Forums | MacLife
You are not logged in.
#1 2007-10-25 11:56 am
- thumbprint
- giant member

- Registered: 2003-06-22
- Posts: 164
- Website
help with file backup server for small office
Hi, I don't know much about setting up servers, so I'm hoping I can get some advice 
I want to buy and set up a file backup server for our design office. We have 4 Macs and 1 WinXP machine. The computers will connect via ethernet, but sometimes we will need to connect remotely via home internet connections. Basically, we just want to backup our project files (which are graphic design projects, so they will be very large groups of files). Software that catalogs all of these files is a must, too. IView Media Pro is our *greatly-preferred* software, so I'm hoping there is a "server version" of it.
Anyway, we simply want something where there's an additional drive icon on our desktop when we boot up in the morning. We just want to double click the drive icon and type in a password and that's it. Nothing complicated at all.
I don't even know if we really need an actual server to do this. We can buy a machine, but NO WINDOWS. Mac or Linux is fine.
Any answers, thoughts, ideas, suggestions, or whatever else is appreciated 
Thanks!
=================================
I'm sorry I need this DISCLAIMER:
=================================
All my opinions are just that. Opinions. Chances are you won't agree. Chances are they won't apply to you. Even if we're arguing I'll still try to respect your opinions.
Offline
#2 2007-10-29 2:46 pm
- user
- Your plastic pal who's fun to be with

- From: I'm not getting you down, am I
- Registered: 2001-10-15
- Posts: 14555
Re: help with file backup server for small office
In our shop we use Retrospect to automatically make a nightly backup to a Firewire drive, including our XP PC. We manually place files in an archive folder and periodically run a script to copy the archive to DVDs. There's no need for a dedicated Mac for this, although it may be easier to run it on a less-used machine.
Last edited by user (2007-10-29 2:46 pm)
Aw, he's no fun, he fell right over.
Unless you become as little children, there's no way you will believe this crap.
Offline
#3 2007-10-29 3:44 pm
- sturner
- Royal High Poobah
- Moderator

- From: Carrollton, TX USA
- Registered: 2000-01-31
- Posts: 9900
Re: help with file backup server for small office
If you want a Mac as the backup machine, something like a mac mini would suffice. You don't need more than a keyboard and a borrowed monitor to setup. Install Chicken of the VNC on it so you can manage it remotely. Use some software like Retrospect. Invest in a large external hardrive to hook on to it.
If you want a shared drive, you are talking about a slightly different animal. The above setup will work effectively for a workgroup backup. Note that your backup capacity is severly limited with a single harddrive.
Backups normally have a rolling series of tapes to write updates to with a weekly consolidation of the entire user harddrive. That allows you to rotate several tapes during a week giving you a weeks snapshot of backups.
Or you could do it more expensively with removable harddrives that hook to the mini.
"There were places in the world commemorating those times when wizards hadn't been quite as clever [as to refrain from doing magic when you knew how easy it was], and on many of them the grass would never grow again." Terry Prachett
There are 3 types of people, those who can count and those who can't.
Offline
#4 2007-10-29 3:45 pm
- sturner
- Royal High Poobah
- Moderator

- From: Carrollton, TX USA
- Registered: 2000-01-31
- Posts: 9900
Re: help with file backup server for small office
What exactly are your requirements because you can have several different solutions depending upon your needs.
"There were places in the world commemorating those times when wizards hadn't been quite as clever [as to refrain from doing magic when you knew how easy it was], and on many of them the grass would never grow again." Terry Prachett
There are 3 types of people, those who can count and those who can't.
Offline
#5 2007-10-30 11:32 am
- thumbprint
- giant member

- Registered: 2003-06-22
- Posts: 164
- Website
Re: help with file backup server for small office
Thanks for the input folks 
Sturner, I guess I don't know enough about this stuff to have any more-exact requirements than what I listed above. The biggest thing is that we just want a drive icon to "just show up" on our desktops when we boot our computers, so the whole "Go/Connect to server/etc" should just happen automatically. If a window pops up when we boot, asking us to log in to the network, that's great. But anything less-automated than that will not work for the less computer savvy people here.
Anyway, what exactly is meant by a "shared drive"?
=================================
I'm sorry I need this DISCLAIMER:
=================================
All my opinions are just that. Opinions. Chances are you won't agree. Chances are they won't apply to you. Even if we're arguing I'll still try to respect your opinions.
Offline
#6 2007-10-30 11:49 am
- Basil
- agitator

