Netgear RN3138 Software Manual - Page 222

Source, Destination, remote, field, enter the remote host name.

Page 222 highlights

ReadyNAS OS 6.4 5. Click the Source or Destination tab. 6. In the Type menu, select remote. 7. Select the protocol. Item Description Windows/NAS (Timestamp) Source or destination is a share on a Windows computer. Incremental backups with this protocol use time stamps to determine whether files will be backed up. Windows (Archive Bit) Source or destination is a share on a Windows computer. Incremental backups with this protocol use the archive bit of files, similar to Windows, to determine whether they will be backed up. FTP NFS Source or destination is an FTP site or a path from that site. Source or destination is on a Linux or UNIX device accessed using NFS. Mac OS X users can also use this option by setting up an NFS share from the console terminal. Rsync server Source or destination is accessed using an rsync server. Rsync was originally available for Linux and other UNIX-based operating systems, but is also popular under Windows and Mac for its efficient use of incremental file transfers. Using rsync is the preferred backup method when you are backing up from one ReadyNAS device to another. Rsync over Remote SSH Source or destination is accessed using an rsync server. Rsync data transfers to go through a secure, encrypted SSH tunnel. We recommend using remote SSH when backups are being transferred over the Internet. 8. In the Host field, enter the remote host name. 9. In the Path field, enter the folder path according to the following: • If you select a Windows protocol, use a forward slash (/) to separate directories, for example: Backup and Recovery 222

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5.
Click the
Source
or
Destination
tab.
6.
In the
Type
menu, select
remote
.
7.
Select the protocol.
Description
Item
Source or destination is a share on a Windows computer.
Incremental backups with this protocol use time stamps to determine whether files will be
backed up.
Windows/NAS (Timestamp)
Source or destination is a share on a Windows computer.
Incremental backups with this protocol use the archive bit of files, similar to Windows, to
determine whether they will be backed up.
Windows (Archive Bit)
Source or destination is an FTP site or a path from that site.
FTP
Source or destination is on a Linux or UNIX device accessed using NFS.
Mac OS X users can also use this option by setting up an NFS share from the console terminal.
NFS
Source or destination is accessed using an rsync server.
Rsync was originally available for Linux and other UNIX-based operating systems, but is also
popular under Windows and Mac for its efficient use of incremental file transfers. Using rsync
is the preferred backup method when you are backing up from one ReadyNAS device to
another.
Rsync server
Source or destination is accessed using an rsync server.
Rsync data transfers to go through a secure, encrypted SSH tunnel. We recommend using
remote SSH when backups are being transferred over the Internet.
Rsync over Remote SSH
8.
In the
Host
field, enter the remote host name.
9.
In the
Path
field, enter the folder path according to the following:
If you select a Windows protocol, use a forward slash (/) to separate directories, for example:
Backup and Recovery
222
ReadyNAS OS 6.4