Replies: 2 comments 2 replies
-
You will need to do the same thing you did when you originally installed the system. Using shrink-backup to write an img was something I lightly touched on and actually had a scrtipt for a short while on the testing branch, but I dropped the idea because skrink-backup suddenly became way more than what intended to be: The backup image is also NOT a clone, it's a bootable img backup created from the running system.
If you want to achieve above, I suggest writing a simple script that writes the img to the sd-card using Another way is to use something like Or simply just write the backed up img the same way as when you installed. If the idea is that you want to be able to write to a Please see: What could be done from the side of shrink-backup in this case is to create a wiki entry for a workflow achieving what you want. The wiki for this project is under utilized, I am working on stuff to include in it, but things take time. Edit |
Beta Was this translation helpful? Give feedback.
-
For me and anybody else:
As an example with In subsequent backups this data is not touched (data before and outside the filesystem), ever. Only a synchronization of the FILESYSTEMS on the device is done, ie a copy.
I just mentioned
I do not, because it is outside the scope of what shrink-backup is.
It is not, and you def should stop calling copies clones.
That IS what a wiki IS, for anybody, ie the community to edit. Otherwise it would just be documentation, not a wiki.
It's not a link to code, it is links to bullet lists of the scripts workflow. 🙂 |
Beta Was this translation helpful? Give feedback.
-
As far as I understand in case the current OS fails I have to restore the backup image created with shrink-backup on a device (for example a SD card), replace the broken SD card on the system and reboot. THis requires some experience how to restore the backup image and needs some time.
Would be much easier and shortens the outage time just to have a cold standby SD card handy which was
created by shrink-backup.
Think about a 7/24 system @home which fails and the system operator is on a business trip. If there exists a cold standby SD card you only have to replace the failed SD card with the cold standby SD card and the system is up and running again easily.
Beta Was this translation helpful? Give feedback.
All reactions