker-compose}/bin/docker-compose down
cd /docker/apps/paaster
${pkgs.docker-compose}/bin/docker-compose down
cd /docker/no-backup-apps/nextcloud
${pkgs.docker-compose}/bin/docker-compose down
cd /docker/apps/nginx-proxy-manager
${pkgs.docker-compose}/bin/docker-compose down
cd /docker/backups/
${pkgs.zip}/bin/zip -r server-backup-$backupDate.zip /docker/apps
cd /docker/apps/nginx-proxy-manager
${pkgs.docker-compose}/bin/docker-compose pull
${pkgs.docker-compose}/bin/docker-compose up -d
cd /docker/apps/paaster
${pkgs.docker-compose}/bin/docker-compose pull
${pkgs.docker-compose}/bin/docker-compose up -d
cd /docker/apps/rss
${pkgs.docker-compose}/bin/docker-compose pull
${pkgs.docker-compose}/bin/docker-compose up -d
cd /docker/no-backup-apps/nextcloud
${pkgs.docker-compose}/bin/docker-compose pull
${pkgs.docker-compose}/bin/docker-compose up -d
cd /docker/backups/
${pkgs.rclone}/bin/rclone copy server-backup-$backupDate.zip Dropbox:Server-Backup/
rm server-backup-$backupDate.zip
${pkgs.rclone}/bin/rclone delete --min-age 7d Dropbox:Server-Backup/
'';
};
};
Thanks! I just started setting up NixOS on my laptop and I'm planning to use it for servers next. Saving this for later!
Someone on lemmy here suggested Restic, a backup solution written in Go.
I back up to an internal 4TB HDD every 30 minutes. My most important files are stored in an encrypted file storage online in the cloud.
Restic is good stuff.
I use restic (and dejadup just to be safe) backing up to multiple cloud storage points. Among these cloud storage points are borgbase.com, backblaze b2 and Microsoft cloud.
VM instances on the Proxmox VE with native integration with the Proxmox Backup Server (PBS).
For non-VM a little PBS agent.
Desktop: I was using Duplicati for years but I've recently switched to Restic directly to B2. I'm using this powershell script to run it.
Server: I'm also using restic to b2.
I also have a Qnap NAS. I'm synchronizing my replaceable data to crappy old seagate NAS locally. For the irreplaceable data that's using the Qnap backup client to B2.
I host everything on Proxmox VM's so I just take daily snapshots to my NAS
I use Backblaze B2. I was using AWS S3 but the Backblaze pricing is significantly better.
You should look into s3 deep glacier. It’s $0.001 GB / month. Caveat is there’s a 6 month minimum charge per object.
Rsync to backblaze b2. I only backup the stuff I can't download again (photos/docs etc). It's the cheapest option and does version control automatically for me on a 12 hourly basis.
I then also once a week plug in my external SSD and it auto dumps changes to it via rclone.
Google drive/takeout etc are all done periodically and put into a folder that will roll into the above backups.
At home I have a Synology NAS for backup of the local desktops. Offsite Backups are done with restic to Blackblaze B2 and to another location.
On Proxmox, I use the built-in system + storing it to my Synology NAS (RS1221+). I use Active Backup for business (filesync) to back up the Proxmox config files, and also backup the husband's PC and my work PC.
Everything:
Kopia encrypted -> another phisical drive
Kopia encrypted -> backblaze B2
- Chron job every day at 4:15 AM
Most important folder (part of everything):
Duplicaty encrypted -> google drive
- Also daily backup
I do something similar with kopia to b2. it works wonderfully.
Rsync everything besides media to a Storj free account. I also rsync my most important data(docker compose files,config files, home assistant, a few small databases) to Google drive.
I use kup to back up my important PC files (the basic pre-installed backup software on KDE neon), which backs up to a separate drive on my PC, and that gets synced to my Nextcloud instance on my local server, and that - along with all the other data for my containers running on it - gets backed up by Kopia to DigitalOcean spaces.
I couldn't recommend Kopia strongly enough, because you have such fine control of what gets backed up, when it gets backed up, how many to keep etc. and it is versioned so doesn't grow exponentially, and it compresses and encrypts the backup. I also have a setup where it executes a script before and after the backup starts that stops and starts the containers to maintain file integrity since nothing will be writing to the files. And it's also a Docker container so it can just fit into your current compose setup.
Backblaze B2. Any software that is S3 compatible can use B2 as the target and it’s reasonably priced for the service. I backup all the PCs and services to a Synology NAS and then backup that to B2 (everything except my Plex media, that would be pricy and it’s easy enough to re-rip from disc if needed).
All systems backup to Synology then to AWS Glacier. Ill check out Backblaze for pricing.
I rsync my data once a day to another drive via script. If I accidentaly delete files, I can easily copy them back. Then once a day, rclone makes an encrypted backup to a hetzner storagebox
veeam is pretty simple and powerful, the community version is free if you are only using it for a small environment (CPU cores is what it counts)
I havn't used it for docker but it says it is supported
So far I have had good experience with kopia. But it is definitly less battle-tested than the other alternatives and I do not use it for too critical stuff yet.
I run a second Unraid server with a couple of backup-related applications, as well as Duplicati. I have my main server network mounted and run scheduled jobs to both copy data from the main pool to the backup pool, as well as to Backblaze. Nice having the on-site backup as well as the cloud based.
I occasionally burn to 100gb blurays as well for the physical backup.
I don't know if it's a smart solution but I have a HDD in my server that is used just for backups, each night I have rsync automatically moving stuff from multiple locations that I want to back up onto the drive. After that is done I have Kopia backup to B2, with compression, deduplication and encryption. I use healthchecks.io as well to alert me if any of the steps fails to complete (but none of the steps block each other).
A lot of services have some kind of way to create backup files. I have cronjobs doing that daily then uploading it to some cloud storage with rclone.
I use rsync with an offsite backup.
Rsnapshot to an external USB drive.
Probably not the best, but it works for my little 6TB OpenMediaVault server with some Docker thrown in.
Duplicati. Works like a charm. Supports practically every backend (S3, backblaze, one drive, Google, storj, sia, even Tahoe!