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Re: Duplicati
Posted: Wed Mar 11, 2015 11:12 am
by Joe
procyon wrote:So, yes, you have to use the parameter --portable-mode every time in order to have a portable Duplicati.
Thanks! And never mind, we all make mistakes like that some time or the other.
Re: Duplicati
Posted: Mon Aug 08, 2016 4:50 pm
by webfork
Although there hasn't been a Duplicati release in years now, there's lots of
developer activity so this is far from a dead project.
Re: Duplicati
Posted: Fri Oct 13, 2017 2:32 pm
by webfork
webfork wrote:Although there hasn't been a Duplicati release in years now, there's lots of
developer activity so this is far from a dead project.
New version out! Yes!
http://www.softpedia.com/get/System/Bac ... cati.shtml
I tried using the old system for portability by downloading the ZIP file version with a new EXE file:
Duplicati.GUI.TrayIcon.exe --portable-mode
It seemed to save settings to the data folder but I didn't run an exhaustive test. As this program uses a web browser for it's program interface, it seems unlikely to qualify as stealth.
Resources: 27 megs while running, plus whatever's needed to run the web browser to interface with the server.
Re: Duplicati
Posted: Wed Apr 17, 2019 3:53 am
by Midas
Topic update:
Duplicati now has its own website at
https://www.duplicati.com/. Acording to the download page, the latest release is Beta v2.0.45, dated 2018-11-28 (no global changelog; for release changes, see
https://github.com/duplicati/duplicati/releases or
https://forum.duplicati.com/c/releases).
There's a download link on the new homepage for v1.3.4, marked as "
not supported", pointing to the
old site, where the download link then silently fails.
Incidently, that last link points back to the same server providing more recent versions (
https://updates.duplicati.com/beta/ and
https://updates.duplicati.com/canary/), but any link pointing to
http://updates.duplicati.com/1.3.x/ is dead, so it looks like the site maintainers either deleted or moved the old versions.
The WayBackMachine didn't keep the download either so, for now, Softpedia looks like the best source -- as noted by
appsuser: