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Signed-off-by: James Munson <[email protected]>
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james-munson committed Nov 21, 2023
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2 changes: 1 addition & 1 deletion content/docs/1.4.0/best-practices.md
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Expand Up @@ -94,7 +94,7 @@ If you're using `ext4` as the filesystem of the volume, we recommend adding a li

## Volume Maintenance

Using Longhorn's built-in backup feature is highly recommended. You can save backups to an object store (such as S3 and Azure), an NFS server, or an SMB or CIFS server. Saving to an object store is preferable.
Using Longhorn's built-in backup feature is highly recommended. You can save backups to an object store (such as S3 and Azure), an NFS server, or an SMB or CIFS server. Saving to an object store is preferable, if possible, because it generally has better performance and reliability. There is also the advantage of not having to mount and unmount the target, which can complicate failover and upgrades.

For each volume, schedule at least one recurring backup. If you must run Longhorn in production without a backupstore, then schedule at least one recurring snapshot for each volume.

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2 changes: 1 addition & 1 deletion content/docs/1.4.1/best-practices.md
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Expand Up @@ -94,7 +94,7 @@ If you're using `ext4` as the filesystem of the volume, we recommend adding a li

## Volume Maintenance

Using Longhorn's built-in backup feature is highly recommended. You can save backups to an object store (such as S3 and Azure), an NFS server, or an SMB or CIFS server. Saving to an object store is preferable.
Using Longhorn's built-in backup feature is highly recommended. You can save backups to an object store (such as S3 and Azure), an NFS server, or an SMB or CIFS server. Saving to an object store is preferable, if possible, because it generally has better performance and reliability. There is also the advantage of not having to mount and unmount the target, which can complicate failover and upgrades.

For each volume, schedule at least one recurring backup. If you must run Longhorn in production without a backupstore, then schedule at least one recurring snapshot for each volume.

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2 changes: 1 addition & 1 deletion content/docs/1.4.2/best-practices.md
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Expand Up @@ -94,7 +94,7 @@ If you're using `ext4` as the filesystem of the volume, we recommend adding a li

## Volume Maintenance

Using Longhorn's built-in backup feature is highly recommended. You can save backups to an object store (such as S3 and Azure), an NFS server, or an SMB or CIFS server. Saving to an object store is preferable.
Using Longhorn's built-in backup feature is highly recommended. You can save backups to an object store (such as S3 and Azure), an NFS server, or an SMB or CIFS server. Saving to an object store is preferable, if possible, because it generally has better performance and reliability. There is also the advantage of not having to mount and unmount the target, which can complicate failover and upgrades.

For each volume, schedule at least one recurring backup. If you must run Longhorn in production without a backupstore, then schedule at least one recurring snapshot for each volume.

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2 changes: 1 addition & 1 deletion content/docs/1.4.3/best-practices.md
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Expand Up @@ -94,7 +94,7 @@ If you're using `ext4` as the filesystem of the volume, we recommend adding a li

## Volume Maintenance

Using Longhorn's built-in backup feature is highly recommended. You can save backups to an object store (such as S3 and Azure), an NFS server, or an SMB or CIFS server. Saving to an object store is preferable.
Using Longhorn's built-in backup feature is highly recommended. You can save backups to an object store (such as S3 and Azure), an NFS server, or an SMB or CIFS server. Saving to an object store is preferable, if possible, because it generally has better performance and reliability. There is also the advantage of not having to mount and unmount the target, which can complicate failover and upgrades.

For each volume, schedule at least one recurring backup. If you must run Longhorn in production without a backupstore, then schedule at least one recurring snapshot for each volume.

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2 changes: 1 addition & 1 deletion content/docs/1.4.4/best-practices.md
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Expand Up @@ -94,7 +94,7 @@ If you're using `ext4` as the filesystem of the volume, we recommend adding a li

## Volume Maintenance

Using Longhorn's built-in backup feature is highly recommended. You can save backups to an object store (such as S3 and Azure), an NFS server, or an SMB or CIFS server. Saving to an object store is preferable.
Using Longhorn's built-in backup feature is highly recommended. You can save backups to an object store (such as S3 and Azure), an NFS server, or an SMB or CIFS server. Saving to an object store is preferable, if possible, because it generally has better performance and reliability. There is also the advantage of not having to mount and unmount the target, which can complicate failover and upgrades.

For each volume, schedule at least one recurring backup. If you must run Longhorn in production without a backupstore, then schedule at least one recurring snapshot for each volume.

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2 changes: 1 addition & 1 deletion content/docs/1.4.5/best-practices.md
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Expand Up @@ -94,7 +94,7 @@ If you're using `ext4` as the filesystem of the volume, we recommend adding a li

## Volume Maintenance

We highly recommend using the built-in backup feature of Longhorn.
Using Longhorn's built-in backup feature is highly recommended. You can save backups to an object store (such as S3 and Azure), an NFS server, or an SMB or CIFS server. Saving to an object store is preferable, if possible, because it generally has better performance and reliability. There is also the advantage of not having to mount and unmount the target, which can complicate failover and upgrades.

