Can someone please explain backups to me? [closed]
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This subject is so confusing to me, I know it shouldn't be, but here we are. First off, what types of backups are there? I hear different terms being used. Full backup, system image. Is there a difference? Currently my drive is partitioned with a boot drive and everything else is on c drive, including some Steam games, totalling about 250 gb. I don't need to back up the games. Is there a way to choose what to back up. Also, what do I use? Can this be done through Windows, or should I use something like Macrium Reflect? And this backup wouldn't be bootable, correct? That is something different? I've also heard of repair discs. What are those exactly? I guess the real question is, What should I be doing, and what should I be using to do it? Any help clarifying this would be greatly appreciated.
backup disk-image windows-backup
closed as too broad by LPChip, music2myear, Máté Juhász, Ramhound, Mike Fitzpatrick Feb 8 at 5:59
Please edit the question to limit it to a specific problem with enough detail to identify an adequate answer. Avoid asking multiple distinct questions at once. See the How to Ask page for help clarifying this question. If this question can be reworded to fit the rules in the help center, please edit the question.
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show 1 more comment
This subject is so confusing to me, I know it shouldn't be, but here we are. First off, what types of backups are there? I hear different terms being used. Full backup, system image. Is there a difference? Currently my drive is partitioned with a boot drive and everything else is on c drive, including some Steam games, totalling about 250 gb. I don't need to back up the games. Is there a way to choose what to back up. Also, what do I use? Can this be done through Windows, or should I use something like Macrium Reflect? And this backup wouldn't be bootable, correct? That is something different? I've also heard of repair discs. What are those exactly? I guess the real question is, What should I be doing, and what should I be using to do it? Any help clarifying this would be greatly appreciated.
backup disk-image windows-backup
closed as too broad by LPChip, music2myear, Máté Juhász, Ramhound, Mike Fitzpatrick Feb 8 at 5:59
Please edit the question to limit it to a specific problem with enough detail to identify an adequate answer. Avoid asking multiple distinct questions at once. See the How to Ask page for help clarifying this question. If this question can be reworded to fit the rules in the help center, please edit the question.
3
Hi and welcome to SuperUSer. You have a set of good questions here. Unfortunately, because you ask so many of them it makes answering these really long and that makes it Too Broad. If you can limit your question to a small section, get an answer then post a new question, it can fit for the SuperUser site.
– LPChip
Feb 7 at 19:36
3
I agree with LPChip - breaking this post down into 3 or 4 questions would be appropriate. Also, using paragraph spacing will make it a lot more readable.
– davidgo
Feb 7 at 19:39
2
A little light reading: techadvisor.co.uk/how-to/windows/how-back-up-windows-10-3635397 windowscentral.com/how-make-full-backup-windows-10 en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Backup en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Backup_and_Restore
– K7AAY
Feb 7 at 19:50
Understood, sorry for the jumble. Good wiki, lot of info.
– VernonB
Feb 7 at 20:26
Can I ask you all what methods you use
– VernonB
Feb 7 at 20:33
|
show 1 more comment
This subject is so confusing to me, I know it shouldn't be, but here we are. First off, what types of backups are there? I hear different terms being used. Full backup, system image. Is there a difference? Currently my drive is partitioned with a boot drive and everything else is on c drive, including some Steam games, totalling about 250 gb. I don't need to back up the games. Is there a way to choose what to back up. Also, what do I use? Can this be done through Windows, or should I use something like Macrium Reflect? And this backup wouldn't be bootable, correct? That is something different? I've also heard of repair discs. What are those exactly? I guess the real question is, What should I be doing, and what should I be using to do it? Any help clarifying this would be greatly appreciated.
backup disk-image windows-backup
This subject is so confusing to me, I know it shouldn't be, but here we are. First off, what types of backups are there? I hear different terms being used. Full backup, system image. Is there a difference? Currently my drive is partitioned with a boot drive and everything else is on c drive, including some Steam games, totalling about 250 gb. I don't need to back up the games. Is there a way to choose what to back up. Also, what do I use? Can this be done through Windows, or should I use something like Macrium Reflect? And this backup wouldn't be bootable, correct? That is something different? I've also heard of repair discs. What are those exactly? I guess the real question is, What should I be doing, and what should I be using to do it? Any help clarifying this would be greatly appreciated.
