Duplicati Description
Duplicati is a free and open-source backup solution that enables users to securely store encrypted backups online across various operating systems including Windows, macOS, and Linux. It supports standard protocols such as FTP, SSH, and WebDAV, and integrates seamlessly with popular cloud services like Backblaze B2, Tardigrade, Microsoft OneDrive, Amazon S3, Google Drive, box.com, Mega, and hubiC among others. With robust AES-256 encryption, users can ensure their files and folders are well protected. Duplicati also optimizes storage with features like incremental backups and data deduplication. You can manage backups effortlessly through its web-based interface or command-line interface, and it includes a built-in scheduler and auto-updater for convenience. This versatile software is available for free, even for commercial use, and its source code is licensed under LGPL. Duplicati operates on Windows, Linux, and macOS systems, requiring .NET 4.5 or Mono to function. In addition to AES-256, users have the option to utilize GPG for added backup encryption. Designed specifically for online backups, Duplicati stands out as a comprehensive solution for safeguarding your data. Its user-friendly nature and extensive compatibility make it a reliable choice for individuals and businesses alike.
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More attractive at a distance than up close Date: Jul 15 2023
Summary: Not productive or even a little fun, this one was pretty bad in hindsight and I'm chagrined that I didn't abandon it sooner. When I started using it development was moving apace, with semi-monthly dev builds and bugs getting squashed. Now it's practically abandonware, with maybe a couple dev releases per year and monthly commit totals that you can count on two hands.
Positive: It has an absolute smorgasbord of available storage backends ranging from SMB to SFTP to NFS locally on top of any cloud storage host you can think of. It also did a good job of pruning old backups and had a pretty organized directory structure for storing its output when I had to go looking for things by hand.
Negative: I just can't suffer through the database fragility anymore, all it takes to leave it in an unrecoverable state is a burp in your internet or for the power to flicker. And it's not just the backup that was in progress that gets murdered, but its awareness of everything else it had backed up successfully before that. So it's got to redownload everything it's stored to process and rebuild the database.
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