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[3010.32 --> 3011.38] with badass microphones |
[3011.38 --> 3012.10] positioned right where |
[3012.10 --> 3012.56] I need them. |
[3013.00 --> 3013.74] That's the key, isn't it? |
[3013.92 --> 3015.60] Local, local, local. |
[3015.88 --> 3016.56] Yeah, absolutely. |
[3017.06 --> 3018.64] We did link to the |
[3018.64 --> 3020.38] integration for Mycroft |
[3020.38 --> 3023.06] that Julian also included. |
[3023.40 --> 3024.06] If you know, |
[3024.44 --> 3025.04] let us know. |
[3025.22 --> 3026.84] If you've seen a comparison |
[3026.84 --> 3027.92] of Home Assistants, |
[3028.60 --> 3029.98] if you have a little bit |
[3029.98 --> 3030.90] of experience you've done, |
[3031.02 --> 3032.22] or if you have a Mycroft |
[3032.22 --> 3032.92] that you've tried |
[3032.92 --> 3033.84] with Home Assistant, |
[3034.58 --> 3035.30] let us know. |
[3035.30 --> 3036.92] selfhosted.show |
[3036.92 --> 3037.46] contact, |
[3037.76 --> 3038.96] or you can send us a boost |
[3038.96 --> 3040.08] with a new podcast app. |
[3040.22 --> 3042.48] And speaking of boosts, |
[3042.56 --> 3043.88] Gene Bean came in this week |
[3043.88 --> 3044.90] with a really generous |
[3044.90 --> 3048.00] 20,480 sats. |
[3048.52 --> 3049.54] And Gene has a question. |
[3050.36 --> 3051.38] How do y'all back up |
[3051.38 --> 3052.04] your Nextcloud? |
[3052.24 --> 3054.12] I'm running the Snap version |
[3054.12 --> 3055.34] on Debian for now. |
[3055.54 --> 3056.26] It's just simplicity. |
[3056.64 --> 3058.32] But I'm totally game to change it |
[3058.32 --> 3059.66] as I have to migrate servers |
[3059.66 --> 3060.60] at some point anyways. |
[3061.22 --> 3061.90] So how do you back up |
[3061.90 --> 3062.32] your Nextcloud? |
[3062.32 --> 3063.74] Well, all of my containers, |
[3063.92 --> 3064.66] and I run Nextcloud |
[3064.66 --> 3065.32] in a container, |
[3065.72 --> 3066.48] of course, |
[3066.72 --> 3068.50] is they're all backed, |
[3068.62 --> 3069.68] all of their app data, |
[3069.86 --> 3070.40] which is what I call |
[3070.40 --> 3071.82] the kind of persistent data |
[3071.82 --> 3072.56] of these containers, |
[3073.30 --> 3074.94] they're all ZFS volumes. |
[3075.22 --> 3076.12] And then I just replicate |
[3076.12 --> 3077.54] those across the world |
[3077.54 --> 3078.66] to various different servers |
[3078.66 --> 3079.06] that I have. |
[3079.10 --> 3080.50] I've got one upstairs. |
[3080.72 --> 3081.66] So my main server's |
[3081.66 --> 3082.20] in the basement. |
[3082.96 --> 3084.12] I use ZFS Send, |
[3084.40 --> 3085.56] which is wrapped in |
[3085.56 --> 3086.56] Jim Salter's |
[3086.56 --> 3088.24] Sanoid and Syncoid tooling |
[3088.24 --> 3090.54] to send it to a box |
[3090.54 --> 3091.42] that I have under my desk |
[3091.42 --> 3091.82] up here, |
[3091.82 --> 3092.72] which has just got |
[3092.72 --> 3093.92] a couple of 10 terabyte drives |
[3093.92 --> 3096.24] in it as a full ZFS replication |
[3096.24 --> 3097.16] of what's in the basement |
[3097.16 --> 3099.32] in case of a pipe burst |
[3099.32 --> 3100.06] or something. |
[3100.56 --> 3101.52] And then I don't have to rely |
[3101.52 --> 3102.20] on the internet |
[3102.20 --> 3103.32] to get that data back. |
[3103.80 --> 3105.52] If this house blows down |
[3105.52 --> 3106.50] for whatever reason, |
[3106.74 --> 3107.42] then I've got stuff |
[3107.42 --> 3107.94] on the other side |
[3107.94 --> 3108.50] of the Atlantic |
[3108.50 --> 3109.72] that I can recover from. |
[3110.12 --> 3112.18] And then as a third prong |
[3112.18 --> 3113.34] to that backup strategy, |
[3113.90 --> 3116.08] I use AutoRestick |
[3116.08 --> 3117.54] as a wrapper around Restick |
[3117.54 --> 3118.72] to send my stuff over |
[3118.72 --> 3120.06] to a Synology as well. |
[3120.06 --> 3121.94] And that does all the app data |
[3121.94 --> 3123.04] on a file level |
[3123.04 --> 3124.36] as opposed to ZFS's |
[3124.36 --> 3125.00] block level. |
[3125.10 --> 3125.72] So I've got kind of |
[3125.72 --> 3127.82] a two-prong approach |
[3127.82 --> 3129.80] to how I backup that data. |
[3130.54 --> 3131.72] I'm wondering what people do |
[3131.72 --> 3132.70] when they want to back up |
[3132.70 --> 3135.54] like 25 terabytes of data. |
[3136.12 --> 3136.94] Well, the only option |
[3136.94 --> 3137.82] realistically |
[3137.82 --> 3139.74] is to either pay |
[3139.74 --> 3140.44] through the nose |
[3140.44 --> 3141.22] for Glacier |
[3141.22 --> 3142.04] or something like that |
[3142.04 --> 3142.54] with AWS |
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