backup disk-image windows-backup
backup disk-image windows-backup
asked Feb 7 at 19:18
VernonBVernonB
34
34
closed as too broad by LPChip, music2myear, Máté Juhász, Ramhound, Mike Fitzpatrick Feb 8 at 5:59
Please edit the question to limit it to a specific problem with enough detail to identify an adequate answer. Avoid asking multiple distinct questions at once. See the How to Ask page for help clarifying this question. If this question can be reworded to fit the rules in the help center, please edit the question.
closed as too broad by LPChip, music2myear, Máté Juhász, Ramhound, Mike Fitzpatrick Feb 8 at 5:59
Please edit the question to limit it to a specific problem with enough detail to identify an adequate answer. Avoid asking multiple distinct questions at once. See the How to Ask page for help clarifying this question. If this question can be reworded to fit the rules in the help center, please edit the question.
3
Hi and welcome to SuperUSer. You have a set of good questions here. Unfortunately, because you ask so many of them it makes answering these really long and that makes it Too Broad. If you can limit your question to a small section, get an answer then post a new question, it can fit for the SuperUser site.
– LPChip
Feb 7 at 19:36
3
I agree with LPChip - breaking this post down into 3 or 4 questions would be appropriate. Also, using paragraph spacing will make it a lot more readable.
– davidgo
Feb 7 at 19:39
2
A little light reading: techadvisor.co.uk/how-to/windows/how-back-up-windows-10-3635397 windowscentral.com/how-make-full-backup-windows-10 en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Backup en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Backup_and_Restore
– K7AAY
Feb 7 at 19:50
Understood, sorry for the jumble. Good wiki, lot of info.
– VernonB
Feb 7 at 20:26
Can I ask you all what methods you use
– VernonB
Feb 7 at 20:33
|
show 1 more comment
3
Hi and welcome to SuperUSer. You have a set of good questions here. Unfortunately, because you ask so many of them it makes answering these really long and that makes it Too Broad. If you can limit your question to a small section, get an answer then post a new question, it can fit for the SuperUser site.
– LPChip
Feb 7 at 19:36
3
I agree with LPChip - breaking this post down into 3 or 4 questions would be appropriate. Also, using paragraph spacing will make it a lot more readable.
– davidgo
Feb 7 at 19:39
2
A little light reading: techadvisor.co.uk/how-to/windows/how-back-up-windows-10-3635397 windowscentral.com/how-make-full-backup-windows-10 en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Backup en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Backup_and_Restore
– K7AAY
Feb 7 at 19:50
Understood, sorry for the jumble. Good wiki, lot of info.
– VernonB
Feb 7 at 20:26
Can I ask you all what methods you use
– VernonB
Feb 7 at 20:33
3
3
Hi and welcome to SuperUSer. You have a set of good questions here. Unfortunately, because you ask so many of them it makes answering these really long and that makes it Too Broad. If you can limit your question to a small section, get an answer then post a new question, it can fit for the SuperUser site.
– LPChip
Feb 7 at 19:36
Hi and welcome to SuperUSer. You have a set of good questions here. Unfortunately, because you ask so many of them it makes answering these really long and that makes it Too Broad. If you can limit your question to a small section, get an answer then post a new question, it can fit for the SuperUser site.
– LPChip
Feb 7 at 19:36
3
3
I agree with LPChip - breaking this post down into 3 or 4 questions would be appropriate. Also, using paragraph spacing will make it a lot more readable.
– davidgo
Feb 7 at 19:39
I agree with LPChip - breaking this post down into 3 or 4 questions would be appropriate. Also, using paragraph spacing will make it a lot more readable.
– davidgo
Feb 7 at 19:39
2
2
A little light reading: techadvisor.co.uk/how-to/windows/how-back-up-windows-10-3635397 windowscentral.com/how-make-full-backup-windows-10 en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Backup en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Backup_and_Restore
– K7AAY
Feb 7 at 19:50
A little light reading: techadvisor.co.uk/how-to/windows/how-back-up-windows-10-3635397 windowscentral.com/how-make-full-backup-windows-10 en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Backup en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Backup_and_Restore
– K7AAY
Feb 7 at 19:50
Understood, sorry for the jumble. Good wiki, lot of info.
