Sure, if my active drives died after this swap, and I had to restore from the old, now backup, drive, I’d be back at the operational state I was at the time of the backup.
That tracks.
It still doesn’t run anything tho. It’s just a drive. It doesn’t house an os or anything, just files that aren’t restricted in any way.
What if my backup is just files and there’s nothing to restore?
Like say I take my existing drives, full of totally working media, and duplicate them, use the originals as a backup and the new drives as the active.
Does that count as a backup? No restoration involved.
In the spirit of this thread: no.
Recovering with the backup should put you back to an operational state equivalent to when the backup was taken.
I.e. if you’ve restored some files, but something is still not working then the backup failed its purpose.
E.g. the timestamps on the files might be important, do they need to be stamped with the time of the backup or the time of the restore?
Sure, if my active drives died after this swap, and I had to restore from the old, now backup, drive, I’d be back at the operational state I was at the time of the backup.
That tracks.
It still doesn’t run anything tho. It’s just a drive. It doesn’t house an os or anything, just files that aren’t restricted in any way.
IMHO there is no point backing up an OS drive, just rebuild it*.
Data is the important thing to back up because you usually can’t regenerate it.
* the corollary here is that you’ve backed up the configuration required to rebuild the OS.