![]() ![]() Google Vault is not meant for quick Google account recovery. In fact, in the proposed use cases for Google Vault, the following are listed: Using Google Vault in this way would be going contrary to what it is designed for – archiving. Google Vault is not designed to be used as a backup solution for your G Suite environment. Hangouts Chat and Google Talk and Hangouts Chat conversations Google vault supports archiving and eDiscovery on the following: Google Vault is a native Google solution that allows you to retain, hold, search, and export data for the purposes of archiving and eDiscovery. At first glance, Google Vault may seem like the tool of choice when it comes to protecting your G Suite data. Using Google’s native tools for protecting data may seem like a good idea. Let’s look at three G Suite backup/archive tools to see how they compare and which tool you should choose to protect your data in G Suite – Backupify vs Google Vault vs SpinOne (previously Spinbackup). Making sure you backup and archive your end user’s data in G Suite is critically important due to data loss threats. I don't understand why restoring 2gb is painful (probably faster than restoring a config and waiting for packages to be reinstalled) but oh well.Using public cloud environments such as G Suite is a great way to empower productivity. Pretty sure people use Windows as a fileserver and it doesn't have this option. That said, most OSes don't have this option and I have had a few commercial NASes that didn't have this option. As others have mentioned, this will be fixed in OMV 5.x. it just didn't work due to some database choices. OMV is much more than a filesystem appliance. ![]() Omg I can't believe that programmers of OMV didn't think of creating/restoring config. I was planning to put OMV on production but I need to reconsider that - previously I was thinking of FreeNas - which of course have ability to backup and restore config. Wow I didn't expected that - I've working on numerous file system appliances, but I can't remember that any of them would not have ability to save and restore config. OMG is this a joke? This is the failure of this system. I'm running Zmirrors, with automated snapshots, with zero issues.) (BTW: Nearly anything FreeNAS is offering can be done in OMV to include ZFS with automated, self rotating and purging ZFS snapshots. But understand, if you go the BSD route, it may be "limiting" and the probabilities are, you'll discover those limitations well after you've committed. ![]() They have limited "Jails" (BSD's equivalent of Dockers) with very little community usage (which would make me wonder if they've been tested adequately). There's one file system, take it or leave it. On the other hand, perhaps FreeNAS is right for what you want to do. With a full featured Linux server, with no restrictions on what can be installed (direct installed servers, Dockers with volumes and mount points, etc., etc.), it would be impossible to restore a working configuration without restoring the entire OS. Otherwise, it would be fairly easy to "break" the appliance or the restored configuration would break, or ignore, add-on functionality. The variables must be predicable and are, therefore, limited by necessity. This is a necessity for having the ability to restore a "stock configuration". They usually come with an OS that's locked down or restricted, with a limited set of configuration options. What you're talking about with "an appliance": (For the fastest possible restoration time, this is the way to go and since the backup clone was tested prior, it's known to work.) In my case, the swap and boot takes 2 to 3 minutes. If I need to back out of a configuration change (usually a self induced error), an update issue, boot media failure, etc., it's just a matter of plugging in a clone and rebooting. Wow I didn't expected that - I've working on numerous file system appliances, but I can't remember that any of them would not have ability to save and restore config.ĭon't you think that's a bit of an overreaction? Backing up your OS AND configuration is really easy to do and there are several ways to do it, to include installing a plugin designed for just that purpose.Īs has mentioned if you boot using a USB stick or an SD-Card, cloning the OS is dirt simple and it's in this Guide beginning on page 73. ![]()
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