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  2. Incremental backup - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Incremental_backup

    A synthetic backup is an alternative method of creating full backups. Instead of reading and backing up data directly from the disk, it will synthesize the data from the previous full backup (either a regular full backup for the first backup, or the previous synthetic full backup) and the periodic incremental backups.

  3. Glossary of backup terms - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Glossary_of_backup_terms

    The disadvantage is longer recovery times, as the latest full backup, and all incremental backups up to the date of data loss need to be restored. Media spanning. sometimes a backup job is larger than a single destination storage medium. In this case, the job must be broken up into fragments that can be distributed across multiple storage media.

  4. Continuous data protection - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Continuous_data_protection

    In some situations, continuous data protection requires less space on backup media (usually disk) than traditional backup. Most continuous data protection solutions save byte or block-level differences rather than file-level differences. This means that if one byte of a 100 GB file is modified, only the changed byte or block is backed up.

  5. Acronis True Image - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Acronis_True_Image

    Full: Creates a new backup archive every time and backs up everything specified by the user. Differential: Backups only backup the changes made since the latest full backup. Incremental: Only backs up the changes made since the last incremental backup. Incremental backups are a chain and loss of any one of the incremental backups renders the ...

  6. Backup software - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Backup_software

    Backup solutions generally support differential backups and incremental backups in addition to full backups, so only material that is newer or changed compared to the backed up data is actually backed up. The effect of these is to increase significantly the speed of the backup process over slow networks while decreasing space requirements.

  7. Differential backup - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Differential_backup

    A differential backup is a type of data backup that preserves data, saving only the difference in the data since the last full backup.The rationale in this is that, since changes to data are generally few compared to the entire amount of data in the data repository, the amount of time required to complete the backup will be smaller than if a full backup was performed every time that the ...

  8. Backup - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Backup

    The backup data needs to be stored, requiring a backup rotation scheme, [4] which is a system of backing up data to computer media that limits the number of backups of different dates retained separately, by appropriate re-use of the data storage media by overwriting of backups no longer needed. The scheme determines how and when each piece of ...

  9. Backup rotation scheme - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Backup_rotation_scheme

    Grandfather-father-son backup (GFS) is a common rotation scheme for backup media, [1] in which there are three or more backup cycles, such as daily, weekly and monthly. The daily backups are rotated on a 3-months basis using a FIFO system as above. The weekly backups are similarly rotated on a bi-yearly basis, and the monthly backup on a yearly ...