backup2l - low-maintenance backup/restore tool
backup2l [ -c conffile ] [ -t
backup-ID ] command
backup2l is a tool for generating, maintaining and
restoring backups on a mountable file system (e. g. hard disk). The main
design goals are low maintenance effort, efficiency, transparency and
robustness. It features differential backups at multiple hierarchical levels
and provides rollback functionality.
All control files are stored together with the archives on the
backup device, and their contents are mostly self-explaining. Hence, in the
case of an emergency, a user does not only have to rely on the restore
functionality of backup2l, but can - if necessary - browse the files
and extract archives manually.
An open driver architecture allows one to use virtually any
archiving program as a backend. Built-in drivers support .tar.gz,
.tar.bz2, or .afioz files. Further drivers can be added by the
user. When restoring data, an appropriate driver is selected automatically
for each archive depending on the suffix of the archive file.
The method of hierarchical differential backups is a
generalization to the concept of the "daily", "weekly"
and "monthly" backups. Each backup has a level and a serial
number. Maximum-level backups are comparable with daily differential
backups, level-0 backups are full backups. For example, let MAX_LEVEL
be 4 and MAX_PER_LEVEL be 5. After 5 level-4 backups (e. g. after 5
days), a new level-3 backup is made. After 5 level-3 backups (and 5*5 at
level-4), a new level-2 backup is made, and so on. Each differential backup
contains the changes towards the previous backup of the same or a lower
level.
This scheme allows one to efficiently generate small incremental
backups at short intervals. At the same time, the total number of archives
that have to be stored (or processed in the case of a restore) only
increases logarithmically with the number of backups since the last full
backup. Time-consuming full backups are only sparsely needed. In the example
above, a new full backup is only necessary after 780 (=5^4+5^3+5*5+5) days,
while only at most 20 (=4*5) archives have to be processed.
For backup2l, each backup archive is identified by its
backup ID (BID). The number of digits determines the level. Level-0
(full) backups have a 1-digit BID, level-n backups have a BID of n+1 digits.
The last digit is a serial number, the prefix identifies the lower-level
backups on which a given backup is based on. For example, the archive 235
contains the differences towards archive 234, and to restore the file system
state of the time it was generated, the full backup 2, the level-1 backups
21, 22, 23 and the level-2 backups 231, ..., 235 have to be processed. All
serial numbers are between 1 and 9, a zero in the BID indicates that no
archive of the respective level is contained in the chain. For example, the
level-3 backup 1201 is immediately based on the level-1 backup 12.
For deciding whether a file is new or modified, backup2l
looks at its name, modification time, size, ownership and permissions.
Unlike other backup tools, the i-node is not considered in order to avoid
problems with non-Unix file systems like FAT32.
- -c, --conf
conffile
- This argument specifies the configuration file (default:
etc/backup2l.conf).
- -t, --time
BID
- If present, this option selects a certain backup for the --locate
and --restore commands. E. g., the latter will restore files and
directories exactly as they were on the system at the time when the
specified backup was made. If not present, the latest available backup is
selected.
- -h, --help
- Display the usage info.
- -e, --estimate [ level
]
- Prints the number of files, estimated amount of data and other information
on the backup that would be generated next. No backup archives are
actually created or removed. If specified, the parameter level
overrides the MAX_LEVEL setting.
- -b, --backup [ level
]
- Creates a new backup and removes old archives based on the given
configuration file. If specified, the parameter level overrides the
MAX_LEVEL setting. This is useful e. g. shortly before or after
major changes are performed with the file system. In this case, a lower
level should be specified in order to avoid that a large number of files
are backed up multiple times again.
- -s, --get-summary
- Shows a table describing each backup (date, size, files, ...) and the file
system usage of the backup device.
- -a, --get-available [
pattern list ]
- Shows all files removed and added for all backups. A '+' in the output
indicates that the file is new and thus contained in the archive file. A
'-' indicates that the file has been removed (or replaced). If one or
several patterns are supplied, grep(1) is used to filter the list.
All status messages go to stderr, so that the generated file list
can easily be redirected.
Note: The search pattern is not just applied to the
file names, but to the whole entry in the .list.gz file. This
allows one to not only search for file names but also for other
attributes like ownership, modification time etc. . In order to apply a
search pattern to file names only, precede it by
"<space>/.*".
