Comments on: holy disappearing blog entries /2005/01/holy-disappearing-blog-entries/ Sarah Allen's reflections on internet software and other topics Tue, 19 Apr 2005 15:44:25 +0000 hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=5.7.1 By: Jennifer /2005/01/holy-disappearing-blog-entries/#comment-209 Tue, 19 Apr 2005 15:44:25 +0000 /wordpress/?p=151#comment-209 Another hearty thanks. The overview you presented of the solution was exactly the fix that I needed. My life was definitely flashing before my eyes as well.

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By: sam /2005/01/holy-disappearing-blog-entries/#comment-208 Tue, 05 Apr 2005 11:31:49 +0000 /wordpress/?p=151#comment-208 Thanks ever-so-much for this post. I’m much less tech-savvy than you, but I managed to fix the problem I was having with my blogs thanks to your documentation. Thanks!!!

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By: Scott Evans /2005/01/holy-disappearing-blog-entries/#comment-207 Wed, 05 Jan 2005 04:29:06 +0000 /wordpress/?p=151#comment-207 I like to couple my techno-savvy with an uncomfortable paranoia about losing my work.

So I have a really simple MT template (in the “archive-related templates” section) that writes XML versions of all my blog entries every time I rebuild the site. Then I have a cron job at home that pulls down copies of all these files nightly. So if my server burns down, I’m covered, or if I just switch blog engines, I should have an easy-ish migration path. (that second part is a lesson learned from my move to MT from a home-grown system: don’t throw away the raw data.)

The template is here:
http://www.antisleep.com/templates/backup-all-xml.tmpl

And in MT’s weblog config/archiving page, I use an archive filename template like this:
xml/<$MTEntryDate format=”%Y-%m-%d”$>_<$MTEntryID zero_pad=”4″$>.xml

The cron stuff is a little more complicated for other reasons but a simple rsync command will do ya.

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By: Jade Rubick /2005/01/holy-disappearing-blog-entries/#comment-206 Tue, 04 Jan 2005 12:34:03 +0000 /wordpress/?p=151#comment-206 This is the main reason MySQL is problematic as a database. It’s great for many applications, but it doesn’t pass the ACID test (http://www.archwing.com/technet/technet_ACID.html).

So I think it’s not your fault. :)

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