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Rocking the new backup

A drummer and guitarist are playing music

Blogger's new backup feature, using Google Takeout, offers more choices about how to safeguard your blog. ¶ 

And, it's a big change. ¶ 

Maybe my story will help you to devise a backup work flow that suits you.

If you are actively blogging, with new posts and/or theme modifications, you should have some system of regular backups in place.

Backup has changed. I recommend regular automated backups, plus spot backups when editing a blog theme.

My work flow, below, is just one possible way to use the new system.

The Takeout backup

Google Takeout can download a copy of everything in your Google account, from your chats to your maps data.

But if you enter Takeout from Blogger settings (Manage Blog > Backup content), the process will only download data linked to your blogs.

All the blogs in your account, at once.

These include the feed.atom file, which has your blog contents, and the theme-layouts.xml file, which has your blog theme.

This backup is live in the Manage Blog section of your dashboard settings as of early July. It replaces backup of a single blog-specific xml file.

However, backing up your theme from the Theme page still backs up a single theme xml file. This is useful if you are customizing your theme.

Backing up before theme changes is a best practice.

Timely and regular

The first time I used Takeout for blog backup, I opted for automated backup. 

Every two months for the next year, Google will send me an email telling me my backup is ready, with a link to the page to download it.

As someone who has tried, and sometimes failed, to remember to back up quarterly, the automatic backups are a real boon.

Drinking from the firehose

Even if you only have one blog, the new Blogger backup can be big. It includes every image you have ever uploaded into every blog, every video, and a lot of other things.

You might want some or all of these things, but for backup purposes you only need two of the files.

I already have copies of all the photos in my blog, so I do not need those.

My collection of blogs includes some test blogs that I do not need to back up at all.

But I have two active blogs that always seem to have new posts, pages, and sometimes changes to blog theme.

My workflow saves only the two files (per blog) that would be essential to restoring the blog. I archive them with all the older versions.

A list of computer files, with two circled in red
The only files I want.

Arguably, the archiving I do, in which I retain backups from years ago, is overkill. It would not be unreasonable for you to just keep the most recent backup.

But this is about me, right? And the two files are not large.

Two files per blog

Those files are going to be in the decompressed downloaded folder, which will always be called "Takeout" (unless renamed by your operating system, e.g. "Takeout2").

Inside that folder, another that will always be called "Blogs" will contain a set of folders with the names of the blogs in my account.

Inside each of those folders will be two files that will always be called "feed.atom" (posts, pages, and comments) and "theme-layouts.xml" (blog theme). 

In the case of this blog, I will rename them to something like "Blog_Too-Clever_8-25-25.atom" and "Theme_Too-Clever_8-25-25.xml."

The I'll move them to another folder on my hard drive where I archive all of the Too Clever backups. 

The big picture

I'll do a similar thing with my other blog, renaming and moving the files.

Finally, I'll just delete the rest of the download. And done.

This will save a snapshot of my blogs every two months.

My whole computer gets regular automated backups, including my archive of Blogger backups. So this routine is proof against most mishaps.

Back to you

Maybe a better plan for you would be something like "keep the full download and replace it with a new one every two months."

It would certainly be faster and easier, and very probably all you need.

Maybe you want to automate the backup to Google Drive or other service, which is an option in Google Takeout.

Maybe you have yet another plan.

I'm not modeling what you should do. I am modeling how to think about what you should do.

Unless you have stopped blogging—unless nothing is changing on your blog any more—regular backups are a best practice.

The charming musicians that illustrate this report are designed by Wannapik

Comments

  1. Thanks for sharing! I also did this as well.

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  2. This is why you are not using google Adsense on your blog

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    1. No, random comment person, that is not the case.

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  3. Thank you very much!

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  4. I was expecting something like good ol' wget which would download the website. Because Blogger doesn't work that way, I get it why wget doesn't work. But if I want a mirror of my blog locally, that I could browse through to find, for instance old photos used in old blog posts, how does Takeout help me?

