The Debian package of rsbackup has some extra
features. You could use these on other systems but on Debian they
are set up to work automatically.
/etc/rsbackup/configIn the .deb package, the default
/etc/rsbackup/config is as follows:
# Location of lockfile lock /var/run/rsbackup.lock # User configuration include /etc/rsbackup/local # Hosts include /etc/rsbackup/hosts.d
Normally you would not edit this file. Instead, put local
configuration in /etc/rsbackup/local and a file for
each host to back up into /etc/rsbackup/hosts.d.
/etc/rsbackup/defaultsThere is an extra configuration file for the cron jobs,
/etc/rsbackup/defaults. The default is as
follows:
# # List hosts to backup hourly, daily, weekly and monthly # - set the empty string to back up no hosts (at that frequency) # - use the special string "_all" to back up everything # hourly="" daily=_all weekly="" monthly="" # # Set report=hourly|daily|weekly|monthly to control frequency of # email reports. (Hourly is probably a bit much!) Only effective # if email is not "". # report=daily # # Set email=ADDRESS to have the report emailed to that address. # email=root # # Set prune=hourly|daily|weekly|monthly|never to control frequency of # automated pruning of old backups # prune=daily # # Set prune_incomplete=hourly|daily|weekly|monthly|never to control # frequency of automated pruning of incomplete backups # prune_incomplete=weekly # # Prefix to the rsbackup command # Use 'nice' and/or 'ionice' here # nicely=
hourly, daily,
weekly and monthly define the
hosts to back up at the given frequencies. You can set any
(or all) of them to _all to back up all known
hosts.
Set them all to ""if you have some other
arrangement for initiating backups.
hourly is intended to be used to
opportunistically back up hosts that are often down, for
instance laptops and personal desktops. weekly
and monthly are appropriate for hosts that
almost never change.
Set email to the destination address for
reports from the daily backup run, or comment out the line
entirely to suppress email reports. If you want reports at
some other frequency than daily, modify
report.
Modify prune to control the frequency of
pruning of old backups. It is recommended to leave this as
daily, since deleting a week or more’s worth of
backups takes a very long time.
Modify prune_incomplete to control the
frequency of deleting incomplete backups. It is recommended
to keep this at a lower frequency than you take backups, as
otherwise rsync will not be able to use
incomplete backups to optimize new ones.
Modify nicely to control the priority of
rsbackup. For example, you might use:
nicely="nice ionice -3"