The Ubuntu backup is a simple, yet powerful backup tool that comes included with Ubuntu.
It offers the power of rsync with incremental backups, encryption, scheduling, and support for remote services.
You can quickly revert files to previous versions or restore missing files from a file manager window.
It has a graphical frontend similar to Duplicity. It offers the power of rsync with a simple interface.
Backup is located in the System Settings window, which you can access from the gear-shaped menu on the panel.
It is named Backup in the System group of icons.
You can also launch it by searching for Backup from the Dash.
Backup’s main screen gives a summary of your backup settings. By default, it backs up your Home directory and ignores the Trash and Downloads folders. It wants to put the backup in your Ubuntu One account.
From the Storage pane, you can choose where the utility puts your backups. If you back up online to Ubuntu One - and have an Ubuntu One account on your computer. Your backup is accessible from any computer. You can restore your personal data on any Linux system with this. You can also back up to other types of media, including remote servers, FTP, SSH, WebDAV, and Windows shared folders. Backup’s encryption protects your data with a password that you set.
The local folder option can back up your data to an external drive or other local storage devices.
From the Folders pane, you can change the folders that the utility backs up to. If you have important files in another folder like downloads? Remove it from the Folders to ignore list. If you do not want to back up the whole Home folder. Delete the Home folder from the Folders to back up list and add the folders that you want.
From the Schedule window, you can set it to automatically back up daily, weekly, biweekly, or monthly. You can also tell it how long to keep the old backups - anywhere from at least a week to at least a year or forever. The utility automatically deletes old backups when it needs space.
Once you have got it set up, you can perform your first backup by clicking the Back Up Now button on the Overview pane. If you want to enable automatic backups. Enable the automatic backup slider. The utility starts your first backup when you enable automatic backups.
The backup process may take a while, especially the first time it is run. However, each subsequent backup is faster. Backup performs incremental backups, which means that it only records the changes from the last backup. That is rsync in action.
You are asked to password-protect your backup. The password that you use here encrypts your data so that no one else can view it. This is important if you are storing your backup online.
Click the Restore button in the utility window to start restoring a backup. The backup automatically selects the folder that you last backed up to, but you can select any other folder that contains a backup.
Select the date that the backup was taken.
Backup restores the files to their original locations by default. You can also have it restore files to a specific folder if you do not want to overwrite the existing files.
If you set a password while creating the backup, you have to enter it to restore files.
You can also restore individual files from a backup. From a Nautilus file manager window, select a file, click the Edit menu, and select Revert to Previous Version.
You go through the same restore process, but only your selected files are restored to its previous state.
You can also restore files that have been deleted by clicking the File menu and selecting Restore Missing Files.
The backup scans your backups for files that were in the current folder, but are not anymore. You can restore them with a few clicks.
Backups are essential - every computer user should do them.