Introduction
btrbk is a backup tool for btrfs subvolumes, taking advantage of btrfs specific capabilities to create atomic snapshots and transfer them incrementally to your backup locations.
The source and target locations are specified in a config file, which allows to easily configure simple scenarios like "laptop with locally attached backup disks", as well as more complex ones, e.g. "server receiving backups from several hosts via ssh, with different retention policy".
Key Features:
- Atomic snapshots
- Incremental backups
- Configurable retention policy
- Backups to multiple destinations
- Transfer via ssh
- Resume of backups (if backup target was not reachable for a while)
- Encrypted backups to non-btrfs destinations
- Wildcard subvolumes (useful for docker and lxc containers)
- Transaction log
- Comprehensive list and statistics output
- Resolve and trace btrfs parent-child and received-from relationships
- Display file changes between two backups
btrbk is designed to run as a cron job for triggering periodic snapshots and backups, as well as from the command line (e.g. for instantly creating additional snapshots).
Installation
Btrbk is a single perl script, and does not require any special installation procedures or libraries. Simply download the latest btrbk source tarball and run the "btrbk" executable.
For more information, read the installation documentation.
Prerequisites
- btrfs-progs: Btrfs filesystem utilities >= v3.18.2
- Perl interpreter: Probably already installed on your system
- OpenSSH: If you want to transfer backups from/to remote locations
- Pipe Viewer: If you want rate limiting and progress bars
Synopsis
Please consult the btrbk(1) man-page provided with this package for a full description of the command line options.
Configuration File
Before running btrbk
, you will need to create a configuration
file. You might want to take a look at btrbk.conf.example
provided
with this package. For a detailed description, please consult the
btrbk.conf(5) man-page.
When playing around with config-files, it is highly recommended to
check the output using the dryrun
command before executing the
backups:
btrbk -c /path/to/myconfig -v dryrun
This will read all btrfs information on the source/target filesystems and show what actions would be performed (without writing anything to the disks).
Example: laptop with usb-disk for backups
In this example, we assume you have a laptop with:
- a disk having a btrfs root subvolume (subvolid=5) mounted on
/mnt/btr_pool
, containing a subvolumerootfs
for the root filesystem (i.e. mounted on/
) and a subvolumehome
for the user data, - a directory or subvolume
/mnt/btr_pool/btrbk_snapshots
which will hold the btrbk snapshots, - a backup disk having a btrfs volume mounted as
/mnt/btr_backup
, containing a subvolume or directorymylaptop
for the incremental backups.
Retention policy:
- keep all snapshots for 2 days, no matter how frequently you (or your cron-job) run btrbk
- keep daily snapshots for 14 days (very handy if you are on the road and the backup disk is not attached)
- keep monthly backups forever
- keep weekly backups for 10 weeks
- keep daily backups for 20 days
/etc/btrbk/btrbk-mylaptop.conf:
snapshot_preserve_min 2d
snapshot_preserve 14d
target_preserve_min no
target_preserve 20d 10w *m
snapshot_dir btrbk_snapshots
volume /mnt/btr_pool
subvolume rootfs
target send-receive /mnt/btr_backup/mylaptop
subvolume home
target send-receive /mnt/btr_backup/mylaptop
/etc/cron.daily/btrbk:
#!/bin/sh
exec /usr/sbin/btrbk -q -c /etc/btrbk/btrbk-mylaptop.conf run
- This will create snapshots on a daily basis:
/mnt/btr_pool/btrbk_snapshots/rootfs.YYYYMMDD
/mnt/btr_pool/btrbk_snapshots/home.YYYYMMDD
- And create incremental backups in:
/mnt/btr_backup/mylaptop/rootfs.YYYYMMDD
/mnt/btr_backup/mylaptop/home.YYYYMMDD
If you want the snapshots to be created only if the backup disk is attached, simply add the following line to the config:
snapshot_create ondemand
Example: host-initiated backup on fileserver
Let's say you have a fileserver at "myserver.mydomain.com" where you want to create backups of your laptop disk, the config would look like this:
ssh_identity /etc/btrbk/ssh/id_rsa
volume /mnt/btr_pool
subvolume rootfs
target send-receive /mnt/btr_backup/mylaptop
target send-receive ssh://myserver.mydomain.com/mnt/btr_backup/mylaptop
In addition to the backups on your local usb-disk mounted at
/mnt/btr_backup/mylaptop
, incremental backups would also be pushed
to myserver.mydomain.com
.
