Advanced Maryland Automatic Network Disk Archiver
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Amanda, or the Advanced Maryland Automatic Network Disk Archiver is an open source computer archiving tool that is able to backup data residing on multiple computers on a network. It uses a client-server model and includes:
- the backup server and client itself
- a tape server
- an index server
All three servers do not necessarily need to run on the one machine.
Amanda was initially developed at the University of Maryland and is released under a BSD-style license [1]. Amanda is available both as a free community edition and fully supported enterprise edition. Amanda runs on almost any Unix or Linux based systems. Amanda supports Windows systems using Samba or Cygwin.
Amanda supports both tape based and disk based backup, and provides some useful functionality not available in other backup products.[2]
[edit] Major releases
The most recent stable release is version 2.5.1p3, released on February 6, 2007.[3]