Duplicity (software)

Duplicity
Stable release
0.7.07.1[1] / April 19, 2016 (2016-04-19)
Written in Python
Operating system Cross-platform (POSIX)
Type Backup software
License GNU General Public License
Website duplicity.nongnu.org

Duplicity is a software suite that provides encrypted, digitally signed, versioned, remote backup of files requiring little of the remote server.[2] Released under the terms of the GNU General Public License (GPL), Duplicity is free software.

Duplicity devises a scheme where the first archive is a complete (full) backup, and subsequent (incremental) backups only add differences from the latest full or incremental backup.[3] Chains consisting of a full backup and a series of incremental backups can be recovered to the point in time that any of the incremental steps were taken. If any of the incremental backups are missing then the incremental backups following it cannot be reconstructed. It does this using GnuPG, librsync, tar, and rdiff.[2] To transmit data to the backup repository it can use SSH/SCP/SFTP, local file access, rsync, FTP, Amazon S3,[4] Google Cloud Storage,[5] Rackspace Cloud Files,[6] and others. Refer to its man page for the constantly growing list of back-ends.

Duplicity works best under Unix-like operating systems (such as Linux, BSD, and Mac OS X),[7] though it can be used with Windows under Cygwin. Currently duplicity supports deleted files, full Unix permissions, directories, and symbolic links, fifos, and device files, but not hard links.

See also

References

  1. Loafman, Kenneth (19 April 2016). "Duplicity 0.7.07.1 Released". duplicity-announce (Mailing list).
  2. 1 2 Linux Journal: An Automated Reliable Backup Solution
  3. Duplicity Website: Features
  4. Bash Script: Incremental Encrypted Backups with Duplicity (Amazon S3)
  5. Change log of version 0.6.22
  6. A fork of dt-s3-backup to use with Rackspace Cloud Files
  7. Installing Duplicity on OS/X 10.5 (Leopard)

External links


This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the 5/31/2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.