Example: fileserver-initiated backups from several hosts
If you're a sysadmin and want to trigger backups directly from your fileserver, the config would be something like:
ssh_identity /etc/btrbk/ssh/id_rsa
volume ssh://alpha.mydomain.com/mnt/btr_pool
subvolume rootfs
target send-receive /mnt/btr_backup/alpha
subvolume home
target send-receive /mnt/btr_backup/alpha
volume ssh://beta.mydomain.com/mnt/btr_pool
subvolume rootfs
target send-receive /mnt/btr_backup/beta
subvolume dbdata
target send-receive /mnt/btr_backup/beta
This will pull backups from alpha/beta.mydomain.com and locally create:
/mnt/btr_backup/alpha/rootfs.YYYYMMDD
/mnt/btr_backup/alpha/home.YYYYMMDD
/mnt/btr_backup/beta/rootfs.YYYYMMDD
/mnt/btr_backup/beta/dbdata.YYYYMMDD
Example: local time-machine (hourly snapshots)
If all you want is to create snapshots of your home directory on a regular basis:
/etc/btrbk/btrbk.conf:
timestamp_format long
snapshot_preserve_min 18h
snapshot_preserve 48h 20d 6m
volume /mnt/btr_pool
snapshot_dir btrbk_snapshots
subvolume home
/etc/cron.hourly/btrbk:
#!/bin/sh
exec /usr/sbin/btrbk -q run
Note that you can run btrbk more than once an hour, e.g. by calling
sudo btrbk run
from the command line. With this setup, all those
extra snapshots will be kept for 18 hours.
Example: multiple btrbk instances
Let's say we have a host (at 192.168.0.42) running btrbk with the setup of the time-machine example above, and we need a backup server to only fetch the snapshots.
/etc/btrbk/btrbk.conf (on backup server):
target_preserve_min no
target_preserve 0d 10w *m
volume ssh://192.168.0.42/mnt/btr_pool
subvolume home
snapshot_dir btrbk_snapshots
snapshot_preserve_min all
snapshot_create no
target send-receive /mnt/btr_backup/my-laptop.com
If the server runs btrbk with this config, 10 weeklies and all
monthlies are received from 192.168.0.42. The source filesystem is
never altered because of snapshot_preserve_min all
.
Example: backup from non-btrfs source
First create a btrfs subvolume on the backup server:
# btrfs subvolume create /mnt/btr_backup/myhost_sync
In your daily cron script, prior to running btrbk, sync your source to
myhost_sync
, something like:
rsync -a --inplace --delete -e ssh myhost.mydomain.com:/data/ /mnt/btr_backup/myhost_sync/
Then run btrbk, with myhost_sync configured without any targets as follows:
volume /mnt/btr_backup
subvolume myhost_sync
snapshot_name myhost
snapshot_preserve_min latest
snapshot_preserve 14d 20w *m
This will produce daily snapshots /mnt/btr_backup/myhost.20150101
,
with retention as defined with the snapshot_preserve option.
Note that the provided script: "contrib/cron/btrbk-mail" has support for this!
Example: encrypted backup to non-btrfs target
If your backup server does not support btrfs, you can send your subvolumes to a raw file.
This is an experimental feature: btrbk supports "raw" targets,
meaning that similar to the "send-receive" target the btrfs subvolume
is being sent using btrfs send
(mirroring filesystem level data),
but instead of instantly being received (btrfs receive
) by the
target filesystem, it is being redirected to a file, optionally
compressed and piped through GnuPG.
/etc/btrbk/btrbk.conf:
raw_target_compress xz
raw_target_encrypt gpg
gpg_keyring /etc/btrbk/gpg/pubring.gpg
gpg_recipient btrbk@mydomain.com
volume /mnt/btr_pool
subvolume home
target raw ssh://cloud.example.com/backup
ssh_user btrbk
# incremental no
This will create a GnuPG encrypted, compressed files on the target host. For each backup, two files are created:
/backup/home.YYYYMMDD.btrfs.xz.gpg
: main data file containing the btrfs send-stream,/backup/home.YYYYMMDD.btrfs.xz.gpg.info
: sidecar file containing metadata used by btrbk.
I you are using raw incremental backups, please make sure you understand the implications (see btrbk.conf(5), TARGET TYPES).
Setting up SSH
Since btrbk needs root access, it is very advisable to take all the
security precautions you can. In most cases backups are generated
periodically without user interaction, so it is not possible to
protect your ssh key with a password. The steps below will give you
hints on how to secure your ssh server for a backup scenario. Note
that the btrbk
executable is not needed on the remote side, but you
will need the btrfs
executable from the btrfs-progs package.
Step 1: Create SSH keypair
On the client side, create a ssh key dedicated to btrbk, without password protection:
ssh-keygen -t rsa -b 2048 -f /etc/btrbk/ssh/id_rsa -C btrbk@mydomain.com -N ""
The content of the public key (/etc/btrbk/ssh/id_rsa.pub) is used for authentication in "authorized_keys" on the server side (see sshd(8) for details).
