IT/Software/Backup Programs/Borg Backup: Difference between revisions

From msgwiki
Jump to navigation Jump to search
Access restrictions were established for this page. If you see this message, you have no access to this page.
mNo edit summary
Line 63: Line 63:


===Backup Scripting===
===Backup Scripting===
Example:


==== Example ====
<code>
<code>
<nowiki>#!/bin/bash</nowiki> <br />
<nowiki>#!/bin/bash</nowiki> <br />

Revision as of 20:18, 4 December 2020

About

Borg Backup is a backup program that features compression deduplication, data compression and runs nicely over SSH.

https://www.borgbackup.org/

Usage

Repos

A Borg repo is where backup data is stored.

A repo can be created by running the following in an empty directory.

borg init -e none repoLocation

"-e none" is a required flag to tell bog that we don't want any encryption.

Creating a backup

When creating a backup we need to specify what kind of compression we want to use, where the repo we want to backup to is, and where the source files we want to backup are located.

borg create -C auto,lzma --progress repo/location/::name-of-backup location/to/be/backed/up

LZMA compression uses more CPU and less storage space.

Name of backup must be unique so using the date command instead of a static name is desirable when automating backups.

... repo/location/::`date '+%Y-%m-%d-%H.%M.%S'` location/to/be/backed/up

Backing up over SSH

In all Borg commands we can use ssh://ip.of.server/repo/location/on/server.

borg create -C auto,lzma --progress ssh://my.backup.server/repo/location/::name-of-backup location/to/be/backed/up


Viewing a repos backups

To list all the backups in a repo we can run the following:

borg list /path/to/repo


Restoring from a backup

We can mount a Borg backup as if it was a regular drive anywhere in the filesystem.

borg mount /path/to/repo/::backupName mountPoint/

We can pull files from the backup as if it were a regular drive.

To unmount the backup we can run:

umount mountpoint/


Pruning old backups

By default Borg will keep backups forever.

We can prune backups by running borg prune.

borg prune -v --list --keep-hourly=48 --keep-daily=30 --keep-monthly=12 /path/to/repo/

In this example we will assume a backup job is running hourly.

In this example we will keep 1 backup per hour for the past 48 hours, 1 backup per day for the past 30 days, and 1 backup per month for the past 12 months.

Borg will keep the most recent backup from the time period it is pruning.

In the example we would keep the backup ran at 23:00 for the past 30 days and the last backup of the month for the monthly.

Backup Scripting

Example:

#!/bin/bash
cd /location/to/be/backed/up
borg create -C auto,lzma --progress /path/to/repo/::`date '+%Y-%m-%d-%H.%M.%S'` .
borg prune -v --list --keep-hourly=48 --keep-daily=30 --keep-monthly=12 /path/to/repo/