[kwlug-disc] Transferring large backup files over the network

Jason Eckert jason.eckert at gmail.com
Thu May 30 09:50:33 EDT 2019


Maybe they thought including butter FS would be a slippery slope.....
[insert groans here]

On Thu, May 30, 2019 at 9:43 AM Jeff Smith <crankyoldbugger at gmail.com>
wrote:

> I'm going to reluctantly end up starting a flame war, whether I want to or
> not...
>
> Just found out two minutes ago that BTRFS is being dropped by both RHEL
> and GParted:
>
> https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Btrfs#No_longer_supported
>
>
> https://news.softpedia.com/news/gparted-open-source-partition-editor-reaches-1-0-milestone-after-almost-15-years-526221.shtml
>
> (you have to scroll down to the bottom of both articles for the relevant
> bits.
>
>
>
>
> ------------------------------
> *From:* kwlug-disc <kwlug-disc-bounces at kwlug.org> on behalf of
> bob+kwlug at softscape.ca <bob+kwlug at softscape.ca>
> *Sent:* 29 May 2019 16:53
> *To:* 'KWLUG discussion'
> *Subject:* Re: [kwlug-disc] Transferring large backup files over the
> network
>
> ZFS for work, BTRFS for home.
>
> If I am not mistaken, btrfs' ability to add and remove disks from storage
> pools makes it a good choice for working with eclectic spindles. Something
> I wouldn't do at work, but definitely at home where "found" hardware rules
> the day.
>
> BB
>
>
> > -----Original Message-----
> > From: kwlug-disc [mailto:kwlug-disc-bounces at kwlug.org
> <kwlug-disc-bounces at kwlug.org>] On Behalf Of
> > jason.eckert
> > Sent: Thursday, May 23, 2019 8:14 PM
> > To: KWLUG discussion
> > Subject: Re: [kwlug-disc] Transferring large backup files over the
> network
> >
> > I'll openly admit that I'm a ZFS snob - I've always regarded BTRFS as
> > decaf ZFS ;-)
> >
> >
> >
> > Sent from my Samsung device running Android (basically Linux in drag)
> >
> > -------- Original message --------
> > From: CrankyOldBugger <crankyoldbugger at gmail.com>
> > Date: 2019-05-23 20:07 (GMT-05:00)
> > To: KWLUG discussion <kwlug-disc at kwlug.org>
> > Subject: Re: [kwlug-disc] Transferring large backup files over the
> network
> >
> > We looked at BTRFS at work a few months ago and decided that it wasn't
> > ready for prime time yet.  I wonder if it's improved since then?  We're
> > happy with ext4 and LVM.
> >
> >
> > On Thu, 23 May 2019 at 19:08, bob+kwlug at softscape.ca
> > <mailto:bob%2Bkwlug at softscape.ca <bob%2Bkwlug at softscape.ca>>  <
> bob+kwlug at softscape.ca
> > <mailto:bob%2Bkwlug at softscape.ca <bob%2Bkwlug at softscape.ca>> > wrote:
> >
> >
> >        Nothing to add to this but just wanted to give a
> >
> >        +1
> >
> >        For use of BTRFS. Love that FS.
> >
> >        BB
> >
> >
> >        > -----Original Message-----
> >        > From: kwlug-disc [mailto:kwlug-disc-bounces at kwlug.org
> <kwlug-disc-bounces at kwlug.org>] On Behalf
> > Of Remi
> >        > Gauvin
> >        > Sent: Thursday, May 23, 2019 5:57 PM
> >        > To: KWLUG discussion
> >        > Subject: Re: [kwlug-disc] Transferring large backup files over
> the
> > network
> >        >
> >        > On 2019-05-23 4:40 p.m., Paul Nijjar via kwlug-disc wrote:
> >        >
> >        > >>
> >        > >
> >        > > Hrm. That brings to mind the (non-FLOSS) Windows Subsystem for
> > Linux.
> >        > > The problem with many of these "compile Linux tools on
> Windows"
> > is
> >        > > that they are often limited to 32-bit (although I am not sure
> > whether
> >        > > MobaXterm is). That actually has caused problems for me in my
> > backups
> >        > > when I have tried to use various Rsync for Windows tools in
> the
> > past.
> >        > >
> >        > > But if I install Linux in Windows using WSL, then the 64 bit
> > versions
> >        > > of these tools might be available, and then maybe NTFS is not
> > going to
> >        > > be the bottleneck any more.
> >        > >
> >        >
> >        > I just use Cygwin for this purpose.  Neither NTFS nor 32-bitness
> > are a
> >        > problem, and I have no idea why you think they would be.  I do
> > not,
> >        > however, preserve the permissions / Ownership of the Windows
> host
> > to the
> >        > backup.
> >        >
> >        > Sample rsync:
> >        >
> >        > (Note: The --inplace is because I'm using BTRFS and snapshots on
> > the
> >        > backup side.  You would not use it otherwise.)\
> >        >
> >        > Note2: I have encountered problems with rsync compression and
> some
> > multi
> >        > GB files.  Compression is instead enabled in the ssh_config if
> > sending
> >        > over a slow link.
> >        >
> >        >
> >        > /usr/bin/rsync \
> >        >       -a --no-o --no-g --no-p --chmod=ugo=rwX --info=STATS \
> >        >       --inplace --exclude='.snapshots' --delete \
> >        >       /nas/  \
> >        >       destination_host:/data/nas/
> >        >
> >        >
> >
> >
> >
> >        _______________________________________________
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> >        kwlug-disc at kwlug.org
> >        http://kwlug.org/mailman/listinfo/kwlug-disc_kwlug.org
> >
>
>
>
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