- From: Terminus
- Registered: 2006-11-26
- Posts: 478
Re: help with file backup server for small office
If you put an alias of the network drive (or some folder within) in the start-up items it will mount when you boot up, assuming it is powered up.
Computers never do what you want them to do; only what you tell them to do.
Offline
#7 2007-10-30 12:14 pm
- mrreet2001
- Member

- From: NW Ohio
- Registered: 2005-05-25
- Posts: 2642
Re: help with file backup server for small office
Basil wrote:
If you put an alias of the network drive (or some folder within) in the start-up items it will mount when you boot up, assuming it is powered up.
if you use apple script you won't have to deal with the folder opening on boot.
2.2Ghz BlackMB---15" 2.4Ghz MBP(work)---Dual 2.3Ghz G5 (4G Ram, 2x 250G HD)---1.5GHz Powerbook---1.6Ghz G5 iMac ---500Mhz iMac DV
2.4GHz PC --- 1.2Ghz PC laptop
Offline
#8 2007-10-30 12:38 pm
- thumbprint
- giant member

- Registered: 2003-06-22
- Posts: 164
- Website
Re: help with file backup server for small office
Basil wrote:
If you put an alias of the network drive (or some folder within) in the start-up items it will mount when you boot up, assuming it is powered up.
So basically, I can set a drive on a computer to be the network drive... and then access it from other computers on the network? How do I set a drive as a network drive?
Yeah, I'm kind of a networking half-noob 
=================================
I'm sorry I need this DISCLAIMER:
=================================
All my opinions are just that. Opinions. Chances are you won't agree. Chances are they won't apply to you. Even if we're arguing I'll still try to respect your opinions.
Offline
#9 2007-10-30 1:30 pm
- mrreet2001
- Member

- From: NW Ohio
- Registered: 2005-05-25
- Posts: 2642
Re: help with file backup server for small office
you would have to set up a share point ... I would suggest sharepoints:
http://www.versiontracker.com/dyn/moreinfo/macosx/12512
then to automatically mount it on the desktop on login / boot:
create an apple script
Code:
tell application "Finder"
mount volume "cifs://computer-name/sharename"
end tellthe syntax of mount is:
protocol://username:password@server/sharedvolume
save the script as an app
put the app in login items in -system prefs-accounts-
2.2Ghz BlackMB---15" 2.4Ghz MBP(work)---Dual 2.3Ghz G5 (4G Ram, 2x 250G HD)---1.5GHz Powerbook---1.6Ghz G5 iMac ---500Mhz iMac DV
2.4GHz PC --- 1.2Ghz PC laptop
Offline
#10 2007-10-30 1:47 pm
- sturner
- Royal High Poobah
- Moderator

- From: Carrollton, TX USA
- Registered: 2000-01-31
- Posts: 9900
Re: help with file backup server for small office
Rereading your orginal post it seems you are asking not for a backup solution, but a network drive to be accessed by all members of your company. The words you use to describe what you want are important as they will point to different solutions. What you are talking about would be a shared network drive that can be accessed by everyone to place files. Backup is a specific process that usually isn't done manually.
You can do what you want with the equipment you have and possibly a large external drive. mreet and basil are pointing to the mechanics of it. I still would recommend that you get a dedicated machine to run the external harddrive.
For your other requirement, that it be accessible from offsite, well that opens other problems. One of which is security and internet access.
Do you have a broadband internet access point for your company? I assume that you do. If so then do you have a static IP address or is it a dynamic address? You can ask your internet service provider these questions. If it is dynamic you have to have a means to find it if it changes address, which it will, eventually. dyndns.com can help in this matter.
Setting up a VPN connection to your shared drive for external access would be the next step. To that end, you could do it yourself with openVPN or just hire someone to use an off-the-self solution to install a VPN server.
Last edited by sturner (2007-10-30 2:05 pm)
"There were places in the world commemorating those times when wizards hadn't been quite as clever [as to refrain from doing magic when you knew how easy it was], and on many of them the grass would never grow again." Terry Prachett
There are 3 types of people, those who can count and those who can't.
Offline
#11 2007-10-30 2:05 pm
- thumbprint
- giant member