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    1. The purpose of backup has always been backup, period, not creating a mirror or anything else. There has never been any way to create a true mirror if Blogger, which is a web application.

      You could consider making a pdf of your blog, or paying a third-party service to do that.

      Takeout doe include all he photos you have ever uploaded into Blogger.

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  5. Hi again Adam and thanks for your endless supply of Blogger tips. I have two questions and hopefully both will be simple to answer. The first is about the new Backup, that seems easy enough to set up and have done so. However the new backup is so massive as mine is 162 gbs and would have to download eighty files! The old way my blog would end up being around 400 mb, there's no way I could download the new files to keep a backup. Have always kept a backup of my blog and luckily have never had to use it but figure if I stopped doing backups Murphy's Law would kick in....

    The second question is part Blogger, part Chrome as if I did want to download any of the new files it asks me to login again which had never been a problem. It is now for some months back I changed my phone number and there's no way to update that info on my Google account. Every time I try doing so it says a text will be sent to my old phone which I no longer have. This has been an endless cycle of Google wanting to send a text to my old phone, how can you update your contact info whether it's your phone or e-mail? Sorry for being longwinded but I can usually get answers to my problems coming here and sure you can solve these two minor yet irritating issues in a few seconds.

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    1. Hi Nao, 162 GB, wow! I suspect most of that is photos, which are not required for a backup.

      As of right now there is no solution that does not involve either a big chunk of hard drive or a cost, as there is no way to exclude anything (like photos): you can whittle Takout down to "everything in Blogger," but it does not get more granular than that.

      I suggest bringing this issue to the help community, where it might be possible to bring it to the attention of the development team. (If anyone from Google reads this blog, they have never said so.)

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    2. Your second issue is something I am learning about for the first time. Apparently Takeout is a part of Google with extraordinary (as in "extra ordinary") security requirements.

      Most bloggers do not encounter this, but some, like you and the anonymous commenter from last week, are interrogated to provide additional proofs that they (you) really are the account holder.

      This can be complicated, but in your case I think it ought to be simple to fix: go into Google account security settings (not Blogger) and change the contact phone number. Then try again.

      If that does not work, please bring this issue to the help community. This could be a complex issue requiring a lot of back and forth, and that, not here, is really the place for such exchanges.

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  6. Thanks for your responses Adam and will bring that first issue up at the Help Community. It is true that my posts often have well over fifty photos if not a hundred at time plus many times have over 2,000 words so the posts are rather large. Am just hoping it'll be a moot point and will never have to use a backup but still have some old ones before the switch was made.

    Will bring that second issue up at the Chrome Help site but did try doing that four days ago. But that question along with about ten other threads done around the same time as mine were deleted with no reasons why. So let me try for another day to change my contact number but am not too confident it will work, you would think changing a phone number and/or e-mail address would be very common.

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  7. Wish I had some good news for you but that's sadly not the case. Three times I have posted my question(s) at the Chrome Help Center, each time my post was deleted! In the one done earlier today after the question about changing my phone number asked why my posts have been deleted and that went nowhere. I can understand if the answer was already posted and a link was posted to direct me to it. But that's not the case and nothing I've done has changed, it's just an endless cycle of if I want to change to a new phone number they need to send a verification text to my old number which is long gone.

    There's no other options besides getting a code sent to a phone and it is frustrating so hope I don't need to download the backup of my blog. The Blog Help site seems to often have good advice or tips on how to solve problems. Not so for the Chrome Help site, I've noticed over the years how little actual help you get there.

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    1. Don't post to Chrome help. Account access is not a Chrome issue. Post to Google Account help about the account access issue with Takeout. Post to Blogger help community about the size issue.

      But also, try my suggestion above to add a current phone number in Google settings.

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  8. What if you rename the .atom file? I found it to be smaller (in size) than the previous backup xml file (refering to the pages, posts and comments).

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    1. I suggest renaming the file, as I do, to reflect the blog identity and date of backup,

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