you or your business.
Your    first   step    in  formulating and learning    to  use an  effective   backup  strategy
is  to  choose  the strategy    that    is  right   for you.    First,  you must    understand  some
of  the most    common  (and    not-so-common)  causes  of  data    loss    so  that    you can
better  understand  the threats your    system  faces.  Then,   you need    to  assess  your
own system, how it  is  used    and by  whom,   your    available   hardware    and
software    resources,  and your    budget  constraints.    The following   sections    look
at  each    of  these   issues  in  detail  and provide some    backup  system  examples.
Why Data Loss Occurs
Files   may disappear   for any number  of  reasons:    They    can be  lost    because
hardware    fails   and causes  data    loss;   or  if  your    attention   wanders,    you might
accidentally    delete  or  overwrite   a   file.   Some    data    loss    occurs  as  a   result  of
natural disasters   and other   circumstances   beyond  your    control.    A   tornado,    a
flood,  or  an  earthquake  could   strike; the water   pipes   could   burst;  or  the
building    could   catch   on  fire.   Your    data,   as  well    as  the hardware,   would   likely
be  destroyed   in  such    a   disaster.   A   disgruntled employee    might   destroy files   or
hardware    in  an  attempt at  retribution.    Equipment   can be  stolen, or  it  might
fail;   all equipment   fails   at  some    time—most   likely  when    it  is  extremely
important   for it  not to  fail.
A   CASE    IN  POINT
A   recent  Harris  poll    of  Fortune 500 executives  found   that    roughly two-
thirds  of  them    had problems    with    their   backup  and disaster    recovery    plans.
How about   you?Data    can also    be  lost    because of  malfunctions    that    corrupt the data    as  it  being
written to  the disk.   Other   applications,   utilities,  and drivers might   be  poorly
written,    buggy   (the    phrase  most    often   heard   today   is  “still  beta    quality”),  or
might   suffer  some    corruption  and fail    to  correctly   write   that    all-important   data
you have    just    created.    If  that    happened,   the contents    of  your    data    file    would
be  indecipherable  garbage of  no  use to  anyone.
All these   accidents   and other   disasters   offer   important   reasons for having  a
good    backup  strategy;   however,    the most    frequent    cause   of  data    loss    is  human
error.  Who among   us  has not overwritten a   new file    with    an  older   version or
unintentionally deleted a   needed  file?   This    applies not only    to  data    files,  but
also    to  configuration   files   and binaries.   In  mail    lists,  Usenet  newsgroup
postings,   and online  forums, stories about   deleting    entire  directories such    as
/home,  /usr,   or  /lib    are all too common. On  a   stable  server  that    is  not
frequently  modified    or  updated,    you can choose  to  mount   /usr    read-only   to