Encrypted bandwidth-efficient backup using the rsync algorithm
Duplicity incrementally backs up files and directories by encrypting
tar-format volumes with GnuPG and uploading them to a remote (or local)
file server. In theory many remote backends are possible; right now
local, ssh/scp, ftp, rsync, HSI, WebDAV, and Amazon S3 backends are
written.
Because duplicity uses librsync, the incremental archives are space
efficient and only record the parts of files that have changed since
the last backup. Currently duplicity supports deleted files, full unix
permissions, directories, symbolic links, fifos, etc., but not hard
links.
- Sources inherited from project openSUSE:Leap:42.2
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osc -A https://api.opensuse.org checkout openSUSE:Leap:42.2:Ports/duplicity && cd $_
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Source Files
Filename | Size | Changed |
---|---|---|
duplicity-0.7.10.tar.gz | 0001543523 1.47 MB | |
duplicity-remove_shebang.patch | 0000000293 293 Bytes | |
duplicity-rpmlintrc | 0000000053 53 Bytes | |
duplicity.changes | 0000024285 23.7 KB | |
duplicity.spec | 0000002970 2.9 KB |
Revision 8 (latest revision is 9)
Ludwig Nussel (lnussel_factory)
accepted
request 421212
from
Wolfgang Rosenauer (wrosenauer)
(revision 8)
- update to 0.7.10 * fixed several issues - Restore from S3 fails with --with-prefix-archive if prefix includes '/' * Changes for connecting to IBM Bluemix ObjectStorage. See man page * Allow duplicity to create remote folder
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