Backup and Sync from Linux to a WSL live (per each change)












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I have some Linux (Arch/Debian) with only a CLUI (Bash) and a server environment (say, LAMP) with the following details:



4 GB RAM
2 vCPU Cores
80 GB SSD
4 TB Transfer
40 Gbps Network In
4000 Mbps Network Out


I host two websites (WordPress and/or Drupal) on this system.



I want to back up and sync this system live to my Windows Subsystem for Linux (WSL) but I don't want hourly/daily/weekly cron, I want that every change in the system would be synced to my WSL.



What I desire is very much like Google's Backup&Sync which I use in my Windows 10 / Ubuntu machines to prevent data loss in case a computer was unexpectedly and sadly ruined or stolen and formatted (in contrast to manual deletion of data after it was stolen where the data would be lost even in the remote syncing environment).



My question is how to do such live syncing (like Google's Backup&Sync) from Linux to









share



























    0















    I have some Linux (Arch/Debian) with only a CLUI (Bash) and a server environment (say, LAMP) with the following details:



    4 GB RAM
    2 vCPU Cores
    80 GB SSD
    4 TB Transfer
    40 Gbps Network In
    4000 Mbps Network Out


    I host two websites (WordPress and/or Drupal) on this system.



    I want to back up and sync this system live to my Windows Subsystem for Linux (WSL) but I don't want hourly/daily/weekly cron, I want that every change in the system would be synced to my WSL.



    What I desire is very much like Google's Backup&Sync which I use in my Windows 10 / Ubuntu machines to prevent data loss in case a computer was unexpectedly and sadly ruined or stolen and formatted (in contrast to manual deletion of data after it was stolen where the data would be lost even in the remote syncing environment).



    My question is how to do such live syncing (like Google's Backup&Sync) from Linux to









    share

























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      0








      I have some Linux (Arch/Debian) with only a CLUI (Bash) and a server environment (say, LAMP) with the following details:



      4 GB RAM
      2 vCPU Cores
      80 GB SSD
      4 TB Transfer
      40 Gbps Network In
      4000 Mbps Network Out


      I host two websites (WordPress and/or Drupal) on this system.



      I want to back up and sync this system live to my Windows Subsystem for Linux (WSL) but I don't want hourly/daily/weekly cron, I want that every change in the system would be synced to my WSL.



      What I desire is very much like Google's Backup&Sync which I use in my Windows 10 / Ubuntu machines to prevent data loss in case a computer was unexpectedly and sadly ruined or stolen and formatted (in contrast to manual deletion of data after it was stolen where the data would be lost even in the remote syncing environment).



      My question is how to do such live syncing (like Google's Backup&Sync) from Linux to









      share














      I have some Linux (Arch/Debian) with only a CLUI (Bash) and a server environment (say, LAMP) with the following details:



      4 GB RAM
      2 vCPU Cores
      80 GB SSD
      4 TB Transfer
      40 Gbps Network In
      4000 Mbps Network Out


      I host two websites (WordPress and/or Drupal) on this system.



      I want to back up and sync this system live to my Windows Subsystem for Linux (WSL) but I don't want hourly/daily/weekly cron, I want that every change in the system would be synced to my WSL.



      What I desire is very much like Google's Backup&Sync which I use in my Windows 10 / Ubuntu machines to prevent data loss in case a computer was unexpectedly and sadly ruined or stolen and formatted (in contrast to manual deletion of data after it was stolen where the data would be lost even in the remote syncing environment).



      My question is how to do such live syncing (like Google's Backup&Sync) from Linux to







      backup synchronization windows-subsystem-for-linux hosting-services





      share












      share










      share



      share










      asked 1 min ago









      JohnDoeaJohnDoea

      601133




      601133






















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