– VernonB
Feb 7 at 20:26
Understood, sorry for the jumble. Good wiki, lot of info.
– VernonB
Feb 7 at 20:26
Can I ask you all what methods you use
– VernonB
Feb 7 at 20:33
Can I ask you all what methods you use
– VernonB
Feb 7 at 20:33
|
show 1 more comment
1 Answer
1
active
oldest
votes
Terminology
- Full backup is a backup of everything on the system.
- Systemimage is a backup which, when restores will include the ability to start an operating system. It may or may not include a full backup. A system image produces a bootable image
- Repair / Rescue disks are bootable images - usually on USB or CDRom which can be used to repair a broken filesystem and/or help get data off it. Common tasks include doing filesystem checks, fixing corrupt boot configurations (ie bootloaders), making filesystems available etc. They run their own copy of an operating system, often different to the broken one.
Types of Backup
The main ways of doing backup are full and incremental.
- A full backup has everything. The advantage is it is easy to restore and complete. The disadvantages are that it can take a lot of time and disk space.
- An incremental ( partial ) backup only records changes since the last backup was done. This is faster and takes less space, but requires a full backup and more effort to restore.
Backup strategies and components
There are different ways to back up data, depending on the risk. Generally more then 1 strategy is deployed as part of a robust solution.
RAID - I've added this for completeness, but in reality, RAID is not backup. It does, however protect data by providing continuity and reliability if a drive fails. RAID 1 or higher is used to reduce the impact of hardware failure by distributing the data over multiple disks, so that it can be pieced back together. It does not generally protect against software failures or user error.
Onsite vs Offsite backups - ideally backups should be kept both on your premises for speed of restore, and sent offsite in case the onsite backups are stolen or destroyed. One solution to this problem is backing up to the cloud. It is important that backups are not kept attached to the running system to avoid things like Cryptolocker compromising your backups as well.
Versioning - A common solution to backing up, normally associated with incremental backups - is versioning, where only changed files are updated. Copies of older files are kept, in case good data was overwritten with bad. Most cloud services offer this, as do programs like rsnapshot (which is for Linux). This can be difficult to do when your backups are rotated depending on your software.
File vs partition/disk backups. Its generally faster to back up files on the computer, which will typically allow for restoration of user generated content, but will require a lot of work to rebuild the system. If you back up partititions or filesystems this generally requires the computer to be offline/partly offline for the duration of the backup, but will allow an easier, faster restore of the data. It would be considered more complete. In general a disk backup would be preferred over a partition backup.
add a comment |
1 Answer
1
active
oldest
votes
1 Answer
1
active
oldest
votes
active
oldest
votes
active
oldest
votes
Terminology
- Full backup is a backup of everything on the system.
- Systemimage is a backup which, when restores will include the ability to start an operating system. It may or may not include a full backup. A system image produces a bootable image
- Repair / Rescue disks are bootable images - usually on USB or CDRom which can be used to repair a broken filesystem and/or help get data off it. Common tasks include doing filesystem checks, fixing corrupt boot configurations (ie bootloaders), making filesystems available etc. They run their own copy of an operating system, often different to the broken one.
Types of Backup
The main ways of doing backup are full and incremental.
- A full backup has everything. The advantage is it is easy to restore and complete. The disadvantages are that it can take a lot of time and disk space.
- An incremental ( partial ) backup only records changes since the last backup was done. This is faster and takes less space, but requires a full backup and more effort to restore.
Backup strategies and components
There are different ways to back up data, depending on the risk. Generally more then 1 strategy is deployed as part of a robust solution.
RAID - I've added this for completeness, but in reality, RAID is not backup. It does, however protect data by providing continuity and reliability if a drive fails. RAID 1 or higher is used to reduce the impact of hardware failure by distributing the data over multiple disks, so that it can be pieced back together. It does not generally protect against software failures or user error.
