For your stack

Linux

Backup and recovery for Linux servers, headless and scriptable.

Illustration depicting how CloudIP supports Linux on the platform.

Linux servers run the majority of internet infrastructure but are second-class citizens in many backup tools. CloudIP treats Linux as a first-class environment: a systemd-managed agent, restic-driven backups, and snapshot integration with LVM and ZFS.

Bare-metal recovery uses an Anaconda-style ISO that knows about your vault.

Why this fits

What Linux gets from CloudIP

systemd agent

Runs as a managed service with proper journal integration.

LVM and ZFS

Snapshot integration on supported file systems for consistent backups.

restic engine

Open-source restic under the hood with deduplication and encryption.

Headless ops

Configurable from CLI and config files — no GUI required.

The story

How CloudIP shows up for Linux

A practical walkthrough of what changes when this audience runs on the platform.

If you are evaluating CloudIP because of Linux, you are likely already running a stack that integrates around it. CloudIP is built to be a friendly neighbour to Linux rather than a replacement: where Linux is the system of record, CloudIP defers; where CloudIP owns the operational record, Linux reads from a documented endpoint.

The most common pattern is a thin integration with Linux for the parts of the business it already runs, and CloudIP for everything else — accounting, CRM, HR, communications, POS, and backup. systemd agent is what makes that practical at SMB scale.

Because the platform exposes REST endpoints and webhooks for every meaningful state change, the integration with Linux stays under your control. There is no special partner program, no hidden surcharge, and no implementation gating — the same automation primitives are available to every customer on day one.

FAQ

Common questions from Linux buyers

Yes. Linux server backup is one of the named buyer profiles the platform is designed around. systemd agent and LVM and ZFS that matter most for Linux are part of the standard subscription rather than a tier upgrade.

Try CloudIP for Linux

14-day free trial with every module enabled. We'll help you import from your current tools.