Hey all, long time no see Used to be quite active here a few years ago.
Anyway, I’m the admin of a relatively small forum. Our backups clock in at under 1GB, and will likely stay that way for the next few years.
I want to set up backups with a cloud provider that’s not tied to my identity, so that I can share login details with other forum owners. This excludes Amazon S3, which is our current solution, tied to my Amazon account. Google Drive would also be a little problematic (would have to create a special account, which requires phone number validation nowadays). Sharing a folder might be another solution, but that would chew up my Google Drive quota.
So is there a free cloud provider for backups that Discourse supports? I’ve spent the last ~15 minutes searching through threads, and it appears most plugins but S3 are deprecated or broken Happy to be wrong and pointed to a working solution.
Also, any ongoing work on building this into Discourse? Is it a lot more complicated than it seems to use Dropbox’s API and upload the latest backup file?
Are they admins on your forum? You don’t need to share your S3 login details if that’s the case. They can download backups in the Admin → Backups. Discourse will generate a secure link to download directly from S3.
It should be a lot simpler to create plugins for different storage providers than it was before the rewrite of the backup storage backend. I guess there isn’t a high demand for anything else than S3, so nobody created a plugin yet.
The idea is to have access to the backups off-site in case our hosting blows up. If Discourse could keep pushing the links to the latest backups somewhere (e.g. into a Google Sheet), that would be interesting.
I use rsync to my machine every few days, that’s the best option for me for now while keeping the costs really down. I keep 3-5 backups online with Discourse and up to 15 locally (sometimes I forget to delete the old ones).
A totally free option is kinda difficult. You could have a script that runs in the Discourse server and copies the file from there to any other place (Google Drive, Dropbox) with their API and a Cronjob.
Other option is to use S3 or S3-alikes as DigitalOcean’s Spaces (5$/250GB)
Efectivamente, fue muy sencillo seguir esta guía y configurar rclone para usarlo con una cuenta compartida de Gmail/Google Drive a la que nuestro equipo tiene acceso. Los 15 GB de almacenamiento son más que suficientes.
Usar el comando sync de rclone significa que solo se almacenarán en Google Drive las copias de seguridad actuales. Esto es en realidad mucho más cómodo que el plugin predeterminado/incrustado de AWS, ya que este no eliminaba las copias de seguridad antiguas ni los archivos de registro, y tenía que iniciar sesión en AWS para eliminarlos manualmente de vez en cuando.
Ten en cuenta que también debes ejecutar rclone cleanup antes de rclone sync para limpiar la Papelera. De lo contrario, Google Drive podría quedarse sin espacio, ya que los archivos en la Papelera todavía cuentan contra la cuota.
Por si sirve de algo, hay una configuración del sitio s3 disable cleanup: Desactivar la eliminación de copias de seguridad de S3 cuando se eliminan localmente.