The configuration file syntax of hdup is borrowed from
SaMBa (which is more commonly known as an ini-style config file). A '#' as
the first character on a line is the start of a comment. Blank lines are
skipped.
Multiple entries on a line must separated by commas:
",".
Some options can be turned on and off. These are binary options.
All binary option default to 'off'. They are turned on by 'yes','on' or
'true' and are turned off with 'no', 'off' or 'false'.
The [global] section is required to be the first section in the
configuration files. Options specified under [global] are also used in
[host] sections. They can overridden when they are also specified under that
[host] statement. This works for all options. Further to this, one
[host] statement can inherit from another [host] statement.
Config entries may be given multiple times, in that case the
latest one is taken as the final choice.
It is further best described by an example:
# |
# backup config for hdup |
# |
[global] |
archive dir = /tmp/storage/ |
compression = gzip |
user = operator |
proto = /usr/bin/ssh |
proto option = -q -oProtocol=2 |
overwrite = yes |
[host-name-a-conf] |
dir = /var/www, /etc/cron.d |
[host-name-a-root] |
dir = /root/.cpan/Bundle |
[host-name-a] |
inherit = host-name-a-conf, host-name-a-root |
allow remote = yes |
The [global] section is required. The keywords specified under it
are used for each host (globally).
All keywords specified under [global] are inherited by the other
hosts. Ie. if you specify 'compression = gzip' under global, all hosts who
do not redefine 'compression' will use 'gzip'.
This is a host statement. For every host you want to back up there
should be a host statement. This is also true when you are restoring an
archive.
Host statements can inherit from other host statements. Any
keywords initialised for the original host, will append to, or overwrite,
the current keywords.
There is a maximum of 255 different hosts in 1 hdup configuration
file.
Be aware that archive dir must be specified in the
configuration file, dir is only needed when performing backups. When
restoring it is not needed.
The following keywords are supported: algorithm, allow
remote, always backup, archive dir, chunk size,
compression,compression level, date spec
dir, exclude, force, free, group,
gpg, include, inherit, key, log,
mcrypt, no history, ,nobackup, one filesystem,
overwrite, postrun, prerun, proto, proto
option, remote hdup, remote hdup option, skip,
sparse, tar, tar option and user,
The only mandatory options are archive dir and dir.
They must be present for every host.
- algorithm
- Optional. What algorithm should hdup use when encrypting an
archive. If this is not specified the archive will not be encrypted. Both
'algorithm' and
'key' must be present. For gpg encryption use gpg here.
- allow remote
- Optional, binary option. If 'on' remote archives are allowed to be
uploaded from this host, otherwise they are denied.
- always
backup
- Optional, binary option. When 'on' hdup will always perform a backup.
Normally when an incfile is not found the backup is aborted. What this
option does is that if the backup scheme is daily and no weekly incfile is
found, hdup performs a weekly backup. If hdup discovers no monthly
incfile when doing a weekly it performs a monthly dump.
- archive
dir
- Mandatory. Specify what directory hdup should use to store the
archives and the (incremental) dump information.
- chunk size
- Optional. Give the size of the chunks hdup should create when splitting up
an archive. Size can be given with the suffix 'k', 'K' or 'm', 'M'. Chunks
of the archive get the suffix '__split__XX', where XX is a two letter
sequence starting by 'aa' and ending at 'zz'. To split up archive in CD
sized chunks, chunk size = 640m could be used.
- compression
- Optional. Specify the compression hdup should use. This can be
bzip, gzip, lzop or none. Defaults to
gzip. Some explanation on the difference might be appropiate
here. bzip (which uses bzip2) is slow but compresses the best,
gzip is faster but offers less compression. lzop is the
fastest of them all while offering very good compression. none is
of course the fastest.
- compression
level
- Optional. Specify the compression level, it's an integer between 1 and 9
(inclusive), where 1 equals, fast operation, lousy compression and 9 means
best compression, but slow. When omitted it defaults to 6.
Defaults to 6, which for all compression algorithms is the
standard default.
- date spec
- Optional. The following formats are supported:
default format will be 'DD-MM-YYYY'
iso format will be 'YYYY-MM-DD'
american format will be 'MM-DD-YYYYY'
- dir
- Mandatory. Specify which directories or files should be backed up. You can
also specify a single file, like /usr/src/linux/.config.
There can be up to 20 different directories specified. There
can only be 1 dir statement per host.
- exclude
- Optional. Specify a list with a regular expressions that should be
used to determine which files should not be backed up. See
regex(7) for more information about regular expressions. Also see
the section PATTERNS.
- force
- Optional, binary option. When 'on' a restore to / will be allowed.
- free
- Optional. With free you can specify how much free space must
be available on a partition. If this free space requirement is not met,
hdup will not perform the backup. Takes an optional size modifier:
'k', 'm' or 'G'.
- gpg
- Optional. The path to gpg. Defaults to the value of the configure
script.
- group
- Optional. Specify the group under which the archives must be stored.
Defaults to whatever group 'user' belongs to.
