Among other things, I’m running a small Nextcloud instance on my home server and over time, data somewhat piles up (especially photos). My main storage is sufficiently sized & redundant for now, but I wonder how I am supposed to do a serious backup: The moment will come where the backup’s size will exceed any reasonly prized single drive. What then?

Of course I can just buy another disk and distribute the chunks, but that’s manual work - or is it not? At least rsync has no builtin option for that.
Using a virtual, larger file system spanning among multiple drives looks like the easiest option, but I doubt it’s a good idea for a reliable backup - if one disk fails, all of the backup is gone. On the other hand: That’s true for the distributed chunks as well.

What do you people do? Right now I don’t have to bother as my data fits on a single device easily, but I wonder what in theory & practice is the best solution.
Regards!

@Aarkon@feddit.de
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23Y

I may have missed to point out that my server’s storage is my NAS. ;)

I realized that may be the case after commenting. I didn’t read your post as closely as I should have, but I kept the comment up in case someone finds it helpful.

Unfortunately I’m not aware of any solutions beyond buy bigger drives, stand up a backup NAS, or omit unimportant/non-critical/easily recoverable data from backups. I don’t think that’s what you’re looking for though.

@Aarkon@feddit.de
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13Y

Thank you nonetheless!

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