Le vendredi 21 septembre 2007 à 21:51 +0200, Farkas Levente a écrit :
ohh nooo! first of all we talk about workstation or server? if you
reinstall servers frequantly then probably you're a good sysadm and can
desing your servers in an advance way:-). what's more you probably don't
save /var/lib/mysql just dump it and don't save /var/named neither
/var/spool/postfix (probably all of your mails on a real server can
delivered right at send time and all of you queues are empty) your
/var/cache/samba don't contains any useful info (have you ever use samba?).
so imho you write it too fast or you've a bad day like me:-(
Get real, very few systems are under 24/24 replication to some other
remote or secure system. Most of them get backuped daily or weekly.
Right now /var mixes :
1. data that can be safely lost/erased at any time (caches)
2. data that the admin should work a little harder to protect (for
example, it should never be erased on reboot) but is transient by
nature. For example mail/print spools. It's pretty useless to backup
them because their state is almost certain to have changed by the time
the system has crashed, and if your restore the nightly/weekly backup
you'll probably only re-queue data that was already moved somewhere else
3. long-term data. That's what people move to /srv or a separate root -
it absolutely requires specific backup policies, and because it's served
from this particular system you won't find it anywhere else in case of
problem
--
Nicolas Mailhot