

As such, when you’re looking for documentation on setting up Wasabi and Duplicacy, you’ll often find confusing information that doesn’t map to what you’re doing. Understandably, the better documentation is for the commercial version instead of the open source version. Second, there is a commercial product that has a GUI for configuration. The only documentation you’ll find for that is on the community forum, as they moved all documentation off of GitHub in favor of the forum. First, there is an open source core and CLI application that you can find on GitHub licenses as free for personal use with a commercial fee. The first thing that you should understand is that Duplicacy is two separate products.
#Data duplicacy how to
You’ll leave this post with an understanding of how to set up an off-site backups repository using these two tools. However, combining the two isn’t very clear due to lacking documentation. Wasabi offers great pricing that allows you to easily calculate how much it will cost to back up your data.

It supports many back ends including Wasabi, a fast, S3-compatible cloud storage provider. Duplicacy is a backup tool written in Go. There are many choices to look through for off-site backups: what software should I use? What storage provider? This post describes how I set up Duplicacy and Wasabi as my off-site backups solution. I recently had my first ever hard drive failure and have since been looking into off-site backups.
