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Forum Discussion
dud3sweet
Apr 18, 2017Aspirant
Remote Back Ups from NG ReadyNAS 214 in my office to WD MyCloud EX2 in my home?
Hello I currently own a WD MyCloud EX2 at my home and I'm going to buy a NETGEAR ReadyNAS 214 device for my office because the data can be more secure with it's SSD compatibility.
Would I be able to remotely back up what is stored on my NETGEAR NAS device in my office to my WD MyCloud EX2 at my home?
dud3sweet wrote:the data can be more secure with its SSD compatibility.
Not convinced...
You can use an Rsync over SSH backup job or a VPN connection to backup the data between both devices.
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- jak0lantashMentor
dud3sweet wrote:the data can be more secure with its SSD compatibility.
Not convinced...
You can use an Rsync over SSH backup job or a VPN connection to backup the data between both devices.
- dud3sweetAspirant
The data *will* be more secure... lol
Thanks for the quick response!That all makes sense, but would I be able to schedule automatic back ups using Rsync over SSH back up jobs?Nevermind I just read the manual and saw that you could.- jak0lantashMentor
Let us know how you get on :)
- jak0lantashMentorWell, it depends what you want to back up. Simple files? Database? System?
Push? Pull? Controlled by a software?- dud3sweetAspirant
Simple files and some software installations located on a partition drive in a Windows Server 2008 R2 virtual machine through VMware.
- jak0lantashMentorShort answer: I'd do a push backup controlled by the Windows VM to a share on the NAS, using a software or a script.
But test and monitor it at the beginning to make sure it's working as expected.
Long answer: There are other options, some more paranoid-secure than others, but this is probably the easiest to implement without overlooking security too much.
A backup, in theory, should always be read-only, so the push way is less secure than the pull (because if you push, it has to be r/w). But a pull not restricted properly is even less secure and is a pain to restrict properly, and while more restrictedx it might be more vulnerable as you open external access to your Windows machine.
If you implement a push backup from your Windows VM to the local NAS on a r/w share, then pull that backup from the remote NAS onto a r/o or offline share, I think it's a good compromise. I implement something similar in my backup strategy.- jak0lantashMentor
Some thoughts about backups ;)
(I'll have to repost that in a separate place as it's no longer relevant to the "issue" discussed there.)
- dud3sweetAspirant
Thanks for all the information and tips! Are you suggesting that I use a third-party software to schedule automatic push back ups going from my Windows VM through a mapped network drive linked to a share on the NAS? If so, can you recommend any software?
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