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duplicity

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  Analyzed about 13 hours ago

Duplicity backs up directories by producing encrypted tar-format volumes and uploading them to a remote or local file server. Because duplicity uses librsync, the incremental archives are space efficient and only record the parts of files that have changed since the last backup. Because duplicity ... [More] uses GnuPG to encrypt and/or sign these archives, they will be safe from spying and/or modification by the server. The duplicity package also includes the rdiffdir utility. Rdiffdir is an extension of librsync's rdiff to directories---it can be used to produce signatures and deltas of directories as well as regular files. These signatures and deltas are in GNU tar format. [Less]

26.2K lines of code

12 current contributors

3 days since last commit

35 users on Open Hub

Moderate Activity
4.46154
   
I Use This

BackupPC

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  Analyzed about 1 hour ago

BackupPC is a high-performance, enterprise-grade system for backing up Linux, WinXX and MacOSX PCs and laptops to a server's disk. Features bleeding-edge technologies like deduplication.

41.4K lines of code

5 current contributors

about 2 years since last commit

29 users on Open Hub

Inactive
4.5
   
I Use This

rdiff-backup

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  Analyzed about 14 hours ago

rdiff-backup backs up one directory to another, possible over a network. The target directory ends up a copy of the source directory, but extra reverse diffs are stored in a special subdirectory of that target directory, so you can still recover files lost some time ago. The idea is to combine the ... [More] best features of a mirror and an incremental backup. rdiff-backup also preserves subdirectories, hard links, dev files, permissions, uid/gid ownership (if it is running as root), modification times, acls, eas, resource forks, etc. Finally, rdiff-backup can operate in a bandwidth efficient manner over a pipe, like rsync. Thus you can use rdiff-backup and ssh to securely back a hard drive up to a remote location, and only the differences will be transmitted. [Less]

54.5K lines of code

0 current contributors

17 days since last commit

27 users on Open Hub

Low Activity
4.14286
   
I Use This

bup

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  Analyzed about 10 hours ago

Highly efficient file backup system based on the git packfile format. Capable of doing *fast* incremental backups of virtual machine images

24.5K lines of code

4 current contributors

4 months since last commit

5 users on Open Hub

Low Activity
5.0
 
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BorgBackup

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  Analyzed about 7 hours ago

Deduplicating backup program with compression and authenticated encryption.

37.2K lines of code

43 current contributors

6 days since last commit

4 users on Open Hub

Moderate Activity
5.0
 
I Use This

cronopete

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  Analyzed about 2 hours ago

An Apple's TimeMachine clone for Linux

17K lines of code

0 current contributors

4 months since last commit

1 users on Open Hub

Very Low Activity
0.0
 
I Use This

Pukcab

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  Analyzed 1 day ago

Lightweight network backup system

7.31K lines of code

1 current contributors

over 5 years since last commit

1 users on Open Hub

Inactive
0.0
 
I Use This

gtkrsync

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  Analyzed about 11 hours ago

gtkrsync is a simple GUI that displays a running status display built from rsync --progress -v. This status display includes a per-file and overall status bar, overall estimated time to completion, and an expandable button that shows all rsync status output. Unlike other GUI rsync frontends such ... [More] as grsync, gtkrsync does not have any GUI tools for configuring or invoking rsync. gtkrsync is designed to be invoked from the command line or shell scripts, which already specify all the needed rsync options. It is thus ideal for scripted rsync runs that need a GUI, or for command-line users that would like a GUI to monitor their rsync progress. [Less]

839 lines of code

0 current contributors

over 12 years since last commit

1 users on Open Hub

Inactive
0.0
 
I Use This

pgBackRest

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  Analyzed about 5 hours ago

pgBackRest aims to be a simple, reliable backup and restore system that can seamlessly scale up to the largest databases and workloads. Instead of relying on traditional backup tools like tar and rsync, pgBackRest implements all backup features internally and uses a custom protocol for ... [More] communicating with remote systems. Removing reliance on tar and rsync allows for better solutions to database-specific backup challenges. The custom remote protocol allows for more flexibility and limits the types of connections that are required to perform a backup which increases security. [Less]

162K lines of code

11 current contributors

9 days since last commit

1 users on Open Hub

Moderate Activity
0.0
 
I Use This

fwbackups

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  Analyzed 1 day ago

fwbackups is a feature-rich user backup program that allows you to backup your documents anytime, anywhere. fwbackups offers a simple but powerful interface and supports multiple scheduled backups, on-demand backups as well as restores. fwbackups can backup to a local disk or alternatively to another host using SFTP.

6.26K lines of code

2 current contributors

over 1 year since last commit

1 users on Open Hub

Very Low Activity
5.0
 
I Use This
Licenses: No declared licenses