- -l, --locate [ pattern
list ]
- Shows most recent backup location for active files. If one or several
patterns are supplied, grep(1) is used to filter the list in the
same way as for --get-available (see above) . All status messages
go to stderr, so that the generated file list can easily be
redirected.
Active files are files that have been on the system at the
time of the selected backup, which is either the latest backup or the
one specified by --time (see above). Files that were removed at
that time but are still stored in some later archive will not be
shown.
Altogether, this command tells you, which files have to be
extracted from which archive in order to restore the state of the system
at the time of the selected backup.
- -r, --restore [ pattern
list ]
- Performs the same steps like --locate and then restores the
respective files. All files are restored relative to the current
directory. They can be restored to their original location by cd'ing into
/ before, but this is not recommended.
- -p, --purge BID
list
- Removes the specified backup archive(s) and all depending backups.
- -m, --make-check [ BID
list ]
- Creates (a) check file(s) for the specified archive(s) using
md5sum(1). If no BID is specified, check files are created wherever
missing.
- -v, --verify [ BID list
]
- Verifies the specified backup archive(s). If no BID is specified, all
existing archives are checked. If a check file exists, this allows one a
comprehensive test including e. g. media failures. If the check file is
missing, only the existence of all files and the immediate base archive
are verified.
- -x, --extract capacity
max-free BID-list
- Split and collect files to be stored on removable media (e. g. CDs).
capacity is the medium capacity in MB. max-free is the
maximum amount of empty space on each medium (except for the last one, of
course). BID-list specifies the archives and may contain wildcards,
e. g.: 1 '2*'. The operation generates enumbered subdirectories
representing the media contents. Some more files are generated that may be
useful, e. g. to print labels.
While guaranteeing a minimum waste of max-free MB per
medium, the collection procedure preserves the ordering of files and
keeps all control files of an archive always together on the same
medium. Large archive files are split into multiple files with serial
numbers appended to their names.
The operation is interactive. Just run it and look what it is
about to do. If that is not what you want, you can stop it.
In the configuration file (/etc/backup2l.conf by default),
the following variables have to be set, following the bash(1)
syntax:
- FOR_VERSION=version
- Defines the backup2l version for which the configuration file is
written. This way, future versions can automatically print a warning if
the syntax has changed.
- SRCLIST=(
source list )
- This is a blank-separated list of all top-level directories to make
backups of. Directory names with spaces have to be quoted, e. g.:
SRCLIST=("/my dir" /another/dir). The last elements of the list
may be options for find(1). For example -xdev can be used to
skip subdirs on other file systems such as /dev or /proc, or -L
will cause all symbolic links to be followed (use with care).
- SKIPCOND=(
find condition )
- Files for which this condition is 'true' are not considered for backup.
See find(1) for information on how to formulate possible
conditions. Special characters ("(", ")",
"!", ...) must be quoted by a leading backslash ("\(",
"\)", " \!", ...). An empty condition (i. e. if you do
not want any files to be skipped) must be specified as "( -false
)".
- [ BACKUP_DEV="mount_point" ]
- If defined, backup2l mounts the backup device before any operation.
Afterwards, it is unmounted unless it was already mounted before.
- BACKUP_DIR="backup
dir"
- Destination directory for backup files. This must be different from
MOUNT_POINT, i. e. a subdirectory on the device.
- VOLNAME="volname"
- This is a common prefix for all backup and control files. Multiple backup
volumes are possible if for each volume a separate configuration file is
written.
- MAX_LEVEL=max_level
- Maximum backup level. Possible values are 1..9.
- MAX_PER_LEVEL=max_per_level
- Number of differential backups per level. Possible values are 1..9.
- MAX_FULL=max_full
- Number of full backups kept. Possible values are 1..8.
- GENERATIONS=generations
- Number of backup generations to keep for each non-zero level. Old backups
are automatically removed as long as at least GENERATIONS *
MAX_PER_LEVEL backups for the respective level remain.
For example, with MAX_LEVEL=3, MAX_PER_LEVEL=5,
GENERATIONS=2 it is always possible to access the last 10 level-3
(e. g. daily) backups, the last 10 level-2 backups (e. g. 5, 10, 15,
..., 50 days old), and so on.
