Keep – backup system
You can not select more than 25 topics Topics must start with a letter or number, can include dashes ('-') and can be up to 35 characters long.
 
 
Go to file
TDE Gitea 4c8ff45748
Reset submodule main/applications/keep/cmake to latest HEAD
5 years ago
admin@f9148018b2 Reset submodule main/applications/keep/admin to latest HEAD 5 years ago
cmake@177a2281dd Reset submodule main/applications/keep/cmake to latest HEAD 5 years ago
keep Add CMakeL10n rules. 5 years ago
po Update translation files 5 years ago
.gitmodules Added common directories 13 years ago
AUTHORS Added old abandoned KDE3 version of keep 14 years ago
CMakeL10n.txt Add CMakeL10n rules. 5 years ago
COPYING Added old abandoned KDE3 version of keep 14 years ago
ChangeLog Added old abandoned KDE3 version of keep 14 years ago
INDEX Rename KGlobal, KProcess, and KClipboard to avoid conflicts with KDE4 11 years ago
INSTALL Added old abandoned KDE3 version of keep 14 years ago
Mainpage.dox Added old abandoned KDE3 version of keep 14 years ago
Makefile.am Additional renaming of kde to tde 13 years ago
Makefile.am.in Additional renaming of kde to tde 13 years ago
README Added old abandoned KDE3 version of keep 14 years ago
TODO Additional k => tde renaming and fixes 11 years ago
VERSION Added old abandoned KDE3 version of keep 14 years ago
acinclude.m4 Rename kdewidgets => tdewidgets 10 years ago
aclocal.m4 Added old abandoned KDE3 version of keep 14 years ago
config.h.in Added old abandoned KDE3 version of keep 14 years ago
configure.files Added old abandoned KDE3 version of keep 14 years ago
configure.in Rename kde-config to tde-config 12 years ago
configure.in.in Added old abandoned KDE3 version of keep 14 years ago
stamp-h.in Added old abandoned KDE3 version of keep 14 years ago
subdirs Added old abandoned KDE3 version of keep 14 years ago

README

Keep README
=====================

Keep is a simple backup system for KDE.

The principe is pretty simple: you choose a directory to backup, you choose the directory in which you want to backup it, you set up some options (eg. frequency) and it's done! Of course you can add later some other directories.

A daemon will after take care of automatically perform backups when it's needed.

When the time comes, Keep offers you a simple wizard to recover a previously backuped directory.

It uses rdiff-backup (http://www.nongnu.org/rdiff-backup/) as backend.