If everything is correct, you can save it by clicking on Next. Check the summary of your backup plan.I usually enable notifications only when a backup fails or a backup is completed. The next option is to allow email notifications of successfully completed backup plans. ![]() You can change these default settings, and you can also decide how to handle files that have been deleted locally, but here, I’ve selected “do not purge,” which means that backups will be kept in AWS S3 buckets indefinitely.Here I’m choosing No schedule for a one-time backup. You can see there are two options No schedule (run manually for one-time backup) and recurring (incremental). Now it’s time to run schedule a backup plan. Click on Next, and here you can see Backup Consistency Check.A license would also allow you to encrypt your data before it is backed up, and you can specify the S3 storage class for backup data. I use the free version, but if you purchase a Cloudberry subscription, you can also enable backup data compression to save bandwidth use.You can filter what you want to back up, but here, I’m choosing Back up all files in selected folders.Only the most crucial data in my Cloudberry backup folder are backed up to Amazon S3. You choose the data you wish to back up in the backup source.Click on Next, and now you will see the Advanced Options here, leave it as default and click on Next.Give your Backup plan name, or leave it as a default name. Click on next, and now, you can create a backup plan.Click on OK here, you can see Selected Backup Cloud Storage.Now you need to configure your AWS account through the access key secret key, give your specific bucket name, Display name, and account type. ![]() So, we need to create AWS IAM Programmatic User with S3 Full Access for CloudBerrry.
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