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Differential backup size

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I see that every differential backup is about 1GB. I'm sure I don't produce that much of data every day. Can I see what actual files are in the particular backup?

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Are you running defrag or a utility which changes disk sectors. Acronis tracks disk sector changes--not changes to files.

A differential backup is all changes to the disk since last full backup. Are you also tracking changes via Windows System Restore changes?

If subsequent backups the same size, then it is tracking the initial changes and not recent changes as the diff has all changes since last full.

No, I don't run any defrag software (I used to run it but disabled lately).
What do you mean by "Are you also tracking changes via Windows System Restore changes"?

I changed differential to incremental and it is still 1G daily. How I can see what's inside that incremental backup?

You cannot see what is in a specific incremental slice, unfortunately. The Windows operating system creates and modifies a bunch of data (shadow copies of system protection, hibernation file, page file, search index, temp files, NTFS volume information, Outlook PST files, , scratch files of specific applications, etc.) and several of these files (like the page file and the volume information) are actually excluded by default in the backup, but others are not.

If you are creating incremental or differential backups of you system installation then those backups are going to be large in size due to the points made by the MVP's above. To reduce backup size it is best to run incremental or differential backups on individual folders/files or groups of folder/files that you wish to have regular or current images.

Typical daily incremental files should (if mine are anything to go by) be around 0.3 to 0.6gb in size on a W8.1 system with system restore (restore points) turned off and Windows auto defrag also turned off. Like the OP, my user data changes little day to day. I also have IE delete temp files on each browser close down.

As you can see, they are very consistent. The differential approach will always yield ever growing backup sizes, and once a large change is made, that reflects in every subsequent backup made. With an incremental a large change affects only one of the incrementals which is the one made following whatever changed on the system.

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