For each volume, schedule at least one recurring backup. If you must run Longhorn in production without a backupstore, then schedule at least one recurring snapshot for each volume.

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2 changes: 1 addition & 1 deletion content/docs/1.5.0/best-practices.md
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Expand Up @@ -95,7 +95,7 @@ If you're using `ext4` as the filesystem of the volume, we recommend adding a li

## Volume Maintenance

Using Longhorn's built-in backup feature is highly recommended. You can save backups to an object store (such as S3 and Azure), an NFS server, or an SMB or CIFS server. Saving to an object store is preferable.
Using Longhorn's built-in backup feature is highly recommended. You can save backups to an object store (such as S3 and Azure), an NFS server, or an SMB or CIFS server. Saving to an object store is preferable, if possible, because it generally has better performance and reliability. There is also the advantage of not having to mount and unmount the target, which can complicate failover and upgrades.

For each volume, schedule at least one recurring backup. If you must run Longhorn in production without a backupstore, then schedule at least one recurring snapshot for each volume.

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2 changes: 1 addition & 1 deletion content/docs/1.5.1/best-practices.md
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Expand Up @@ -95,7 +95,7 @@ If you're using `ext4` as the filesystem of the volume, we recommend adding a li

## Volume Maintenance

Using Longhorn's built-in backup feature is highly recommended. You can save backups to an object store (such as S3 and Azure), an NFS server, or an SMB or CIFS server. Saving to an object store is preferable.
Using Longhorn's built-in backup feature is highly recommended. You can save backups to an object store (such as S3 and Azure), an NFS server, or an SMB or CIFS server. Saving to an object store is preferable, if possible, because it generally has better performance and reliability. There is also the advantage of not having to mount and unmount the target, which can complicate failover and upgrades.

For each volume, schedule at least one recurring backup. If you must run Longhorn in production without a backupstore, then schedule at least one recurring snapshot for each volume.

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2 changes: 1 addition & 1 deletion content/docs/1.5.2/best-practices.md
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Expand Up @@ -95,7 +95,7 @@ If you're using `ext4` as the filesystem of the volume, we recommend adding a li

## Volume Maintenance

Using Longhorn's built-in backup feature is highly recommended. You can save backups to an object store (such as S3 and Azure), an NFS server, or an SMB or CIFS server. Saving to an object store is preferable.
Using Longhorn's built-in backup feature is highly recommended. You can save backups to an object store (such as S3 and Azure), an NFS server, or an SMB or CIFS server. Saving to an object store is preferable, if possible, because it generally has better performance and reliability. There is also the advantage of not having to mount and unmount the target, which can complicate failover and upgrades.

For each volume, schedule at least one recurring backup. If you must run Longhorn in production without a backupstore, then schedule at least one recurring snapshot for each volume.

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2 changes: 1 addition & 1 deletion content/docs/1.5.3/best-practices.md
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Expand Up @@ -95,7 +95,7 @@ If you're using `ext4` as the filesystem of the volume, we recommend adding a li

## Volume Maintenance

We highly recommend using the built-in backup feature of Longhorn.
Using Longhorn's built-in backup feature is highly recommended. You can save backups to an object store (such as S3 and Azure), an NFS server, or an SMB or CIFS server. Saving to an object store is preferable, if possible, because it generally has better performance and reliability. There is also the advantage of not having to mount and unmount the target, which can complicate failover and upgrades.

For each volume, schedule at least one recurring backup. If you must run Longhorn in production without a backupstore, then schedule at least one recurring snapshot for each volume.

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2 changes: 1 addition & 1 deletion content/docs/1.5.4/best-practices.md
Original file line number Diff line number Diff line change
Expand Up @@ -95,7 +95,7 @@ If you're using `ext4` as the filesystem of the volume, we recommend adding a li

## Volume Maintenance

We highly recommend using the built-in backup feature of Longhorn.
Using Longhorn's built-in backup feature is highly recommended. You can save backups to an object store (such as S3 and Azure), an NFS server, or an SMB or CIFS server. Saving to an object store is preferable, if possible, because it generally has better performance and reliability. There is also the advantage of not having to mount and unmount the target, which can complicate failover and upgrades.

For each volume, schedule at least one recurring backup. If you must run Longhorn in production without a backupstore, then schedule at least one recurring snapshot for each volume.

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2 changes: 1 addition & 1 deletion content/docs/1.6.0/best-practices.md
Original file line number Diff line number Diff line change
Expand Up @@ -95,7 +95,7 @@ If you're using `ext4` as the filesystem of the volume, we recommend adding a li

## Volume Maintenance

Using Longhorn's built-in backup feature is highly recommended. You can save backups to an object store (such as S3 and Azure), an NFS server, or an SMB or CIFS server. Saving to an object store is preferable.
Using Longhorn's built-in backup feature is highly recommended. You can save backups to an object store (such as S3 and Azure), an NFS server, or an SMB or CIFS server. Saving to an object store is preferable, if possible, because it generally has better performance and reliability. There is also the advantage of not having to mount and unmount the target, which can complicate failover and upgrades.

For each volume, schedule at least one recurring backup. If you must run Longhorn in production without a backupstore, then schedule at least one recurring snapshot for each volume.

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