- include
- Optional. Specify a list with a regular expressions that should be
used to determine which files should be backed up. See regex(7) for
more information about regular expressions. Also see the section
PATTERNS. Included files take precedence on exclude files.
- inherit
- Optional. Specify a list of hosts to inherit from. All keywords
specified will either overwrite (for single items) or append (for lists)
keywords for the current host. This allows creating specific host
configurations out of common parts.
- key
- Optional. Which file should be used as the encryption key. Both
'algorithm' and 'key' must be present. In the case where algorithm
is gpg the user ID of the key must be specified here.
- log
- Optional, binary option. When 'on' hdup will also log to syslog.
All message will be logged under LOG_DAEMON with priority LOG_NOTICE. All
errors are logged in the following format:
FAILURE, <hostname>, <error condition>
Succes is reported as:
SUCCESS, <hostname>, <archive size>, <archive time>
If the backup is send to a remote system, <archive size>
equals "remote". If the operation is restore, then <archive
size> equals "restore".
- mcrypt
- Optional. The path to mcrypt. Defaults to the value of the
configure script.
- no history
- Optional, binary option. When 'on' hdup will store each archive in
a directory called 'static' thereby not keeping any history of the
archives. WARNING: this option is dangerous to use. When a backup fails
and you did not copy the archives to some safe place you are left with no
backups at all! A postrun script is provided in the examples directory of
the hdup source, which copies the archives to a safe place. It is best to
NOT use this option unless you know what you are doing.
Restoring such an archive can be accomplished by using the
word 'static' as the restore date.
- nobackup
- Optional. The argument is a filename. When specified hdup looks for
this file in the directories it backs up. If this file is found the
current directory and all sub-directories are excluded from
the backup.
- one filesystem
- Optional, binary option. When 'on' hdup will stay in the local file
system for each directory specified (with 'dir') when creating a backup.
- overwrite
- Optional, binary option. When 'on' old archives are overwritten.
- postrun
- Optional. Specify a command or script that be should run after
hdup is finished with the backup. The following variables can be
used as arguments:
%h expands to the current host.
%a expands to the full path of the archivename of the current backup.
%s expands to the current scheme.
%u expands to the username under which the archives are stored.
%e expands to 'yes' when encryption is used, 'no' otherwise.
%c expands to 'yes' when chunksize is used, 'no' otherwise.
%g expands to the groupname under which the archives are stored.
Note: If the postrun script executes with errors the backup is
not aborted. Note2: Any arguments not defined will be expanded to
'-empty', without the quotes.
- prerun
- Optional. Specify a command or script that should run before
hdup begins with the actual backup. The following variables can be
used as arguments:
%h expands to the current host.
%a expands to the full path of the archivename of the current backup.
%s expands to the current scheme.
%u expands to the username under which the archives are stored.
%e expands to 'yes' when encryption is used, 'no' otherwise.
%c expands to 'yes' when chunksize is used, 'no' otherwise.
%g expands to the groupname under which the archives are stored.
Note: If the prerun script executes with errors the backup IS
aborted. Note2: Any arguments not defined will be expanded to '-empty',
without the quotes.
- proto
- Optional. Specify the path of the program to use when transferring an
archive to a remote host. Known to work is ssh. Defaults to the
value of the configure script.
These programs must be able to be used as a filter and support
the user@remotehost syntax.
Note: Be aware that this value must also be defined in the
remote hdup which is receiving the backup, although it is not
used there. If you don't want to set it to 'ssh' you can use '/dev/null'
or any other path.
- proto
option
- Optional. Specify options that are given to the proto command in
hdup. E.g. proto option = -i /home/user/.ssh/identity
-oProtocol=2.
- remote
hdup
- Optional. If the @user@remotehost syntax is used this keyword specifies
the location of the remote hdup.
- remote hdup
option
- Optional. If the @user@remotehost syntax is used this keyword specifies
the options (like the location of the config file) that should be used by
the remote hdup.
- skip
- Optional, binary option. Depricated, it is always 'on'. When 'on' the
backup directory is automaticly put in the exclude list and thus not
backed up.
- sparse
- Optional, binary option. Depricated, it is always 'on'. When 'on' hdup
will use tar's --sparse feature when backing up files.
- tar
- Optional. The path to tar. Defaults to the value of the configure
script. This tar must support the command line syntax of GNU tar.
- tar option
- Optional. Specify some extra options to the tar executed by
hdup. These options are given the tar and untar commands. No extra
checking is done by hdup on these options.
- user
- Optional. Specify the user under which the archives must be stored.
Defaults to operator.
The include and exclude keywords take regular expression as there
input. There is one extra rule. If an expression ends with a slash '/' it is
only applied to directories. A '/' in a different place is not handled
special.
The whole pathname of a file or directory is used in the pattern
matching. The pattern matching is case sensitive.
To match all files ending with .txt use the pattern .*.txt.
To match everything file under opt, use ^/opt. To match a specific
directory in /opt, use ^/opt/bla/, note that this excludes all
directories which start with this string.
If you want to match a single directory you must supply the full
pathname and a leading, and closing '/'.
WHAT COMES FIRST include or exclude