Data Recovery
November 14th, 2007 by
admin
Bacula, a set of computer software, though not free backup software, lets users or the system administrator to deal with backup, recovery, and verification of computer data across a network of computers of different kinds. If we see it in the technical terms, then we might say that Bacula is a network based backup program. It is comparatively simple to use and well-organized. It also puts forward lots of advanced storage management features that make it easy to find and recover lost or damaged files. A good number of the Bacula source code is released under the GPL version 2 licenses. The Documentation link might get users close to a page where they can access all the obtainable Bacula documentation for the formally released version and for the current code under development in the Source Forge SVN.
The expansion edition of the manual typically comprises more documentation; however t may also document new features that are not in the released version. On the very other hand, afbackup is a client-server backup system. This specific system allows more than a few workstations to backup to a central server and it does simultaneously or serially. The process of Backups might be started distantly from the server or via cron jobs on the clients. The afbackup software has been put to the test on Linux, FreeBSD, AIX, IRIX, Digital UNIX (OSF1), Solaris and HP-UX and the afbackup client has also been tested on SunOS and OpenBSD.
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