ron@mlfarm.UUCP (Ronald Florence) (08/10/89)
Some time ago I posted an inquiry about using a second hard disk as a backup device. I received the following replies by email: Mike Anthis (anthis@sleepy.UUCP) recommended using dump and restore, with some cautions about the need to "fool" dump about the capacity of the "dump tape" (the second hard disk). Don Molaro (molarod@vaxa.cpsc.UCalgary.CA) recommended using cpio with find to backup a whole file system onto another whole filesystem on a different drive. Frank Bicknell (frankb@usource.UUCP) suggested mounting the second disk filesystem as /mnt and using backup to dump the entire root and /u filesystems onto files on the /mnt filesystem. He also suggested buying a DPT controller with the mirror module. John Owens (john@jetson.UPMA.MD.US) suggested cpio -p, or a shell script using tar. Harol Tsitsivas (harol@unisol.UUCP) suggested cpio or dump, and pushed the SysAdmin product from his company. I have opted for cpio -p to copy the entire /u filesystem and portions of the root filesystem onto /dev/archive. Cpio -p to a mounted filesystem may be less efficient than other backup schemes using the disk as a raw device, but it can be run by cron in the wee hours, leaves a mirror image (including special files) on the second disk, and makes restoration of single files (people around here goof occasionally) relatively simple. My thanks to everyone who offered suggestions and advice. -- Ronald Florence ...{hsi!aati,rayssd}!mlfarm!ron