Copyright (C) 2008-2022 Oprea Dan, Bart de Koning, Richard Bailey, Germar Reitze, Taylor Raack
It is an easy to use backup tool for Linux heavily using rsync
in the back. It was inspired by FlyBack.
It provides a command line tool backintime
and a Qt5 GUI backintime-qt
both written in Python3.
You only need to specify 3 things:
- What folders to back up.
- Where to save snapshots.
- The backup frequency (manual, every hour, every day, every month).
The development of this project has been dormant for a while. But a small team has started
in summer 2022 to get things moving again. Stick with us, we all
We are currently trying to fix the major issues while not implementing new features to prepare a new stable release. The next release is planned in early 2023. If you are interested in the development, please see the Contribute section.
- Documentation & FAQs & Support
- Known Problems and Workarounds
- Download
- Installation and Dependencies
- Contribute
- End user documentation (not totally up-to-date)
- FAQ - Frequently Asked Questions
- Source code documentation for developers
- Use Issues to ask questions and report bugs.
- Incompatibility with rsync >= 3.2.4
- File permissions handling and therefore possible non-differential backups
- Python 3.10 compatibility and Ubuntu version
- Non-working password safe and BiT forgets passwords (keyring backend issues)
- Warning: apt-key is deprecated. Manage keyring files in trusted.gpg.d instead (see apt-key(8)).
- Tray icon or other icons not shown correctly
The latest release (1.3.2
) and earlier versions of Back In Time are incompatible with rsync >= 3.2.4
(#1247). The problem is fixed in the current master branch of that repo and will be released with the next release (1.3.3
) of Back In Time.
If you use rsync >= 3.2.4
and backintime <= 1.3.2
there is a workaround. Add --old-args
in Expert Options / Additional options to rsync. Note that some GNU/Linux distributions (e.g. Manjaro) using a workaround with environment variable RSYNC_OLD_ARGS
in their distro-specific packages for Back In Time. In that case you may not see any problems.
In version 1.2.0, the handling of file permissions changed.
In versions <= 1.1.24 (until 2017) all file permissions were set to -rw-r--r--
in the backup target.
In versions >= 1.2.0 (since 2019) rsync
is executed with --perms
option which tells rsync
to
preserve the source file permission.
Therefore backups can be larger and slower, especially the first backup after upgrading to a version >= 1.2.0.
If you don't like the new behavior, you can use Expert Options -> Paste additional options to rsync
to add --no-perms --no-group --no-owner
to it.
Note that the exact file permissions can still be found in fileinfo.bz2
and are also considered when restoring
files.
Back In Time versions older than 1.3.2 do not start with Python >= 3.10.
Ubuntu 22.04 LTS ships with Python 3.10 and backintime 1.2.1, but has applied
a patch
to make it work. If you want to update to backintime 1.3.2 in Ubuntu, you may use the PPA: see under INSTALL/Ubuntu PPA
.
Back in Time does only support selected "known-good" backends
to set and query passwords from a user-session password safe by
using the keyring
library.
Enabling a supported keyring requires manual configuration of a configuration file until there is e.g. a settings GUI for this.
Symptoms are DEBUG log output (with the command line argument --debug
) of keyring problems can be recognized by output like:
DEBUG: [common/tools.py:829 keyringSupported] No appropriate keyring found. 'keyring.backends...' can't be used with BackInTime
DEBUG: [common/tools.py:829 keyringSupported] No appropriate keyring found. 'keyring.backends.chainer' can't be used with BackInTime
To diagnose and solve this follow these steps in a terminal:
# Show default backend
python3 -c "import keyring.util.platform_; print(keyring.get_keyring().__module__)"
# List available backends:
keyring --list-backends
# Find out the config file folder:
python3 -c "import keyring.util.platform_; print(keyring.util.platform_.config_root())"
# Create a config file named "keyringrc.cfg" in this folder with one of the available backends (listed above)
[backend]
default-keyring=keyring.backends.kwallet.DBusKeyring
See also issue #1321
In newer Ubuntu-based distros you may get this warning if you manually install Back In Time as described in the Installation section here.
The reason is that public keys of signed packages shall be stored in a new folder now (for details see https://itsfoss.com/apt-key-deprecated/).
You can currently ignore this warning until we have found a reliable way to support all Ubuntu distros (older and newer ones).
This issue is tracked in #1338.
