![]() But for "time to market" reasons (we call it "minimum viable product" internally) I left out any logic to do this and just excluded Reparse Points.Īfter we shipped the minimum viable product, we had a TON of customer complaints of many many other areas of the product, so we worked nights and weekends on those areas, but to my surprise the Reparse Points never really came up very often at all, so we just worked on the things customers cared more about. I read up on a few algorithms on how to exclude the circularities. When I started writing the original client in 2007, I was REALLY worried about this issue (circular paths) and I thought it would be a future area we would need to work on. So filter out the unique paths from all symbolic links before scanning? or excluding parent pointing? On the Macintosh, you can do this by right clicking on the Folder you want to copy, and selecting them menu item "Folder Actions." ![]() We could come up with a nice web page that helps walk people through that with screenshots. You can use Windows "Task Scheduler" to run that at any frequency you like. On Windows, this might be something like one line of code:Ĭ:\Windows\system32\xcopy.exe /m src* dest For security reasons, Windows and Macintosh have been locking up the app execution folders tighter and tighter and tighter.īut what we (Backblaze) should do is either provide a little interface in the Backblaze client to automatically copy folder to folder once a day, or provide instructions on how to do this on the Mac and Windows for customers. We heard a few complaints about this 10 years ago, but it's been pretty quiet since then. Having to fuss about manually copying my specific program file data into some other folder just for it to get backed up This is frustrating to me because I'm currently desperate to get the hell out of Carbonite, and Backblaze was looking pretty great until I realized this one core limitation that sort of throws my actual backup plan out of the window. So while I appreciate Backblaze's stance, I think it's unfortunately very naïve to believe valuable data would never exist in this folder (even under modern circumstances), and having to fuss about manually copying my specific program file data into some other folder just for it to get backed up is in violation on their core philosophy here. Additionally, if you've ever used a digital audio workstation to make music for awhile now, there's a decent chance your VSTPlugins folder ended up in Program Files (by default)- and these are 1000% *definitely* worth backing up (some of these are vaporware and I couldn't redownload from the developer if my life depended on it). While it's true storing user data in this folder has been discouraged, it's not strictly enforced and there are still a ton of legacy apps that do it (like my versions of Photoshop & 3DSMax store their user prefs/configs/plugins here). Therefore, we automatically select all your data.īut this is immediately sorta wrecked by excluding the Program Files folder altogether. We believe you should not need to worry whether you selected all the files you care about, put any files in a different location on your computer, or added any new files that may not be included in your online backup. The Backblaze service backs up all your data. ![]() Just to skip to the chase, I've already read threads like this one that are now archived and un-replyable.īackblaze's philosophy on their website states
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