Beta: This role is in beta status.
Restic is a versatile Go based backup solution which supports multiple backends, deduplication and incremental backups.
This role installs restic on a client, configures the backup repositories and optionally sets up cronjobs to run said backups. Aditionally, it will setup executable scripts to run a Backup manually.
This Project borrows heavily from the donat-b/ansible-restic ansible role. We try to make this role more semver deployment friendly by allowing to use version tags and keep these snapshots and adapting the automated backup definition for use with windows systems.
This role will create a backup script and a file with credentials usable with the source
command on linux for each backup in the restic_script_dir
.
These executable scripts can be used to manually trigger a backup action, but
are also used for automated backups if you have set restic_create_cron
to true.
make sure to not change the files manually, as this can interfere with your
backups quite a bit.
on Linux, if you want to take a manual snapshot, you can run the backup like this:
$ /path/to/backup/script/backup-example.sh
by default, such a snapshot will be given the tag manual
, so you can distinguish
them from automatically created snapshots. You can also append more tags by
simply appending them:
$ /path/to/backup/script/backup-example.sh --tag deployment
In order to make use of defined backups, they can be automatically setup as scheduled tasks. You have to be aware of the fact that (on linux systems at least) you need to have administrator permissions for configuring such an action.
If you cannot use the automatic creation of the tasks, you can still make use
of the generated scripts. If you are for example on a shared hosting server
and can define a cronjob via a webinterface, simply add each backup file to
be executed. Make sure to prefix the command with CRON=true
to imply that the
snapshot was created via a scheduled task:
CRON=true /path/to/backup/script/backup-example.sh
ansible-galaxy install arillso.restic
- bzip2
Name | Default | Description |
---|---|---|
restic_url |
undefined |
The URL to download restic from. Use this variable to overwrite the default |
restic_version |
'0.11.0' |
The version of Restic to install |
restic_download_path |
'/opt/restic' |
Download location for the restic binary |
restic_install_path |
'/usr/local/bin' |
Install location for the restic binary |
restic_script_dir |
'~/restic' |
Location of the generated backup scripts |
restic_repos |
{} |
A dictionary of repositories where snapshots are stored |
restic_backups |
{} (or [] ) |
A list of dictionaries specifying the files and directories to be backed up |
restic_create_cron |
false |
Should a cronjob be created for each backup |
restic_dir_owner |
'{{ansible_user}}' |
The owner of all created dirs |
restic_dir_group |
'{{ansible_user}}' |
The group of all created dirs |
Restic stores data in repositories. You have to specify at least one repository to be able to use this role. A repository can be local or remote (see the official documentation).
Using an SFTP repository
For using an SFTP backend, the user needs passwordless access to the host. Please make sure to distribute ssh keys accordingly, as this is outside of the scope of this role.
Available variables:
Name | Required | Description |
---|---|---|
location |
yes | The location of the Backend. Currently, Local, SFTP, S3 and B2 are supported |
password |
yes | The password used to secure this repository |
init |
no | Describes if the repository should be initialized or not. Use false if you are backuping to an already existing repo. |
aws_access_key |
no | The access key for the S3 backend |
aws_secret_access_key |
no | The secret access key for the S3 backend |
aws_default_region |
no | The desired region for the S3 backend |
b2_account_id |
no | The account ID for Backblaze B2 backend |
b2_account_key |
no | The account key for Backblaze B2 backend |
Example:
restic_repos:
local:
location: /srv/restic-repo
password: securepassword1
init: true
remote:
location: sftp:user@host:/srv/restic-repo
password: securepassword2
init: true
A backup specifies a directory or file to be backuped. A backup is written to a
Repository defined in restic_repos
.
Available variables:
Name | Required (Default) | Description |
---|---|---|
name |
yes | The name of this backup. Used together with pruning and scheduling and needs to be unique. |
repo |
yes | The name of the repository to backup to. |
src |
yes | The source directory or file |
stdin |
no | Is this backup created from a stdin? |
stdin_cmd |
no (yes if stdin == true ) |
The command to produce the stdin. |
stdin_filename |
no | The filename used in the repository. |
tags |
no | Array of default tags |
keep_last |
no | If set, only keeps the last n snapshots. |
keep_hourly |
no | If set, only keeps the last n hourly snapshots. |
keep_daily |
no | If set, only keeps the last n daily snapshots. |
keep_weekly |
no | If set, only keeps the last n weekly snapshots. |
keep_monthly |
no | If set, only keeps the last n monthly snapshots. |
keep_yearly |
no | If set, only keeps the last n yearly snapshots. |
keep_within |
no | If set, only keeps snapshots in this time period. |
keep_tag |
no | If set, keep snapshots with this tags. Make sure to specify a list. |
prune |
no (false ) |
If true , the restic forget command in the script has the --prune option appended. |
scheduled |
no (false ) |
If restic_create_cron is set to true , this backup is scheduled. |
schedule_minute |
no (* ) |
Minute when the job is run. ( 0-59, *, */2, etc ) |
schedule_hour |
no (* ) |
Hour when the job is run. ( 0-23, *, */2, etc ) |
schedule_weekday |
no (* ) |
Weekday when the job is run. ( 0-6 for Sunday-Saturday, *, etc ) |
schedule_month |
no (* ) |
Month when the job is run. ( 1-12, *, */2, etc ) |
exclude |
no ({} ) |
Allows you to specify files to exclude. See Exclude for reference. |
Example:
restic_backups:
data:
name: data
repo: remove
src: /path/to/data
scheduled: true
schedule_hour: 3
You can also specify restic_backups as an array, which is a legacy feature and might be deprecated in the future. currently, the name key is used for namint the access and backup files
the exclude
key on a backup allows you to specify multiple files to exclude or
files to look for filenames to be excluded. You can specify the following keys:
exclude:
exclude_cache: true
exclude:
- /path/to/file
iexclude:
- /path/to/file
exclude_file:
- /path/to/file
exclude_if_present:
- /path/to/file
Please refer to the use of the specific keys to the documentation.
none
- hosts: all
roles:
- restic
- Matthias Leutenegger
This project is under the MIT License. See the LICENSE file for the full license text.
(c) 2019, Arillso