Hi everyone. I was considering backup options to Glacier Deep Archive, and wanted to know:

  1. Which software do you use to encrypt client-side, obfuscate, compress and deduplicate the data before you send it to S3?
  2. What is the difference between Restore Requests (bulk) and Outbound data transfer and which one will I be using when I want to pull my data from AWS?

I’ll be storing approximately 8TB or so of data, which is why I was looking at inexpensive ways to back it up other than buying an HDD outright.

Thanks!

  • 7Sea_Sailor@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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    1 year ago

    Recently I looked into the same thing, since AWS caught my eye with their apparently ridiculously low prices. Then I found this (presumably indepdenant) review, that changed my view on things: https://b3n.org/b2-vs-s3-nas-backup/

    After reading that, I won’t go with AWS. I’m currently considering to abuse the OneDrive Office Family plan, which costs 99 $ a year for 6 TB of storage (split across 6 accounts), which comes down to 1,40 $ per month per TB. A price that I have not seen beaten by other storage / backup providers.

    • MigratingtoLemmy@lemmy.worldOP
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      1 year ago

      The problem with AWS is that one need to bring all storage from glacier to regular S3 (which is quite expensive), and then their egress costs are massive. I read more about it and completely agree that AWS is not worth it at all when pulling data in.

      However, BackBlaze is quite expensive. I’d be paying $50 for my storage, which is simply not how much I’d like to pay. At this rate, I’d get a 10TB Ironwolf drive in an enclosure from Amazon for my cold storage.

      TBH, I was looking at other providers, and Dropbox looks much less expensive at $20 for 9TB. It’s a lot more than the 8TB I thought I’d be able to get away with for Glacier storage, but at least it’s not $50. I will take a look at scaleaway, but I simply trust the bigger players to be around and keep my files safe than the smaller companies.

      Edit: Scaleway seems less expensive than Dropbox with their glacier option. I really hope I can trust this company because this is an excellent price and I might even be willing to pay as much if it can be kept secure and safe. Now, I just need to read more about the value proposition of Dropbox vs Scaleway Glacier.

      • 7Sea_Sailor@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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        1 year ago

        Regarding Dropbox: Where are you seeing 9 TB for 20 $? I’m in the EU so my pricing may vary, but all I can see is the Business plan for 16 € per month per user, with a minimum of 3 users in the plan, making it cost 48 € instead. Do you have access to something else?

        Regarding Backblaze: Agreed that 50$ a month is a rough bill to pay, that sums up very fast if youre counting across the years. But their storage is also a lot more reliable than one single hard drive stored in a bank locker, with them always checking their arrays and replacing aged drives.

        Regarding Scaleway: If im reading their pricing chart right, it would cost roughly 2 € / month / TB for glacier storage, and 9 € / TB when restoring from glacier to standard storage? A big questionmark for me is how ingress works. If I’m using this for backups in case of total system failure, i’ll want to upload differential backups (borg/duplicati) every couple days. How is that going to work with pricing, is that all running through standard storage driving up monthly cost, do I have to manually manage file history and deletion of older stuff or does my backup software handle that? Plus, you loose out on the instant file access that you get with Backblaze, or with something hacky like Dropbox / Onedrive. I’m still undecided which I value more, money or fast access.

        • MigratingtoLemmy@lemmy.worldOP
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          1 year ago

          My apologies, I seemed to have missed the per user part. I’m looking at $20 a user a year, which obviously makes it insanely expensive.

      • Burn1ngBull3t@lemmy.world
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        1 year ago

        Hello ! Just adding my two cents for Scaleway. I’ve used them personally for some services (and probably will add s3 storage in the near future)

        It’s seems pretty reliable in my opinion.

        • MigratingtoLemmy@lemmy.worldOP
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          1 year ago

          Really? Their pricing is even more expensive than AWS’ S3 Glacier Archive! I’d much rather use BackBlaze B2 than pay that much!

          • 𝕽𝖔𝖔𝖙𝖎𝖊𝖘𝖙@lemmy.world
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            1 year ago

            Tbh I don’t really bother with Glacier. It is a lot more expensive than it seems especially when you want to restore anything.

            I generally just use intelligent tiering and it kind of balances out.

            You might think “oh well I’m probably never going to restore from here anyway”

            I am here to tell you that’s a very foolish attitude.

            If you aren’t testing your backups you might as well not have them.

            My honest advice if you must insist on using Glacier is to start off in a normal tier, and keep it there long enough to have tested the backups before transferring it as-is into Glacier.

            It’s not perfect as there’s really no guarantee that data remains safe but at least it mitigates the possibility and reduces the cost to initially use standard tiers before retiring it to Glacier.

