Or, if you only wanted it mounted while backing up, you could add a command like:
mount -t nfs 192.168.1.1:/path/to/directory /mnt/backup
In the "Command to run before..." field. Where 192.168.1.1 is the NFS server, /path/to/directory is the location on the file server, and /mnt/backup is a mount point on the Virtualmin server.
You may find that SMB/CIFS works better, though, since you're talking about a Windows server. Last time I used NFS on Windows (admittedly years ago) if was sadly inadequate, but SMB/CIFS worked pretty reliably. Linux works fine with either.
This one is easy. Just mount them and treat them like a regular directory (there's no other way to talk to NFS). ;-)
All of the backup types in Webmin and Virtualmin can be configured to work with a regular file or directory.
And, of course, you can mount NFS filesystems using the Webmin Disk and Network Filesystems module.
--
Check out the forum guidelines!
Or, if you only wanted it mounted while backing up, you could add a command like:
mount -t nfs 192.168.1.1:/path/to/directory /mnt/backup
In the "Command to run before..." field. Where 192.168.1.1 is the NFS server, /path/to/directory is the location on the file server, and /mnt/backup is a mount point on the Virtualmin server.
You may find that SMB/CIFS works better, though, since you're talking about a Windows server. Last time I used NFS on Windows (admittedly years ago) if was sadly inadequate, but SMB/CIFS worked pretty reliably. Linux works fine with either.
--
Check out the forum guidelines!
ok, easy enough :)