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The issue came around with sharing - I shared my dropbox with someone else, they joined the share, but didn't have enough quota to get a copy of my files. They left the share. My files were deleted in the cloud and also on my PC.
I raised a ticket. They were useless.
I haven't used sharing, but think I'll stay away from that feature then.... just in case
My tuppence worth... Why did you try and upgrade the OS? Update, fair enough, but upgrade?
I have had CentOS updates bugger up live machines before so don't rely on changing OS to save your arse. Sorry but to dist-upgrade a critical machine without a full (and I mean tar the whole directory structure to another drive) is just a bit silly.
You have a point.
I tried to install HPLIP so I could get my printer and scanner to work. This destroyed the python libraries and knocked out half of gnome
A simple "sudo apt-get install hplip" fraked it totally.
In desperation I tried reinstalling gnome. This in turn fraked the rest of the machine. In a final piece of madness / desperation "sudo apt upgrade"
My tuppence worth... Why did you try and upgrade the OS? Update, fair enough, but upgrade?
I have had CentOS updates bugger up live machines before so don't rely on changing OS to save your arse. Sorry but to dist-upgrade a critical machine without a full (and I mean tar the whole directory structure to another drive) is just a bit silly.
I do backup my data and have tested a restore from backup on a virtual machine, so it is a proven backup. To that end I am not worried.
Rather my ignorance of piling all my eggs into one machine so that when it blows I lose my ability to invoice, and work all at the same time, is the thing I lament.
My funky new laptop has cured the second point, and I restored from a backup to be able to get up and running in under 30 mins.
Yeah exactly. The data is one thing, being able to use it, have a clean PC up and running from scratch, etc, is another. All I'd lose is some working time, maybe a few £100 of billing time. If I were responsible for hosting anything, who knows what those few hours might cost.
The answer is A. I've installed and reinstalled the client numerous times on numerous machines without issue.
*if* it did in fact delete your files, which I've not experienced in almost 2 years of use on 6 machines. Why didn't you just restore them from the dropbox web interface which is very easily done? Failing that, you could raise a ticket and dropbox would be able to restore them for you.
The issue came around with sharing - I shared my dropbox with someone else, they joined the share, but didn't have enough quota to get a copy of my files. They left the share. My files were deleted in the cloud and also on my PC.
I think you need to draw a distinction between a backup and a drive image. Drives are pretty chunky these days and I'm sure none of you is paying $1/gig to store a 500Gb image in the cloud. Rather you backup your data.
I do backup my data and have tested a restore from backup on a virtual machine, so it is a proven backup. To that end I am not worried.
Rather my ignorance of piling all my eggs into one machine so that when it blows I lose my ability to invoice, and work all at the same time, is the thing I lament.
My funky new laptop has cured the second point, and I restored from a backup to be able to get up and running in under 30 mins.
The linux server is another question as this needs an OS rebuild, and I am switching distros from Ubuntu to CentOs (thanks for the steer ClipHead)
This will take a lot longer.
At what point does someone come up with the cliché?
There are two kinds of people: those who take backups and those who haven't had a catastrophic disk failure.
I think there are 3 distinctions:
- Those who don't take backups
- Those who tell you about their backup strategy
- Those who have had to use their backup strategy in real life
Having stuff backed up doesn't mean it's easy to get up and running, I think most only worry about the first part. Myself included... but then losing a few hours doesn't leave me screwed in any real way.
Oh yeah? So what happens when you re-install the client and it notices that your local dropbox is empty? Does it (a) Copy everything back from the cloud, or (b) delete everything in the cloud thereby "syncing" with your local dropbox?!
The answer is A. I've installed and reinstalled the client numerous times on numerous machines without issue.
*if* it did in fact delete your files, which I've not experienced in almost 2 years of use on 6 machines. Why didn't you just restore them from the dropbox web interface which is very easily done? Failing that, you could raise a ticket and dropbox would be able to restore them for you.
Means I can recover all my files automatically just by installing the client should I suffer some sort of failure.
Oh yeah? So what happens when you re-install the client and it notices that your local dropbox is empty? Does it (a) Copy everything back from the cloud, or (b) delete everything in the cloud thereby "syncing" with your local dropbox?!
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