
+1 for Unimus We get it to pull all our core Mikrotik configs, Ubiquiti airFiber and Cambium AP gear. Works a treat and the summary emails of diffs are beautiful. If you are only looking at Mikrotik stuff duxBak might do what you want as well. Duxtel does good stuff but I haven’t looked at it because Unimus having all the other vendors and ability to push config as well. Cheers, Andrew
On 13 May 2025, at 11:37 am, Daniel Millar via Public <public@talk.mikrotik.com.au> wrote:
I use Unimus and rate it. It's got some great features and supports a number of different vendors.
Just use it on core equipment, i wouldn't use it on devices where I’ve got a standardised deployment (templated configs etc)
Ngā Mihi,
*Daniel Millar*
Merp NZ | dan@merp.nz | www.merp.nz | DDI: +64 4 595 6870 | M: +64 211 268 444
On Tue, 13 May 2025 at 13:14, Steve at Digitronics via Public < public@talk.mikrotik.com.au> wrote:
I have been using FTP successfully for many years, for both full backups and config changes.
-Steve
-----Original Message----- From: doatesy+duxtel--- via Public [mailto:public@talk.mikrotik.com.au] Sent: Tuesday, 13 May 2025 10:47 To: public@talk.mikrotik.com.au Cc: doatesy+duxtel@gmail.com Subject: [MT-AU Public] Router backup Management
Hi All, Just wondering how other people manage their router backups? We manager a few routers across different clients, and we have been doing email backups to a office 365 mailbox for a while to keep historic backups of routers (both an Export/rsc and binary .backup files) , but every time I go to set it up and wage war with modern antispam configurations, I think there should be a better way.
I was playing with the idea of creating a small custom SMTP server receive my mikrotik backup emails and store them appropriately (depending on client, router, and date, etc) and then do Git commits to keep track of changes on the .rsc/plain text backups, but thought I'd find out if anyone else has some good ideas. Also going down this route I can make sure all my backups go via VPN to our backup server which would be nice now that I think of it.
I did notice that Mikrotik have a Cloud based backup service (which seems to be a paid option), but I always like having control over my own data (and I'll spend days of time to avoid a $5 subscription) hence the hesitation there.
Anyways, would be very interested to hear anyone else's perspective on this.
First time poster too, so hope this kind of question is appropriate.
Thanks, Dave _______________________________________________ Public mailing list -- public@talk.mikrotik.com.au To unsubscribe send an email to public-leave@talk.mikrotik.com.au
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