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Paragon backup and recovery community edition
Paragon backup and recovery community edition




paragon backup and recovery community edition

Note again - if you take incrementals / differentials on Windows - simply backup those generated files - on Windows created with the Macrium backup - incremental / differential (1 data file) to your NAS with the rsync / grsync selection - you should always have more than 1 set of backups.

paragon backup and recovery community edition paragon backup and recovery community edition

However whatever method(s) you use it's important to have backup that works, is reliable and restorable when you need it. You could run a test job to see what command is generated then create a crontab job with the CLI program Simply mount the Windows HDD's on to your NAS and browse to the directory / directories you want to back up - recursion is also allowed etc -too many options to display in a short post. Here's the GUI for GRSYNC Both Source and target HDD's / directories etc can be anywhere on your network whether windows machines or not so long as SAMBA can access the HDD's. Using the Linux CLI program (rsync) makes automated backups a breeze - just use the crontab for scheduling jobs. Simply connect via connect network drive via samba and run the program rsync/grsync restoring / backing up what data you want. Paid version of Macrium also worth it if you like incremental and differential backups and are not a Linux user.įrom a Linux based NAS it's easy to do a data backup / restore to / from Windows drives via rsync / grsync (grsync is the gui version of rsync). That's though a Windows problem rather than Macrium. Rsync/grsync for data backups - there's though no reason why you shouldn't use macrium for these too but disadvantage is if you have long file + directory names (> 266 chars) you get the "truncated" version. I also use DD command on linux - reliable, 100% independant of disk format / geometry (so long as image fits on target drive) - disadvantge is complex to use if you don't like command line and takes quite a long time to run as it copies everything bitwise from Disk a to Disk b. +1 to cereberus -> Macrium definitely reliable, easy cheap (free for basic use) - pretty well all other windows stuff found failed at some critical point.

paragon backup and recovery community edition

I've done backups also on all conceivable hardware






Paragon backup and recovery community edition