SnapRAID is a backup program for disk arrays.
sudo apt install snapraid
df -h
returns:
Filesystem Size Used Avail Use% Mounted on /dev/nvme0n1p2 ext4 1.8T 1.7T 14G 100% / ... /dev/sdb ext4 15T 14T 286G 98% /mnt/disk1 /dev/sdc ext4 15T 13T 1.5T 90% /mmt/disk2 /dev/sdd ext4 15T 14T 30G 100% /mnt/disk3 /dev/sde ext4 15T 14T 3.2G 100% /mnt/disk4 /dev/sdf ext4 15T 14T 56G 100% /mnt/parity1 /dev/sdg ext4 15T 14T 233G 99% /mnt/parity2 mergerfs 34T 24T 10T 69% /mnt/media
NOTE: This checks the mountpoints.
Edit the main configuration file for SnapRAID, /etc/snapraid.conf.
A basic configuration for three data disks and one parity disk looks like this:
# Parity files - stored on the largest disks or dedicated parity drives. 1-parity /mnt/parity1/snapraid.parity 2-parity /mnt/parity2/snapraid.parity # Content files - store metadata; should be on multiple drives for redundancy. content /var/snapraid.content content /mnt/disk1/.snapraid.content content /mnt/disk2/.snapraid.content content /mnt/disk3/.snapraid.content content /mnt/disk4/.snapraid.content # Data drives - these contain actual files. data d1 /mnt/disk1 data d2 /mnt/disk2 data d3 /mnt/disk3 data d4 /mnt/disk4 # Excludes hidden files and directories exclude *.unrecoverable exclude /tmp/ exclude /lost+found/ exclude downloads/ exclude appdata/ exclude *.!sync
NOTE: Modify this file depending on the disks in the system.