Setup of a Noninteractive Restore Section 10.4. Preparing for an Interactive Restore Section 10.3. Solaris Bare-Metal Recovery Section 10.1. Disk Targets Part 4: Bare-Metal Recovery Chapter 10. Protection of the Backup Index Section 8.17. Support of a Standard or Custom Backup Format Section 8.13. Reduction in Network Traffic Section 8.12. Storage Management Features Section 8.11. Data Requiring Special Treatment Section 8.10. Simultaneous Backup of One Client to Many Drives Section 8.9. Simultaneous Backup of Many Clients to One Drive Section 8.7. Backup of Very Large Filesystems and Files Section 8.5. Full Support of Your Platforms Section 8.3. Community and Support Options Section 4.6. Backing Up Clients via NFS or Samba Section 4.4. Summary of Important Features Section 4.2. Using ssh or rsh as a Conduit Between Systems Chapter 4. Comparing tar, cpio, and dump Section 3.14. Backing Up and Restoring with the ditto Utility Section 3.13. Backing Up and Restoring with the dd Utility Section 3.11. Backing Up and Restoring with the tar Utility Section 3.10. Backing Up and Restoring with the cpio Utility Section 3.9. Limitations of dump and restore Section 3.7. Restoring with the restore Utility Section 3.6. Backing Up with the dump Utility Section 3.5. Backing Up and Restoring with ntbackup Section 3.3. Basic Backup and Recovery Utilities Section 3.1. Good Luck Part 2: Open-Source Backup Utilities Chapter 3. Following Proper Development Procedures Section 2.10. Deciding Why You Are Backing Up Section 2.3. Wax On, Wax Off: Finding a Balance Chapter 2. Why Should I Read This Book? Section 1.3. Champagne Backup on a Beer Budget Section 1.2. Table of Contents Copyright Preface Part 1: Introduction Chapter 1.
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