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A place to share alternatives to popular online services that can be self-hosted without giving up privacy or locking you into a service you don't control.
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Why do you need to back up that server data? The great thing about joplin, is that the full content of your notes (and history) is distributed, like a git repo. As long as you have one device left with your notes, everything else can be bootstrapped from there. If your sync server burns down, start a new one and sync your notes to it again.
Genuine question - doesn't this leave you open to loss of data from database corruption or an app failure (or human error, accidentally deleting a bunch of pages, for example)?
I've used "sync as backup" a lot, and run into these kinds of issues (it's my current OneNote "backup" strategy). I'm just not familiar enough with Joplin to know what risks this exposes.
There is a fail-safe switch in settings preventing the deletion of local copy if the remote is empty
Well that's something anyway, though I wouldn't rely on it - sometimes things happen.
I'm sure there's a way to do proper backups of database data (e.g. Incrementals, full, etc), that would get the changes.
That's always handled by other teams for systems I've deployed, so I'm joy familiar with current approaches.
@vvv @jaykay my experience of joplin was that it was way to easy to lose everything if you don't understand its cryptic settings, and of course db corruption.
True, should've thought of that. Well, at least this gives me a chance to explore and learn alternatives :P
I'd rather backup a stack of plain text files, personally. So Obsidian for me.