Onsite vs Offsite backups - ideally backups should be kept both on your premises for speed of restore, and sent offsite in case the onsite backups are stolen or destroyed. One solution to this problem is backing up to the cloud. It is important that backups are not kept attached to the running system to avoid things like Cryptolocker compromising your backups as well.
Versioning - A common solution to backing up, normally associated with incremental backups - is versioning, where only changed files are updated. Copies of older files are kept, in case good data was overwritten with bad. Most cloud services offer this, as do programs like rsnapshot (which is for Linux). This can be difficult to do when your backups are rotated depending on your software.
File vs partition/disk backups. Its generally faster to back up files on the computer, which will typically allow for restoration of user generated content, but will require a lot of work to rebuild the system. If you back up partititions or filesystems this generally requires the computer to be offline/partly offline for the duration of the backup, but will allow an easier, faster restore of the data. It would be considered more complete. In general a disk backup would be preferred over a partition backup.
add a comment |
Terminology
- Full backup is a backup of everything on the system.
- Systemimage is a backup which, when restores will include the ability to start an operating system. It may or may not include a full backup. A system image produces a bootable image
- Repair / Rescue disks are bootable images - usually on USB or CDRom which can be used to repair a broken filesystem and/or help get data off it. Common tasks include doing filesystem checks, fixing corrupt boot configurations (ie bootloaders), making filesystems available etc. They run their own copy of an operating system, often different to the broken one.
Types of Backup
The main ways of doing backup are full and incremental.
- A full backup has everything. The advantage is it is easy to restore and complete. The disadvantages are that it can take a lot of time and disk space.
- An incremental ( partial ) backup only records changes since the last backup was done. This is faster and takes less space, but requires a full backup and more effort to restore.
Backup strategies and components
There are different ways to back up data, depending on the risk. Generally more then 1 strategy is deployed as part of a robust solution.
RAID - I've added this for completeness, but in reality, RAID is not backup. It does, however protect data by providing continuity and reliability if a drive fails. RAID 1 or higher is used to reduce the impact of hardware failure by distributing the data over multiple disks, so that it can be pieced back together. It does not generally protect against software failures or user error.
Onsite vs Offsite backups - ideally backups should be kept both on your premises for speed of restore, and sent offsite in case the onsite backups are stolen or destroyed. One solution to this problem is backing up to the cloud. It is important that backups are not kept attached to the running system to avoid things like Cryptolocker compromising your backups as well.
Versioning - A common solution to backing up, normally associated with incremental backups - is versioning, where only changed files are updated. Copies of older files are kept, in case good data was overwritten with bad. Most cloud services offer this, as do programs like rsnapshot (which is for Linux). This can be difficult to do when your backups are rotated depending on your software.
File vs partition/disk backups. Its generally faster to back up files on the computer, which will typically allow for restoration of user generated content, but will require a lot of work to rebuild the system. If you back up partititions or filesystems this generally requires the computer to be offline/partly offline for the duration of the backup, but will allow an easier, faster restore of the data. It would be considered more complete. In general a disk backup would be preferred over a partition backup.
add a comment |
Terminology
- Full backup is a backup of everything on the system.
- Systemimage is a backup which, when restores will include the ability to start an operating system. It may or may not include a full backup. A system image produces a bootable image
- Repair / Rescue disks are bootable images - usually on USB or CDRom which can be used to repair a broken filesystem and/or help get data off it. Common tasks include doing filesystem checks, fixing corrupt boot configurations (ie bootloaders), making filesystems available etc. They run their own copy of an operating system, often different to the broken one.
Types of Backup
The main ways of doing backup are full and incremental.
- A full backup has everything. The advantage is it is easy to restore and complete. The disadvantages are that it can take a lot of time and disk space.
- An incremental ( partial ) backup only records changes since the last backup was done. This is faster and takes less space, but requires a full backup and more effort to restore.
Backup strategies and components
There are different ways to back up data, depending on the risk. Generally more then 1 strategy is deployed as part of a robust solution.
RAID - I've added this for completeness, but in reality, RAID is not backup. It does, however protect data by providing continuity and reliability if a drive fails. RAID 1 or higher is used to reduce the impact of hardware failure by distributing the data over multiple disks, so that it can be pieced back together. It does not generally protect against software failures or user error.
