I am currently using EndeavourOS for my laptop. Is there a backup solution that is easy to use, and can be run from the EndeavourOS install media without internet? (RSync is included, but no other backup tools are included, to my knowledge.) I don’t want to use another ISO due to space constraints on my USB.

26 points

Borg backup. You should be able to install it on your Live session, then restore to the target mount point.

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7 points

And use Vorta if you want a gui for Borg backup.

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3 points

Pika Backup is another user-friendly Borgbackup GUI.

https://apps.gnome.org/en-GB/app/org.gnome.World.PikaBackup/

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1 point
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Pika Backup is the most user-friendly GUI for Borg. Vorta UI is powerful but complex. Pika only shows you the absolute basics: where to keep the backups, what to include, what to exclude, list of snapshots, and schedule options.

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1 point

Vorta looks very powerful. I know all that functionality is in Borg, but it’s tricky to do it right. I’ll give Vorta a try on my next install.

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3 points

BorgBackup is the answer. Stopped creating stupid shell scripts with rsync and whatever and thinking I was so clever.

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1 point

Are you serious? It actually does that? So you have a usb stick with the live environment, then you boot into that environment, then from there you install borg, plug in the other stick that has the back then just restore onto the internal drive and restart? Is that correct?

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4 points
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As long as you don’t reboot, your live sessions act like a fully installed OS. At least with any of the LiveUSB sessions I’ve ever used over the last decade.

You can install, mount a backup image, then push it on to a mountpoint for your actual install to be restored.

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1 point

Nice. Thank you

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3 points

Technically you are able to to do with any live environment and backup data, so the answer would be “yes”.

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16 points
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Timeshift. Easy to set up. Easy to use, only takes a couple of minutes to ‘re-set’ your system back, if you break it. If you want just to backup files, documents etc then Cron. I use both. They are standard Linux programs and easy to use

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6 points

Restic is my favorite, but you really would need to be familiar with the terminal, cron tasks, etc. to consider it a viable option.

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5 points

Have you looked to see if rdiff-backup is included? It works off of rsync but provides incremental backups and restores. On my servers I set up a script that excludes system folders like /dev, network mounts, and the log files, but it grabs pretty much everything else. Once the script works just set up a cron job and forget about it.

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4 points
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2 points

Sounds like a well thought out solution, but we need proper programs which can handle backups, like some mentioned in this thread.

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1 point
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2 points

Its not about features, its about “duct tape scripts” are rarely a solution for anybody else than the author, imo. Borgbackup seems like the proper suggestion here for the OP.

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