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My backup buddy
My backup buddy













  1. #My backup buddy how to#
  2. #My backup buddy install#
  3. #My backup buddy professional#
  4. #My backup buddy free#

#My backup buddy free#

It gives you 15GB of free storage for your entire account. Google Drive is a temporary but inexpensive solution for external backups.

#My backup buddy how to#

If that’s the route you’re looking to take, this article is all you need to know about how to take WordPress backup to Google Drive. Another option is to store on cloud storage. BlogVault stores your site backups on its own servers. We recommend you store your site in a remote location. This is because it’s easy to take a bad backup that is rendered worthless when you really need it. If you’d like to store a backup on your local computer or an external removable hard disk, you’ll need to manually backup your site, which in itself is risky. This still leaves your site vulnerable because everything is one hack away from being accessed by a hacker. If your web host takes a backup, it’s stored on your server. But, where you store your backups are equally important. Instances of hacking are few and far between, but if you ever do need it, it’s good to know you have a “blog insurance” policy that will get you up and running again.WordPress 101 is that backups are necessary. So If you’re running a self-hosted blog, please make regular backups of your blog. I had to chalk that one up to “life lessons learned.” …although it wasn’t malicious hackers in my case, it was my own stupidity. I wish it hadn’t ever happened to me, but yes, I’ve lost a website before, too. See my post on the best WordPress plugins for a more thorough discussion. At $5/month, it’s an absolutely amazing deal for the added level of protection and ease of use. With SiteGround (who hosts this site), their lowest hosting plan includes automatic daily backups…and then if you ever need to use the backup, they’re there to restore your site for you.Įdited to say: Since publishing this post, I have changed my backup method to VaultPress. I also like the fact that it’s supported – there is a support forum where I can go if I run into any snags in restoring to an earlier version of my site, and they’ve always gotten back to me within 24 hours when I contacted them with questions.Īnother choice might be to look to your web host to see what options they have for keeping backups of your blog. I like the fact that I can set a backup schedule (monthly, weekly, or daily) and it will run automatically, saving a copy of my blog to my Dropbox account without me having to ever touch it again. It backs up not only your WordPress database, but also all your theme files and plugins. Still, it’s free – and if you have more time than money, this might be a good option for you.Ībout a year ago, I switched to using Backup Buddy, for myself and my design clients – not just for backups, but to move blogs to a different hosting company, as well. I used to use a free plugin called Backup to Dropbox but found it lacking: in order to make it work properly on shared hosting, I had to go through the extra steps of increasing the upload memory limit on my server…and while that isn’t too bad to do once, on my own site, it was impractical to do it for all my blog design clients, as well. We simply erased all the files on her server and went through a 6-step process and BAM! – she was back in action. Once we remembered the backup, it was smooth sailing to completely restore her site. It’s something I recommend doing with all new sites, as soon as they’re live. In about 10 minutes of setup time, we had created a backup of all her files and sent them to her Dropbox storage folder. Luckily for Emily, we had a backup plan: literally the day before, I had installed Backup Buddy for her once her new site was live. But with freedom comes responsibility: it means you’re also responsible for all your own files.Įmily called her hosting company, and while they did have a recent backup of her site, it was a week old…and she had just finished a complete design overhaul of her site.

#My backup buddy professional#

If you’re blogging on self-hosted WordPress, you’re working with the best there is – you have amazing flexibility and control over your content on an awesome, professional platform. Obviously this is no way to wrap up a great week. I’ve been hacked.Ī malicious hacker had gotten into Emily’s site somehow and messed up the databases, the files – everything was destroyed.

#My backup buddy install#

No, as in – there’s a blank WordPress install showing up where my site should be. Just wait a couple of hours and check back. Like, it’s not loading? Sometimes that happens.

my backup buddy

This afternoon I got a phone call from my good friend and colleague Emily White.















My backup buddy