Onsite vs Offsite backups - ideally backups should be kept both on your premises for speed of restore, and sent offsite in case the onsite backups are stolen or destroyed. One solution to this problem is backing up to the cloud. It is important that backups are not kept attached to the running system to avoid things like Cryptolocker compromising your backups as well.
Versioning - A common solution to backing up, normally associated with incremental backups - is versioning, where only changed files are updated. Copies of older files are kept, in case good data was overwritten with bad. Most cloud services offer this, as do programs like rsnapshot (which is for Linux). This can be difficult to do when your backups are rotated depending on your software.
File vs partition/disk backups. Its generally faster to back up files on the computer, which will typically allow for restoration of user generated content, but will require a lot of work to rebuild the system. If you back up partititions or filesystems this generally requires the computer to be offline/partly offline for the duration of the backup, but will allow an easier, faster restore of the data. It would be considered more complete. In general a disk backup would be preferred over a partition backup.
Terminology
- Full backup is a backup of everything on the system.
- Systemimage is a backup which, when restores will include the ability to start an operating system. It may or may not include a full backup. A system image produces a bootable image
- Repair / Rescue disks are bootable images - usually on USB or CDRom which can be used to repair a broken filesystem and/or help get data off it. Common tasks include doing filesystem checks, fixing corrupt boot configurations (ie bootloaders), making filesystems available etc. They run their own copy of an operating system, often different to the broken one.
Types of Backup
The main ways of doing backup are full and incremental.
- A full backup has everything. The advantage is it is easy to restore and complete. The disadvantages are that it can take a lot of time and disk space.
- An incremental ( partial ) backup only records changes since the last backup was done. This is faster and takes less space, but requires a full backup and more effort to restore.
Backup strategies and components
There are different ways to back up data, depending on the risk. Generally more then 1 strategy is deployed as part of a robust solution.
RAID - I've added this for completeness, but in reality, RAID is not backup. It does, however protect data by providing continuity and reliability if a drive fails. RAID 1 or higher is used to reduce the impact of hardware failure by distributing the data over multiple disks, so that it can be pieced back together. It does not generally protect against software failures or user error.
Onsite vs Offsite backups - ideally backups should be kept both on your premises for speed of restore, and sent offsite in case the onsite backups are stolen or destroyed. One solution to this problem is backing up to the cloud. It is important that backups are not kept attached to the running system to avoid things like Cryptolocker compromising your backups as well.
Versioning - A common solution to backing up, normally associated with incremental backups - is versioning, where only changed files are updated. Copies of older files are kept, in case good data was overwritten with bad. Most cloud services offer this, as do programs like rsnapshot (which is for Linux). This can be difficult to do when your backups are rotated depending on your software.
File vs partition/disk backups. Its generally faster to back up files on the computer, which will typically allow for restoration of user generated content, but will require a lot of work to rebuild the system. If you back up partititions or filesystems this generally requires the computer to be offline/partly offline for the duration of the backup, but will allow an easier, faster restore of the data. It would be considered more complete. In general a disk backup would be preferred over a partition backup.
answered Feb 7 at 20:00
davidgodavidgo
44.7k75292
44.7k75292
add a comment |
add a comment |
3
Hi and welcome to SuperUSer. You have a set of good questions here. Unfortunately, because you ask so many of them it makes answering these really long and that makes it Too Broad. If you can limit your question to a small section, get an answer then post a new question, it can fit for the SuperUser site.
– LPChip
Feb 7 at 19:36
3
I agree with LPChip - breaking this post down into 3 or 4 questions would be appropriate. Also, using paragraph spacing will make it a lot more readable.
– davidgo
Feb 7 at 19:39
2
A little light reading: techadvisor.co.uk/how-to/windows/how-back-up-windows-10-3635397 windowscentral.com/how-make-full-backup-windows-10 en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Backup en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Backup_and_Restore
– K7AAY
Feb 7 at 19:50
Understood, sorry for the jumble. Good wiki, lot of info.
– VernonB
Feb 7 at 20:26
Can I ask you all what methods you use
– VernonB
Feb 7 at 20:33