

That means that in curr will be the latest and greatest look of your entire backup and in dated back directories, you will have all of the files that would have been deleted or modified. What you will have is a "reverse incremental" backup. exclude "*.exe" `# Plus any other excludes` \

fast-list `# useful on bucket-remotes like B2` \ Make a simple script that looks like the following This is a good test since it will help you identify issues and make sure you're getting all of the files you want.

You can test what you have backed up pretty easily. If you don't want to mess with it, just leave it alone. You can just copy everything or you can use filters to control it. You will use rclone to copy from a source "remote" (which will be your local file system) to B2. See later for ransomware protection guide too Read the 1001 different guides out there including the ones written by Backblaze on their blog. Meaning if you don't use rclone's encryption, you can download your files with any other B2 compatible tool including the web interface. Also, especially useful for the novice user, it uploads your files in a 1-1 manner. What it is is easy, robust, and sufficient. Is it is the smartest, best, most efficient, most featureful, fastest backup tool out there? Nope for every single one of them. I could have small typos that make it fail but I can update it. WARNING: I am writing this without access to an easy test. This is not going to go into every single detail. This is really for u/TroothBeToldPodcast who is having some trouble, and u/TotallynotJohnSmith, but maybe it will help others.