- Registered: 2003-06-22
- Posts: 164
- Website
Re: help with file backup server for small office
Thanks sturner (and others). Yes I do want a network drive... and additionally a backup process... but let's stick to the network drive for now. Sorry if I'm not describing things clearly/correctly.
We would like a separate computer with at least one large HD. This (these) HD(s) would be network drives. I'll check out Sharepoints. So, I'm understanding that this separate computer does not have to be running any type of server software, correct?
Also, yes we do want the remote access, so I guess the VPN is the way to go. I will have a professional install this since I know very little about VPNs. Is there any software we would need to buy for this?
=================================
I'm sorry I need this DISCLAIMER:
=================================
All my opinions are just that. Opinions. Chances are you won't agree. Chances are they won't apply to you. Even if we're arguing I'll still try to respect your opinions.
Offline
#12 2008-03-04 11:58 am
- thumbprint
- giant member

- Registered: 2003-06-22
- Posts: 164
- Website
Re: help with file backup server for small office
Ok some more questions:
We are talking with a company about having them install a VPN. They are recommending that we buy a VPN box called SonicWALL TZ 180 Internet Security Appliance.
What exactly is a VPN box.... and why do we need it? We already have a router/firewall. What is this "VPN box" going to do that our router/firewall can't?
They recommend VPN Tracker for Macintosh as our VPN client. Does anyone know if that is a decent package?
Thanks for your input 
=================================
I'm sorry I need this DISCLAIMER:
=================================
All my opinions are just that. Opinions. Chances are you won't agree. Chances are they won't apply to you. Even if we're arguing I'll still try to respect your opinions.
Offline
#13 2008-03-06 7:45 am
- mrreet2001
- Member

- From: NW Ohio
- Registered: 2005-05-25
- Posts: 2642
Re: help with file backup server for small office
That would allow you to securely get to your files from an off location site. ie like at home or a coffee shop
2.2Ghz BlackMB---15" 2.4Ghz MBP(work)---Dual 2.3Ghz G5 (4G Ram, 2x 250G HD)---1.5GHz Powerbook---1.6Ghz G5 iMac ---500Mhz iMac DV
2.4GHz PC --- 1.2Ghz PC laptop
Offline
#14 2008-05-16 5:05 pm
- thumbprint
- giant member

- Registered: 2003-06-22
- Posts: 164
- Website
Re: help with file backup server for small office
Ok, so I loaded Sharepoints and I can now copy files to and from this "backup" machine's shared drive.
But
When I copy a folder from the "backup" machine to my desktop, it changes the permissions to read only. The "backup" machine is Tiger and my desktop is Leopard.
So I go on the "backup" machine and change the folder's permissions to "Others: read/write" and then click the "apply to enclosed items" button. Ok, that seems to work just fine.
But isn't there some EASY way to just automatically set all permissions on all files on this friggin' drive so that nobody has to worry about this crap anymore? We need to be able to FREELY pass files back and forth between the 5 computers at our office without having to constantly worry about permissions.
Last edited by thumbprint (2008-05-16 5:07 pm)
=================================
I'm sorry I need this DISCLAIMER:
=================================
All my opinions are just that. Opinions. Chances are you won't agree. Chances are they won't apply to you. Even if we're arguing I'll still try to respect your opinions.
Offline
#15 2008-05-16 5:53 pm
- thumbprint
- giant member

- Registered: 2003-06-22
- Posts: 164
- Website
Re: help with file backup server for small office
Heh, nevermind, I think I found my answer... the elusive "ignore ownership on this volume" checkbox sounds like it'll do the trick 
=================================
I'm sorry I need this DISCLAIMER:
=================================
All my opinions are just that. Opinions. Chances are you won't agree. Chances are they won't apply to you. Even if we're arguing I'll still try to respect your opinions.
Offline
