You can back up content, data, and settings from your phone to your Google Account. You can restore your backed up information to the original phone or to some other Android phones. You can't use back up when you set up a personal device with a work profile or for work only, or when you set up a company-owned device.

Your photos and videos are already available in Google Photos. But you can restore the rest of the data you backed up while you set up your new phone for the first time or after a factory reset. At setup, to restore your data, follow the on-screen steps.


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Your Windows PC comes with a one-stop backup solution, Windows Backup, that will help you to back up many of the things that are most important to you. From your files, themes, and some settings to many of your installed apps and Wi-Fi information - Windows Backup will help protect what matters and make it easier than ever to move to a brand-new PC.

Windows Backup is an easy, single stop for all of your backup needs. Your free Microsoft account comes with 5 GB of OneDrive cloud storage (and more storage is available if you need it), and backing up your folders syncs the folders you specify to your OneDrive account, making them instantly accessible on all computers that you use with this Microsoft account. And since they are synced to OneDrive, once you sign in to OneDrive on a new PC, those files will be available to you once again.

If you want to check and make sure everything is still backed up (hey, we all want that sense of security from time to time!), you can just open the Windows Backup app and it will show you the current state of your backup, or you can check on things at the top of the Windows backup page in Settings, at StartĀ  > SettingsĀ  > AccountsĀ  > Windows backup.

We have your back! When you get a new PC or if you have to reinstall Windows, when you are setting it up, just log in with the same Microsoft account that you used to make the backup here. We'll see that you have backups and ask you if you would like to restore one.

If you have more than one computer backed up, you can select More options and select the backup you wish to restore from. When you get to your desktop everything will be right there waiting for you!

Your most important settings will also be restored on your new device so that it feels like yours and is ready to go right away. For a full list of settings that are supported, see Windows Backup settings and preferences catalog.

Once you've turned off backup, if you wish to delete the data that has been backed up previously to your Microsoft account, you can visit your Microsoft Account Devices page , find the Cloud synced settings section at the bottom of the page and select and select Clear stored settings.

If you want to check and make sure everything is still backed up (hey, we all want that sense of security from time to time!), you can just open the Windows Backup app and it will show you the current state of your backup, or you can check on the state of your OneDrive folder sync at the top of the main Settings page; just open StartĀ  > SettingsĀ  and look for the icon.

We have your back! When you get a new Windows 11 PC, when you are setting it up, just log in with the same Microsoft account that you used to make the backup here. We'll see that you have backups and ask you if you would like to restore one.

If you have more than one computer backed up, you can select More options and select the backup you wish to restore from. When you get to your desktop everything you have backed up will be right there waiting for you!

If you have to reinstall Windows on your Windows 10 PC, you'll still have your folders synced to OneDrive and your settings synced to your Microsoft account, so as long as you log in with the same account you used to make the backup, everything will restore and you'll still have your files and settings with you.

If you want to stop backing up some of your folders, you'll need to turn those off in OneDrive. To do that, right-click (or long-press) the OneDrive icon in your system tray, then select Settings > Sync and backup > Manage backup, and turn off the folders you no longer wish to back up.

Afterwards you import this data. Assuming your backup is at the same location as before and the data on the same location you can simply start the backup. It will detect the destination already has data in it, and because the local database is missing Duplicati informs you about the need to repair your database.

HI!

Just a thing: If you restore data from backup and next import the backup definition and recreate the DB you waste your time because the direct restore from DB procedure create a temporary DB wich is throw away when the procedure finished. I suggest to use the method 2.

Advice: keep all above prerequisites in the same location as the backup, so in case of total data loss you have everything you need in one place. The backup settings file must be encrypted as it contains the encryption password of your backup files!

@gdassieu

This would be something for the wiki I assume, would do the others say

Ā GitHub duplicati/duplicatiStore securely encrypted backups in the cloud! Contribute to duplicati/duplicati development by creating an account on GitHub.

Although the exported backup jobs will help you if you need to get the backup configuration set up again, the backed up files themselves are completely described by data at the destination, which is also what allows the local database to be rebuilt (sometimes too slowly) from destination data, should the local disk get destroyed. Dated dlist files list files, and refer into the dblock files for data. How the backup process works describes this.

How neat would it be to eventually get this process automated (perhaps optionally) and in some way slipstreamed into the main backup set, in such a way that a database rebuild command could check first and see whether it exists, and if so, speed up the database rebuild by a factor of 100?

I tested a little bit and backed up my Duplicati databases in my profile. After that I restored them on a newly installed machine to my new profile. All jobs were available when starting Duplicati. So I decided to regularly backup my databases for having them present when installing a new OS or my system is crashing down.

This question specifically concerns the new Dropbox "Backup" functionality, and *not* the well-established normal cloud/sync functions of Dropbox (which have always work pretty well for me). So now I backed up an external hard disk (some 500+ gb of data) to Dropbox Backup -- this worked fine (almost, I needed two attempts but) now I have a backup of that disk on Dropbox Backup. This is nice, but here's my questions:

- Showing the folder sizes on the web interface, they are all smaller than those actually on the hard disk (as shown by Finder locally). To double check, I downloaded one of the folders back to my computer again, and there the file sizes match those of the external HDD again. Long story, are the file/folder sizes on the web interface simply off (too small?)?Ā 

- All progress information provided by the app while backing up, i.e., what it is doing when, how many files of which sizes are left etc. are *completely* off. Ridiculously off. Like "I am at 99%" (or even finished) when just 2/10000 files had been transferred.Ā 

- Now my most important question. A "backup" (e.g. of an external HDD) is for restoring the disk in case the HDD brakes or is lost, correct? But how the heck can I restore my drive (say, on a new HDD) from Dropbox Backup? I checked and searched but all I can find is the option to download (as zipped folders) from the "Backup" web interface. There doesn't seem to be any option like "restore my disk from backup X". The "download" seems equivalent, but there is a critical limit: you can download only like 25k files at once. So if you chose to backup a disk with a huge picture collection (say 1TB with about 350k files) you'd have a hard time restoring that disk from Dropbox Backup, is this correct? (You'd need to manually start a dozen of zip-folder downloads). Isn't there any simple unsupervised procedure for restoring an external drive no matter what's on it? Any information appreciated!

I'm trying to build a lab for testing with the configuration on my Netscaler. I haven't done much on the lab image, just downloaded the same version, mounted it on Vmware, added the IP and the user and when I try to upload the backup it says "Not authorized to execute this command". I tried creating a new superadmin user and nothing. I tried connecting to the Netscaler with winSCP to upload the backup via FTP and I receive the following error e24fc04721

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