![]() ![]() As data volumes continue to grow by 40 percent per year, both businesses and individuals are looking for ways to safeguard ever-increasing stores of information.Īnd many organizations are governed by regulations that mandate backup procedures, which is only driving up demand.Īccording to one estimate, backup and recovery software sales are worth $4.7 billion dollars per year, and that’s just for enterprise users. ![]() The open source community offers a variety of tools that can minimize the costs associated with backup and recovery. We’ve updated our list of open source backup tools for 2015, and this year’s list has quite a few new entries that weren’t featured last year. In addition, we’ve dropped off several projects that are no longer actively maintained. If you know of additional open source projects that you think should be on the list for the next time we update it, please feel free to note them in the comments section below. Backup-NetworkĪMANDA, which stands for “Advanced Maryland Automatic Network Disk Archiver,” is a mature backup program which has been under development for decades. ![]() It is now maintained by Carbonite, and it provides the basis for Carbonite’s well-known cloud backup service. If you are looking to minimize the amount of storage space you need for backups, consider Attic, which includes built-in deduplication. It also includes optional 256-bit AES encryption and can transfer files to remote hosts via SSH. ![]() Operating System: LinuxĬlaiming to be “by far the most popular open source program backup program,” Bacula offers enterprise-class network backup that is “relatively” easy to use. ![]()
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