I’ve been “staging” data onto a 12tb external drive for a few months in preparation for building a more robust system. In the back of my mind I knew that if I didn’t have a backup of this and something happened all is lost and I was truly an idiot.

Now that I’ve got the idiocy out of the way, my roommate plugged in the drive as she decided it would be a nice idea to clean up my desk and such. She called me saying she smelled burning plastic and shutdown my systems.

I came home to find the external drive smelling of burnt plastic and my heart sank. It would not power on, I pulled it out of the encloure and connected it to a usb sata cable and power source and it would not come on. So essentially I lost everything.

This is my fault for not having backups and allowing other people to touch my gear. So I’ve learned my lesson.

I’m working to recover everything that I actually cared about (maybe 2-3tb out of the full disk I cared about).

Moving forward. I don’t know that spending 2k on a NAS is going to do me any good as the NAS is not a replacement for backups.

I’m trying to come up with a new system (to me) for backups/archiving.

Here’s what I used to have.

1 x external usb drive encrypted with Luks, data within is client-side encrypted with restic for multiple sources. This works fine for me and I’ve got my restic and luks head keys backed up (like that, huh? lol).

I’m likely going to go with this same method, but I’m thinking this time I’ll figure out a way to have a second drive of the same size that either is a restic target so all backups and archives are duplicated as they are archived or figure out a way to do this to where drive A is somehow mirrored to drive B when it’s not archiving. I’m not sure if this is possible or the best way to do this.

If you were starting over and had the budget for say 2-3 big external drives what would you recommend?

I know I am also going to be using something like B2 with encryption as a point of last resort backup solution (encrypted client side again). But for now I’m focusing on physical media.

Thanks for your help. I expect to be flamed for this post, but trust me I’ve learned my lesson and was idiot-taxes

  • WilliamNearToronto@alien.topB
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    1 year ago

    There are two kinds of computer users: those who have lost data and those who will lose data.

    Most important in my mind is to not have the backups on the same computer as the primary storage. If you get hit with malware, they’re both vulnerable. If you have an electrical problem that takes out your computer, it can/will also take out your backup.

    Also, have local onsite backup and offsite backup of anything that’s important like financial records, or anything else that is important to you.

    In concrete terms, you don’t need much processing power for a NAS to store your backups on. You can use an old desktop.