            • MigratingtoLemmy@lemmy.worldOP
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              1 year ago

              You’re right about testing backups. I will have 2 different backups, one for my config and the second for the irreplaceable media. Indeed, restoration from Glacier is too expensive for the data that I plan to back-up.

              I was looking at Scaleway’s Glacier offering, B2 and iDrive. How do you propose I test my backups? I could certainly pull in my config and test it on a VM, but how do I check that I have backed up my media? I plan to encrypt, compress, deduplicate and then ship it off.

  • lal309@lemmy.world
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    1 year ago

    Lots of answers in the comment about this particular storage type/vendor. Regardless, to answer your original question, rclone. Hands down. If you spend 30-60 minutes actually reading their documentation, you are set and understand so much more of what’s going on under the hood.

    • MigratingtoLemmy@lemmy.worldOP
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      1 year ago

      Thanks, I do know of rclone and intend to study it. I was just wondering if the likes of borg, duplicati etc could be used.

      • lal309@lemmy.world
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        1 year ago

        Can’t speak for those but I tried Kopia and it did the job okay. Ultimately tho I landed on rclone.

            • MigratingtoLemmy@lemmy.worldOP
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              1 year ago

              How much of storage do you use on B2? Does it not feel quite expensive to you? Even Wasabi is quite expensive, although it’s not as bad as AWS.

              I was recommended iDrive e2 by another commentor, and now that I look at it, it is likely the best product I have come across other than factoring in reliability. I have never heard of this company before, and considering that this is very important data to me, I’d like to have a reliable company behind it.

              • lal309@lemmy.world
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                1 year ago

                Well here’s my very abbreviated conclusion (provided I remember the details appropriately) when I did the research about 3 months ago.

                Wasabi - okay pricing, reliable, s3 compatible, no charges to retrieve my data, pay for 1tb blocks (wasn’t a fan of this one), penalty for data retrieval prior to a “vesting” period (if I remember correctly, you had to leave the data there for 90 days before you could retrieve it at no cost. Also not a big fan of this one)

                AWS - I’m very familiar with it due to my job, pricing is largely influenced by access requirements (how often and how fast do I want to retrieve my data), very reliable, s3, charges for everything (list, read, retrieve, etc). This is the real killer and largely unaccounted cost of AWS.

                Backblaze - okay pricing, reliable, s3 compliant, free retrieval of data up to the same amount that you store with them (read below), pay by the gig (much more flexible than Wasabi). My heartburn with Backblaze was that retrieval stipulation. However, they have recently increased it to free up to 3x of what you store with them which is super awesome and made my heartburn go away really quickly.

                I actually chose Backblaze before the retrieval policy change and it has been rock solid from the start. Works seamlessly with the vast majority of utilities that can leverage s3 compliant storage. Pricing wise, I honestly don’t think it’s that bad

                Hope this helps

                • MigratingtoLemmy@lemmy.worldOP
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                  1 year ago

                  Here’s my situation; I anticipate about 8TB that I will need to store reliably.

                  That’s $50 with BackBlaze B2 a month.

                  I can get 2 12TB drives for $500 total, and keep one/both of them in remote locations (may or may not be connected to the internet, so I suppose the convenience just isn’t there like the Cloud).

                  The supposed value of the cloud is becoming a bit difficult for me to justify TBH. No wonder B2 is reliable, but if I have 2 drives acting as cold storage in different locations (I will be encrypting the contents), is that a better idea than Cloud storage/BackBlaze specifically? I have been assured that the remote locations should be fine for the most part, other than for natural calamities.

  • CosmicTurtle@lemmy.world
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    1 year ago
    1. I don’t encrypt before I push to S3. Probably bad practice on my part. I just rely on AWS encryption to secure my data. My backups are low-risk (imo). That said, I lock down the bucket so that only my account can access the objects. Compression I use tar cjf (bzip). Protip: Once the tar file is made, run tar ljf $archiveFile > archiveFile-ls.txt and store the resulting file along with the tar file in standard storage. That way you know what is in the archive.

    2. Both. Restore Requests is to copy the data out from Glacier into Standard storage. Note that I said copy. When you perform a restore, your original object stays in glacier and AWS creates a copy to somewhere in S3 that you specify. Once the restore is complete, you can then download the copied object like any S3 object, triggering the Outbound data transfer fee.

    • MigratingtoLemmy@lemmy.worldOP
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      1 year ago

      Thanks, I’ll keep that in mind. I’d encrypt everything client-side since I don’t want anyone to know what I’m storing; including the Cloud provider.