
Sometimes you have to suffer through the hard way once or twice just to find out... there's an easier way. I've posted recently about commercial backup a licatio that trigger a backup when you co ect a target drive; I've posted on roll-your-own scripts that do the same thing. Over at MacOSXHints, an enterprising soul took the scripts from post #2 and enhanced/extended them. Great effort, everyone!
Then, along comes a comment to the scripting hint: "Hey, why not just use Do Something When?" Gosh, never heard of that, let's check it out... gadzooks! A preference pane that launches an a lication or document when a drive is mounted! Why, with that plus SuperDuper!, or Automator, or even rsync/r a hot and Platypus -- you'd be a backup machine.
So, the way to trigger backu on mount can be summed up thusly:
- Create your backup script in your tool of choice and save as a document or a let.
- Trigger that script when your drive is mounted, using DSW.
- There is no step three. There's no step 3!
Update: As Greg points out in his comment, with any scheduled or triggered clone to a drive, there's the risk of accidentally overwriting your 'good' data if you co ect the backup device to recover a file. Be sure to: disable the DSW pane before recovery; hook up your drive to a different machine; use a backup tool that requires a confirmation click (SuperDuper!), or one that does incremental/historical backu (r a hot, Chronosync, EMC Retro ect).
Also, Amy's comment points to a Mothership-sanctioned a roach: an A leScript Folder Action to launch when a drive is mounted. Again, the cautio from Greg a ly: you run the risk of accidentally overwriting your backup using any auto-launch method, so be careful out there.
[via MacOSXHints]
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