Missing installations of Qt5-supported themes and icons can cause this effect. Back In Time may activate the wrong theme in this case leading to some missing icons. A fix for the next release is in preparation.
As clean solution, please check your Linux settings (Appearance, Styles, Icons) and install all themes and icons packages for your preferred style via your package manager.
Please find the latest versions in the release section.
Back In Time is included in many distributions. Use their repositories to install it.
We provide a PPA (Private Package Archive) with current stable version (ppa:bit-team/stable) and a testing PPA (ppa:bit-team/testing)
Important: Until version 1.3.2 there was a bug that caused
backintime
failed to start if the package backintime-qt
was not installed.
As work-around also install backintime-qt
because the missing
Udev serviceHelper
system D-Bus daemon is packaged there.
# You can ignore "Warning: apt-key is deprecated..." for now (see issue #1338)
sudo add-apt-repository ppa:bit-team/stable
sudo apt-get update
sudo apt-get install backintime-qt
or
sudo add-apt-repository ppa:bit-team/testing
sudo apt-get update
sudo apt-get install backintime-qt
./makedeb.sh
sudo dpkg -i ../backintime-common-<version>.deb
sudo dpkg -i ../backintime-qt-<version>.deb
Back In Time is available through the AUR package backintime
that also includes the GUI (backintime-qt
).
Important: Until version 1.3.2 there was a bug that prevented the successful first-time installation due to a unit test failure when building with the PKGBUILD script (see #1233) and required to edit the PKGBUILD file for a successful installation (see description in #921).
# You need to import a public key once before installing
gpg --keyserver pgp.mit.edu --recv-keys 615F366D944B4826
# Fingerprint: 3E70 692E E3DB 8BDD A599 1C90 615F 366D 944B 4826
wget https://aur.archlinux.org/cgit/aur.git/snapshot/backintime.tar.gz
tar xvzf backintime.tar.gz
cd backintime
makepkg -srci
An alternative way of installation clones the AUR package which has the
advantage to use git pull
instead of downloading backintime.tar.gz
to be prepared to build an updated version of the package:
git clone https://aur.archlinux.org/backintime.git
# Optional: Edit PKGBUILD to comment the `make test` line for the first-time installation of version 1.3.2 or less
cd backintime
makepkg -si
The dependencies are based on Ubuntu. Please open an Issue if something is missing. If you use another GNU/Linux distribution, please install the corresponding packages.
-
Build dependencies
To build and install Back In Time from the source code install these packages (together with the run-time dependencies):
build-essential
gzip
gettext
python3-pyfakefs
(since Ubuntu 22.04) or viapython3 -m pip pyfakefs
- required for a unit test
-
Runtime dependencies
python3
(>= 3.6)rsync
cron-daemon
openssh-client
python3-keyring
python3-dbus
python3-packaging
-
Recommended
sshfs
encfs
-
Commands to build and install cd common ./configure make make test sudo make install
-
Build dependencies
See above...
-
Runtime dependencies
x11-utils
python3-pyqt5
python3-dbus.mainloop.pyqt5
qtwayland5
(if Wayland is used as display server instead of X11)libnotify-bin
policykit-1
backintime-common
(installed withsudo make install
after building it)
-
Recommended
- For SSH key storage one of these packages
python3-secretstorage
python3-keyring-kwallet
python3-gnomekeyring
- For diff-like comparing files between backup snapshots one of these packages
kompare
meld
- For SSH key storage one of these packages
-
Commands to build and install
cd qt ./configure make sudo make install
You can use optional arguments to ./configure
for creating a Makefile.
See common/configure --help
and qt/configure --help
for details.
- Mailing list bit-dev for development related topics
- Source code documentation for developers
- Translations are done on a separate plattform
The maintenance team will welcome all types of contributions. No contribution will be rejected just because it doesn't fit to our quality standards, guidelines or rules. Every contribution is reviewed and if needed will be improved together with the maintainers.
Please take the following best practices into account if possible (to reduce the work load of the maintainers):
- Follow PEP8 as a minimal Style Guide for Python Code
- Follow Google Style Guide for docstrings (see our own HOWTO about doc generation).
- Be careful when using automatic formatters like
black
and please mention the use of it when opening a Pull Request. - Run unittests before you open a Pull Request. You can run them via
make
-system withcd common && ./configure && make && make test
or you can usepytest
. - Try to create new unittests if appropriated. Use Pythons regular
unittest
instead ofpytest
.
๐ December 2022