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wgrover | 2 years ago

Can anyone recommend a backup strategy for iCloud? Specifically, my Macs' hard drives aren't big enough for any one computer to store everything locally, so some documents end up living only in iCloud which is clearly asking for trouble. My ideal solution would be to regularly mirror iCloud's contents on my NAS (which is big enough to store everything locally) but I've never seen anyone implement something like that.

discuss

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aspenmayer|2 years ago

Have a look at SuperDuper![0] (The exclamation mark is part of the software name, as there are some other things with the same name, but the spelling above is correct.)

It’s shareware, and there’s a free trial. It’s fairly priced imo, and I’ve only used the shareware version. The paid version has some decent QoL features including ACL fixup, but I’m not sure how important that is? I usually run Disk Utility to try to fix those myself but I don’t claim to know the specifics of the paid features.

It seems to work fine with NAS volumes that are configured to play nice with Time Machine, but I forget what the specifics entail on that part. The .dmg backup should be more compatible with varied NAS setups; iirc it has something to do with ACLs being writable by macOS and associated software.

I like that it can make bootable clones of disks to other disks. It can also make .dmg backups of folders or disks.

No affiliation, just a happy user. If anyone knows of other software in the space, I’d love to hear about them, especially FOSS options.

[0] https://www.shirt-pocket.com/SuperDuper/SuperDuperDescriptio...

AnonC|2 years ago

The paid version of SuperDuper! can do incremental backups whereas the free version will always do a full backup and take more time. I’d say it’s worth it to pay for it since you get updates for at least a few years for that version. I use the paid version of Carbon Copy Cloner (bombich.com) though.

bradknowles|2 years ago

What you would do is the reverse. Store all your documents on the NAS, which could be mounted on multiple clients. Then backup the NAS to the cloud.

skydhash|2 years ago

Yes. Local to Cloud, not Cloud to Local.

As for Photos, I'd do a weekly or monthly export if I did not have the space to store the library locally (I do).

mindprism|2 years ago

Elcomsoft's Phone Breaker will let you download your entire iCloud as a local archive. Not free or even cheap, but it does work:

https://www.elcomsoft.com/eppb.html

ThePowerOfFuet|2 years ago

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Absolutely 100% illegal in the EU to force acceptance of third party cookies.

Even though Elcomsoft have a long and storied history, why should people trust their data to the software of a company which already shows such disdain for privacy?

astrange|2 years ago

Time Machine backs up files in iCloud Drive. (which is what Desktop/Documents is)

steve1977|2 years ago

But only the downloaded ones I assume, not evicted files?