My primary backup service, CrashPlan, decided to drop home backup services to focus on other things. So now I'm left with an old home IT problem: how to deal with backup.
I take care of a full fleet of family Macs that are scattered around. Crashplan helped me make sure those Macs were backed up. I liked CrashPlan because it was easy, automatic, and reliable. Now I have to start all over again.
The biggest problem with backup is where to stick the copied data. I'm a big fan of remote storage, in case of a fire, flood, or other disaster that impacts more than just the local hard drive. So I'm going with S3-compatible storage services, which is an efficient way to move and store a lot of data remotely.
There are many S3 storage providers out there at a whole bunch of different price points. At first I was planning to use a commercial provider, but I've decided to give it a shot using my own SE solution to save some money. My own solution has a cost too, in hardware and electricity and effort spent.
My solution is to use minio, an S3-compatible server for Linux. My Linux server has an attached 4 TB disk. This server is located in a building about 100 miles away from any machine I want to back up.
In full disclosure, this "server" is a 2007 MacBook laptop with a broken display, located in a friend's basement.
I estimate that my own solution costs roughly $77 per year for up to 4 TB of storage:
- Annualized equipment costs (mostly for drives, 4 year life): $33
- Power costs (22w): $40
- Network costs: $0 additional
More on this solution in a subsequent post.
I take care of a full fleet of family Macs that are scattered around. Crashplan helped me make sure those Macs were backed up. I liked CrashPlan because it was easy, automatic, and reliable. Now I have to start all over again.
The biggest problem with backup is where to stick the copied data. I'm a big fan of remote storage, in case of a fire, flood, or other disaster that impacts more than just the local hard drive. So I'm going with S3-compatible storage services, which is an efficient way to move and store a lot of data remotely.
There are many S3 storage providers out there at a whole bunch of different price points. At first I was planning to use a commercial provider, but I've decided to give it a shot using my own SE solution to save some money. My own solution has a cost too, in hardware and electricity and effort spent.
My solution is to use minio, an S3-compatible server for Linux. My Linux server has an attached 4 TB disk. This server is located in a building about 100 miles away from any machine I want to back up.
In full disclosure, this "server" is a 2007 MacBook laptop with a broken display, located in a friend's basement.
I estimate that my own solution costs roughly $77 per year for up to 4 TB of storage:
- Annualized equipment costs (mostly for drives, 4 year life): $33
- Power costs (22w): $40
- Network costs: $0 additional
More on this solution in a subsequent post.