Enfin pour ma part il me semble que tu devrais faire une sauvegarde de machine arrêtée (système uniquement) + les programmes spécifiques (en excluant les données)
une sauvegarde quotidienne des données.
une sauvegarde quotidienne des données.
Donc essaie avec ISO-8859 ou cp1252$Conf{ClientCharset} = '';
Filename charset encoding on the client. BackupPC uses utf8 on the server for filename encoding. If this is empty, then utf8 is assumed and client filenames will not be modified. If set to a different encoding then filenames will converted to/from utf8 automatically during backup and restore.
If the file names displayed in the browser (eg: accents or special characters) don't look right then it is likely you haven't set $Conf{ClientCharset} correctly.
If you are using smbclient on a WinXX machine, smbclient will convert to the ``unix charset'' setting in smb.conf. The default is utf8, in which case leave $Conf{ClientCharset} empty since smbclient does the right conversion.
If you are using rsync on a WinXX machine then it does no conversion. A typical WinXX encoding for latin1/western europe is 'cp1252', so in this case set $Conf{ClientCharset} to 'cp1252'.
On a linux or unix client, run ``locale charmap'' to see the client's charset. Set $Conf{ClientCharset} to this value. A typical value for english/US is 'ISO-8859-1'.
Do ``perldoc Encode::Supported'' to see the list of possible charset values. The FAQ at http://www.cl.cam.ac.uk/~mgk25/unicode.html is excellent, and http://czyborra.com/charsets/iso8859.html provides more information on the iso-8859 charsets.