- PRE_BACKUP () {
do something }
- This function is called before writing the backup. It can be used to dump
some important system information, e. g. the HD's partition table, to a
file which is then backed up.
- POST_BACKUP
() { do something }
- This function is called after writing the backup. Together with
PRE_BACKUP it can be used to stop and restart e. g. database or
mail services which may frequently alter some files that have to be backed
up.
- [ AUTORUN=1 ]
- If set to 1, backup2l performs the --backup operation when
invoked without arguments. Otherwise, the usage information is shown.
- [ SIZE_UNITS= B | K | M | G ]
- Sets the units for archive sizes in summary listings to bytes, KB, MB, or
GB. If unset, a user-readable format is chosen automatically. If set, the
units are the same for the whole table, which may be even more
user-friendly.
- [ CREATE_DRIVER="archive driver" ]
- Selects an archive driver for creating backups. An archive driver is
responsible for managing backup files. If unset, the default driver
"DRIVER_TAR_GZ" is used. The --help operation lists all
available drivers. More drivers can be defined in the configuration file
(see below).
- [ USER_DRIVER_LIST="user-defined drivers"
]
- Declares additional, user-defined archive drivers which are implemented in
the configuration file. The sample configuration file contains a commented
example. Read it in order to learn how to implement your own driver.
- /etc/backup2l.conf
- Configuration file.
- VOLNAME.BID.tar.gz,
VOLNAME.BID.afioz, ...
- Archive files.
- VOLNAME.BID.list.gz
- List of all active files when the backup was made. Each file is preceded
with its size, modification time, and other information.
- VOLNAME.BID.new.gz
- List of all new ore modified files when the backup was made (pathnames
only). Unless an error occurred, this list reflects the contents of the
archive.
- VOLNAME.BID.obsolete.gz
- List of all obsolete files when the backup was made (pathnames only).
- VOLNAME.BID.skipped.gz
- Complete list of all files that were skipped according to
SKIPMASK.
- VOLNAME.BID.error.gz
- This file is generated by comparing the .new.gz file with the
actual archive contents using diff(1). If the error file is
non-empty, something may have gone wrong.
- VOLNAME.BID.check
- MD5 check sums of all files of the present archive and the .list.gz
file of the base archive. This file is optional and may be used by the
--verify operation.
backup2l is designed to be run autonomously as a cron job.
If the variable AUTORUN is set, it generates a backup if invoked
without any parameters, and you can simply create a symlink, e. g. by:
ln -s `command -v backup2l` /etc/cron.daily/zz-backup2l
The "zz-" prefix causes the backup job to be the last one executed,
so that other jobs are not delayed if the backup takes somewhat longer. The
status output is e-mailed to root by the cron daemon.
backup2l has been designed to be robust with respect to
errors and configuration changes. If the backup process is interrupted, e.
g. because of a shutdown while it is running, no serious data corruption can
occur. Some temporary files may remain which are cleaned up during the next
run. If file is changed during the backup generation, it may not be
contained in the current backup. However, it is guaranteed that it is
considered modified during the next backup.
In order to save disk space, e. g. after some archives have been
copied to external media, archive files (.tar.gz or .afioz, for example) can
safely be removed from the backup directory. As long as all control files
are kept, backup2l retains full functionality as far as possible. The
--restore command prompts for eventually missing archive files for
the respective request (and only those). The --extract command
completely ignores all backups with missing archive files.
The configuration, especially the settings for MAX_LEVEL,
MAX_PER_LEVEL, MAX_FULL and the specification of source files,
can be arbitrarily changed without having to expect data corruption.
backup2l will gracefully adapt the new settings during the next
run.
After a restore operation, the modification time of directories is
equal to the restoration time while for files it is equal to the original
modification time.
backup2l was written by Gundolf Kiefer <gundolfk at
web.de>.
This program is free software; you can redistribute it and/or
modify it under the terms of the GNU General Public License as published by
the Free Software Foundation, either version 2 of the License, or (at your
option) any later version.
This program is distributed in the hope that it will be useful,
but WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of
MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. See the GNU General
Public License for more details.