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I have a network of about 30 Windows PCs.

What good free software is available that will automatically (scheduled) make backups (not whole HDD but only certain folders) for these PCs and save on a remote server which will be used only for storing the backups? Preferably the server will run Linux and the backups will be stored via FTP, where each PC will have its own FTP account.

Chealion
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daniels
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10 Answers10

7

I've had pretty good experience with Cobian Backup. Runs as a service, can backup to compressed (Zip & 7Zip) and move to an off-site (FTP et al) location. I haven't tried to deploy it to several computers at once, but every other experience I've had with it has been superb.

Also, as Alex notes, it can send e-mail notification upon completion/failure, and I believe can be remotely admin'd.

MattGWagner
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    I use Cobian at work for Windows server boxes at work (no budget!). It works quite well, can send an email with the backup report and is easy enough to use. You might want to take a look at MS' Synctoy too. – alex Jun 23 '09 at 17:26
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    Upvoted, Cobian Backup seems really nice but i decided to give BackupPC a try first due to pull-style backup. – daniels Jun 24 '09 at 07:24
  • Makes sense. Hell, I'll give BackupPC a try too and compare! – MattGWagner Jun 25 '09 at 14:14
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Give BackupPC a try.

It's extremely space-efficient; can handle many types of connections; has a good web interface; needs no client-software; etc.

It's not push but pull-style backup, reducing the things your clients can screw up.

All-in-all we're very pleased with it.

Martijn Heemels
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If they're Windows XP-based PCs, you can use the built-in NTBACKUP and fire it off from "Scheduled Tasks". This is a good "no third-party software" solution, and catches NTFS ACLs. You can backup to a file and then move it with FTP.

If you're not stuck with FTP, and perhaps concerned about bandwidth usage you could use one of the various rsync ports and an rsync server on the Linux machine. Cwrsync (http://www.itefix.no/cwrsync/) is a decent one, but beware that it doesn't replicate NTFS ACLs.

You could knock something together with, like, ZIP and a scheduled task to FTP the ZIP file, but if you're going to do that you might as well use NTBACKUP.

Evan Anderson
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I can recommend SyncBack. Even the free version has an impressive feature list.

SyncBack is our freeware program that helps you easily backup and synchronize your files to: the same drive; a different drive or medium (CDRW, CompactFlash, etc); an FTP server; a Network; or a Zip archive.

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splattne
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1

Does it have to be FTP?

If it could be Samba, then NTBackup would do it easily.

Matt Simmons
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I would recommend rsync+ssh for almost all basic file backups.

There are a number of builds available for Windows environment, the one I use being that found in the CygWin distribution: http://www.cygwin.com/

For a lighter client install you might try http://www.itefix.no/i2/cwrsync

David Spillett
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Check out FBackup, this should be exactly what you are looking for.

Dave Drager
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Have a look at Bacula - our hosting company is using it to backup our servers and don't seem to have any trouble.

Chris W
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Amanda is another free solution for this kind of situation. It has a windows client which supports VSS.

Bacula seems to have better support for disk to disk and file retention control though.

I prefer it to Cobian as it has more flexible backup schedules, bandwidth management, and restore options.

menko
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Even know everyone has added their own version, I have used Owncloud. Run's as a linux server and requires a client. Sync's the folder, very useful.

There is a windows client, mac and linux. It runs under apache and stores the date in the public_html location. Simples!

Sc0rian
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