Crashplan connecting to backup destination
- CRASHPLAN CONNECTING TO BACKUP DESTINATION INSTALL
- CRASHPLAN CONNECTING TO BACKUP DESTINATION ARCHIVE
- CRASHPLAN CONNECTING TO BACKUP DESTINATION SOFTWARE
- CRASHPLAN CONNECTING TO BACKUP DESTINATION TRIAL
- CRASHPLAN CONNECTING TO BACKUP DESTINATION PASSWORD
CRASHPLAN CONNECTING TO BACKUP DESTINATION INSTALL
Now I don’t want to install this on new client systems, having that option for _free_ was a huge selling point and the best part of this software. This worked beautifully until they started charging a subscription, just to backup to our own system. I seed it onsite first, then take it offsite and just get tiny updates throughout the day. We run CP+ in their office, and a small linux box at the owner’s home as an offsite destination.
I have several clients that I’ve set this up for. Actually, I take that back, because now you have to pay a subscription, even if you backup to your own system. Has been very solid, like having my own _cloud storage_ backups system, which no subscription. Nice post, I have had this running on a couple OpenSolaris boxes as offsite destinations for other systems. This entry was posted in Desktop and tagged backup, crashplan, review, solaris, storage by James Lee. My backup should hopefully be done by the new year and then it’ll just be a matter of performing small nightly incrementals. I tested a restore and saw much better speeds around 16 Mbps (2 MB/s), though still not even close to saturating my internet connection. I do like that the backup actually takes place in the background, so the GUI is only ever necessary for changing settings and performing restores. They’ve been experiencing much higher volume than normal with last week’s release of CrashPlan 3, so I hope to see increased speed when that activity subsides. They claim that they do not cap or throttle connections, though from what I’ve read, speed is largely dependent on which of CrashPlan’s many datacenters you are provisioned to. I’m currently seeing speeds around 6 Mbps (750 KB/s) which is slightly disappointing on my fast connection, but not unacceptable.
CRASHPLAN CONNECTING TO BACKUP DESTINATION SOFTWARE
Next I directed the software to backup my storage array mounted at /nest to CrashPlan Central and off it went. At the very least, I’d like for CrashPlan to provide more details about their encryption methods similar to SpiderOak. Security is very important to me, so I am happy to see that they give control over these settings to the user, though I wish the backup agent were open-source to enable more public scrutiny. The other advanced option, supplying your own private data key, I would argue is less secure since the key is stored in-the-clear on the local system and it cannot be changed without invalidating all of your backups.
CRASHPLAN CONNECTING TO BACKUP DESTINATION PASSWORD
This encrypts the key which encrypts my data with a separate password so even if someone hijacks my CrashPlan account, they will not be able to restore any of my files.
CRASHPLAN CONNECTING TO BACKUP DESTINATION ARCHIVE
I’m still on my trial, but as long as it continues to work for me, I expect I’ll purchase a subscription for $5/month.įirst thing I did after registering was to go into the security settings and change the archive encryption key type to use a private password.
CRASHPLAN CONNECTING TO BACKUP DESTINATION TRIAL
New users get a 30-day free trial to CrashPlan+, which includes unlimited online backups. On the first run, it walks you through setting up an account. # svccfg import /opt/sfw/crashplan/bin/crashplan.xmlįrom there the GUI can be launched as a regular user by running /opt/sfw/crashplan/bin/CrashPlanDesktop. Looking back at my shell history, it was as easy as: I can only hope that they continue to maintain it, despite the uncertainty surrounding Solaris’s future. Normally I’d never trust consumer-oriented proprietary software like this, but their Solaris support instills confidence in me. The software is delivered as a standard SVR4 package which installs to /opt/sfw/crashplan and includes an SMF manifest.
Now I have a 25 Mbps (~3 MB/s) symmetric connection, so last week when I got a promotional email from CrashPlan announcing their new version and prices, I decided to give it another try.ĬrashPlan is, as far as I know, the only online backup solution that officially supports Solaris, and it’s not half-assed either. Last year I evaluated various online backup services but concluded that my 5 Mbps (~600 KB/s) upload bandwidth was just too slow to feasibly backup all of my data. And yet, I don’t have any sort of backup for it. Music, movies, photographs, projects, school work-I’d be devastated if I lost any of it. I have a little storage array that I store my life on.