Go to the U of M home page
School of Physics & Astronomy
School of Physics and Astronomy Wiki

User Tools


computing:network:backups:crashplan

Differences

This shows you the differences between two versions of the page.

Link to this comparison view

Both sides previous revisionPrevious revision
Next revision
Previous revision
computing:network:backups:crashplan [2011/05/06 12:17] – [Crashplan Pro Backups] allancomputing:network:backups:crashplan [2014/10/01 12:41] (current) allan
Line 1: Line 1:
 ====== CrashPlan Pro Backups ====== ====== CrashPlan Pro Backups ======
  
-CrashPlan Pro is supported on Windows (XP or later), Mac OS X (10.4 or later) and Linux. At present we are limiting its use to one backed-up computer per faculty member, and will backup up to 100GB of data per person (these limitations are likely to change based on feedback)It's ideal for laptops but may also be useful for standalone Mac desktop computers (for most Windows desktop computers, we recommend storing data on our Active Directory file server instead).+A network backup system using Crashplan software is availableThe system is run by CSEbut accounting and setup for Physics and Astronomy users is handled by net@physics.umn.edu
  
-You can download the installer from the "crashplan" folder under "Software Downloads" in [[https://www.physics.umn.edu/resources/myphys/|MyPhys]]. Please notice there are two possible installers for Windows (a standard version  and a 64-bit version).+Essential information
  
-When you run the installerit will prompt you for your name and login detailsFor username and passwordprovide your **Physics username** (not email addressand password.+  * Physics has a pool of 20 licenses in CSE crashplan. While we have these availablethere is no startup cost; after they are exhausted, the startup cost is $55 
 +  * The per-year cost is $30 for each user (starting 7/2015) 
 +  * Must use non-sponsored funds 
 +  * The user is "tied" to your university x.500 account (ie this is intended as backup of individual datanot for a shared research group). 
 +  Each user can backup up to 4 devices 
 +  The size limit of backed-up data is not yet defined but should be "reasonable" (eg a few TB).
  
-The Mac and Linux versions will also prompt for a registration key and the backup server address (the Windows installers have been customized with this information)You can find this information in a "Crashplan_Physics_license.txtfile in the downloads area.+If you are interested in using this system, send email to us at net@physics.umn.edu, with the account string to charge annually, and we will get you set upThe system sends you an "invitationwith a web link to log in and download the software. It's very easy to set up, though if you need assistance please let us know.
  
-Once it's installed, and running, you can choose what needs to be backed up (by default it will back up your user home folder), and how often (by default it will check for changes to files once per hour). There are a lot of settings which can be changed, but most of them should hopefully be fairly self-explanatory.+<note> 
 +The email "invitation" from the crashplan system refers to setting a password when you first visit - you can ignore this; it uses your UMN x.500 username and password 
 +</note>
  
-Depending on what you select, the initial backup will probably take some time, so you might want to make sure this occurs while you're on campus, rather than from a slower home internet connection. 
  
-Further backups will continue whenever a network connection is available. CrashPlan will attempt to backup any changed files as often as every hour. Our experience is that these ongoing backups are fairly unnoticeable.+<note warning> 
 +**Physics crashplan server**
  
-You can restore files directly using the same control panel, including choosing different versions of files from points in time (so, for example, you can use this to revert to an earlier version of a file).+10/2014 - The Physics crashplan server is now in a "frozen" state and we are not accepting new backup clients. Existing users should transition to the CSE system described above. We expect it to shut down by the end of 2014. 
 +</note>
  
-===== Major differences from Retrospect ===== 
- 
-  * You can choose exactly what gets backed up, and how often 
-  * Backups and restores can work from anywhere (with a network connection) rather than just within Tate Lab 
-  * Your computer remains usable during a backup 
-  * Vastly easier to restore files when needed 
- 
-though also 
-  * older operating systems (Windows 98, Mac OS Classic) are not supported. 
-  * we pay for a client license for each machine we back up, unlike Retrospect which was "unlimited". This is why we are limiting the use of Crashplan for now. 
-===== Virtual machines ===== 
- 
-If you use virtual machines on your computer (eg VMware or Parallels), you should probably exclude the VM files from your backup. 
  
computing/network/backups/crashplan.1304702268.txt.gz · Last modified: 2011/05/06 12:17 by allan