Step 2 (option): root login restricted by "ssh_filter_btrbk.sh"
Btrbk comes with a shell script "ssh_filter_btrbk.sh", which restricts ssh access to sane calls to the "btrfs" command needed for snapshot creation and send/receive operations (see ssh_filter_btrbk(1)).
Copy "ssh_filter_btrbk.sh" to "/backup/scripts/", and configure sshd to run it whenever the key is used for authentication. Example "/root/.ssh/authorized_keys":
# example backup source (also allowing deletion of old snapshots)
command="/backup/scripts/ssh_filter_btrbk.sh -l --source --delete" <pubkey>...
# example backup target (also allowing deletion of old snapshots)
command="/backup/scripts/ssh_filter_btrbk.sh -l --target --delete" <pubkey>...
# example fetch-only backup source (snapshot_preserve_min=all, snapshot_create=no),
# restricted to subvolumes within /home or /data
command="/backup/scripts/ssh_filter_btrbk.sh -l --send -p /home -p /data" <pubkey>...
Step 2 (option): dedicated user login, using different backend
Create a user dedicated to btrbk and add the public key to "/home/btrbk/.ssh/authorized_keys". In "btrbk.conf", choose either:
-
backend btrfs-progs-btrbk
to use separated binaries with elevated privileges (suid or fscaps) instead of the "btrfs" command (see btrfs-progs-btrbk). -
backend btrfs-progs-sudo
, configure "/etc/sudoers" and add thessh_filter_btrbk.sh --sudo
option.
Further considerations
You might also want to restrict ssh access to a static IP address within your network:
from="192.168.0.42",command=... <pubkey>...
For even more security, set up a chroot environment in "/etc/ssh/sshd_config" (see sshd_config(5)).
Restoring Backups
btrbk does not provide any mechanism to restore your backups, this has
to be done manually. In the examples below, we assume that you have a
btrfs volume mounted at /mnt/btr_pool
, and the subvolume you want to
have restored is at /mnt/btr_pool/data
.
Important: don't use btrfs property set
to make a subvolume
read-write after restoring. This is a low-level command, and leaves
"Received UUID" in a false state which causes btrbk to fail on
subsequent incremental backups. Instead, use btrfs subvolume snapshot
(without -r
flag) as described below.
Example: Restore a Snapshot
First, pick a snapshot to be restored:
btrbk list snapshots
From the list, pick the snapshot you want to restore. Let's say it's
/mnt/btr_pool/_btrbk_snap/data.20150101
.
If the broken subvolume is still present, move it away:
mv /mnt/btr_pool/data /mnt/btr_pool/data.BROKEN
Now restore the snapshot:
btrfs subvolume snapshot /mnt/btr_pool/_btrbk_snap/data.20150101 /mnt/btr_pool/data
That's it; your data
subvolume is restored. If everything went fine,
it's time to nuke the broken subvolume:
btrfs subvolume delete /mnt/btr_pool/data.BROKEN
Example: Restore a Backup
First, pick a backup to be restored:
btrbk list backups
From the list, pick the backup you want to restore. Let's say it's
/mnt/btr_backup/data.20150101
.
If the broken subvolume is still present, move it away:
mv /mnt/btr_pool/data /mnt/btr_pool/data.BROKEN
Now restore the backup:
btrfs send /mnt/btr_backup/data.20150101 | btrfs receive /mnt/btr_pool/
btrfs subvolume snapshot /mnt/btr_pool/data.20150101 /mnt/btr_pool/data
btrfs subvolume delete /mnt/btr_pool/data.20150101
Alternatively, if you're restoring data on a remote host, do something like this:
btrfs send /mnt/btr_backup/data.20150101 | ssh root@my-remote-host.com btrfs receive /mnt/btr_pool/
Hint: If you still have common snapshot / backup pairs (i.e. both "snapshot_subvol" and "target_subvol" are listed) consider sending the backup incrementally by specifying a parent subvolume:
btrfs send -p /mnt/btr_backup/<parent-subvolume> [...]
This allows btrbk to continue using the parent subvolume for incremental backups later.
If everything went fine, nuke the broken subvolume:
btrfs subvolume delete /mnt/btr_pool/data.BROKEN
FAQ
Make sure to also read the btrbk FAQ page. Help improve it by asking!
Donate
So btrbk saved your day?
I will definitively continue developing btrbk for free, but if you want to support me you can do so:
Development
Source Code Repository
The source code for btrbk is managed using Git.
Official repository:
git clone https://dev.tty0.ch/btrbk.git
Mirror on GitHub:
git clone https://github.com/digint/btrbk.git
How to Contribute
Your contributions are welcome!
If you would like to contribute or have found bugs:
- Visit the btrbk project page on GitHub and use the issues tracker there.
- Talk to us on Freenode in
#btrbk
. - Contact the author via email (the email address can be found in the sources).
Any feedback is appreciated!
License
btrbk is free software, available under the GNU General Public License, Version 3.