And no, my server isn't behind cloudflare, primarily because I don't have $200 to throw at them to allow me to proxy arbitrary TCP/UDP ports through their network, and I don't know how to tell CF "Hey, only proxy this traffick but let me handle everything else" (assuming that's even possible given that the usual flow is to put your entire domain behind them).
Dropbox and onedrive can handle backblaze zipping through and opening many files. The risk is getting too many gigabytes at once, but that shouldn't happen because backblaze should only open enough for immediate upload. If it does happen it's very easily fixed.
If it overloads nextcloud by hitting too many files too fast, that's a legitimate issue but it's not what OP was worried about.
It shouldn't stress things to spend a couple weeks relaying a terabyte in small chunks. The most likely strain is on my upload bandwidth and yeah that's the cost of cloud backup, more ISPs need to improve upload.
> more ISPs need to improve upload.
I was yelling the same things to the void for the longest time, then I had a brilliant idea of reading the technical specs of the technology coming to my home.
Lo and behold, the numbers I got were the technical limits of the technology that I had at home (PON for the time being), and going higher would need a very large and expensive rewiring with new hardware and technology.
> the technical limits of the technology that I had at home (PON for the time being)
Isn't that usually symmetrical? Is yours not?
Depends on your device capacity and how much is in actual use. Wear leveling things also wear things while it moves things around.
> For something you'll need to do once or twice ever?
I don't know you, but my cloud storage is living, and even if it's not living, if the software can't smartly ignore files, it'll pull everything in, compare and pass without uploading, causing churns in every backup cycle.
> Isn't that usually symmetrical? Is yours not?
GPON (Gigabit PON) is asymmetric. Theoretical limits is 2.4Gbps down, 1.2Gbps up. I have 1000Mbit/75Mbit at home.
But you're probably changing less than 1% each day. And new changes are likely already in the cache, no need to download them.
> if the software can't smartly ignore files, it'll
Backblaze checks the modification date.
> GPON (Gigabit PON) is asymmetric. Theoretical limits is 2.4Gbps down, 1.2Gbps up. I have 1000Mbit/75Mbit at home.
2:1 is fine. If you're getting worse than 10:1 then that does sound like your ISP failed you?
Of course I'm not modifying 4TB on a cloud drive, every day.