Contents
This recipe is mostly a wrapper around the bin/repozo
script in
your Zope buildout. It requires that this script is already made
available. If this is not the case, you will get an error like this
when you run one of the scripts: bin/repozo: No such file or
directory
. This should be there when you
are using plone.recipe.zeoserver
. If this is
not the case, the easiest way of getting a bin/repozo
script is to
add a new section in your buildout.cfg
(do not forget to add it in the
parts
directive):
[repozo] recipe = zc.recipe.egg eggs = ZODB # or this for an older version: # eggs = ZODB3 scripts = repozo dependent-scripts = true
bin/repozo
is a Zope script to make backups of your Data.fs
.
Looking up the settings can be a chore. And you have to pick a
directory where to put the backups. This recipe provides sensible
defaults for your common backup tasks. Making backups a piece of
cake is important!
bin/backup
makes an incremental backup.bin/restore
restores the latest backup created by the backup script.bin/snapshotbackup
makes a full snapshot backup, separate from the regular backups. Handy right before a big change in the site.bin/snapshotrestore
restores the latest full snapshot backup.bin/zipbackup
makes a zip backup. This zips the Data.fs and the blobstorage, handy for copying production data to your local machine, especially the blobstorage with its many files. Actually, zipping the Data.fs is standard, and we do not zip the blobstorage, because most files in there are already compressed. But we do combine the blobs in one tar archive. Note: the Data.fs and blobstorage (or other storages) are not combined in one file; you need to download multiple files. Enable this script by using theenable_zipbackup
option.bin/ziprestore
restores the latest zipbackup.
The recipe is tested with Python 2.7, 3.6, 3.7, 3.8, 3.9. In Plone terms it works fine on Plone 4, 5 and 6.
Note that the integration with plone.recipe.zope2instance
is not tested on Python 3.
It would pulls in too many dependencies, like Zope and ZODB.
- Code repository: https://github.com/collective/collective.recipe.backup
- Issue tracker: https://github.com/collective/collective.recipe.backup/issues
- Obvious fixes, like fixing typos, are fine on master. For larger changes or if you are unsure, please create a branch or a pull request.
- The code comes with a
buildout.cfg
. Please bootstrap the buildout and run the createdbin/test
to see if the tests still pass. Please try to add tests if you add code. To run the tests for all supported Python versions, runtox
. - The long description of this package (as shown on PyPI), used to
contain a big file with lots of test code that showed how to use the
recipe. This grew too large, so we left it out. It is probably
still good reading if you are wondering about the effect some
options have. See
src/collective/recipe/backup/tests/*.rst
. - We are tested on GitHub Actions: https://github.com/collective/collective.recipe.backup/actions
- Questions and comments to https://community.plone.org or to Maurits van Rees.
The simplest way to use this recipe is to add a part in buildout.cfg
like this:
[buildout] parts = backup [backup] recipe = collective.recipe.backup
You can set lots of extra options, but the recipe authors like to think they have created sane defaults, so this single line stating the recipe name should be enough in most cases.
Running the buildout adds the backup
,
snapshotbackup
, zipbackup
, restore
, snapshotrestore
and ziprestore
scripts to the bin/
directory of the buildout.
Some are not added by default, others can be switched off.
Which data does this recipe backup?
- The Zope Object DataBase (ZODB) filestorage, by default located at
var/filestorage/Data.fs
. - The blobstorage (since version 2.0) if your buildout uses it, by
default located at
var/blobstorage
.
Which data does this recipe not backup? Everything else of course, but specifically:
- Data stored in
RelStorage
will not be backed up. (You could still use this recipe to back up the filesystem blobstorage, possibly with theonly_blobs
option.) - Other data stored in SQL, perhaps via SQLAlchemy, will not be backed up.
- It does not create a backup of your entire buildout directory.
Note that the backups are by default created in the var
directory
of the buildout, so if you accidentally remove the entire buildout,
you also lose your backups. It should be standard practice to use the
location
option to specify a backup location in for example the
home directory of the user. You should also arrange to copy that
backup to a different machine/country/continent/planet.
Calling bin/backup
results in a normal incremental repozo backup
that creates a backup of the Data.fs
in var/backups
. When you
have a blob storage it is by default backed up to
var/blobstoragebackups
.
A quick backup just before updating the production server is a good
idea. But you may not want to interfere with the regular backup
regime. For that, the bin/snapshotbackup
is great. It places a
full backup in, by default, var/snapshotbackups
.
For quickly grabbing the current state of a production database so you
can download it to your development laptop, you want a full and zipped
backup. The zipped part is important for the blobstorage, because you
do not want to use scp
to recursively copy over all those blob
files: downloading one tarball is faster.
You can use the bin/zipbackup
script for this. This script
overrides a few settings, ignoring whatever is set in the buildout
config section:
archive_blob
is turned on.keep
is set to 1 to avoid keeping lots of needless backups.keep_blob_days
is ignored because it is a full backup.
The script places a full backup in, by default, var/zipbackups
and
it puts a tarball of the blobstorage in var/blobstoragezips
.
This script is not created by default.
You can enable it by setting the enable_zipbackup
option to true.
Also, if backup_blobs
is false, the scripts are useless, so we do not create them, even when you have enabled them explicitly.
Calling bin/restore
restores the very latest normal incremental
repozo
backup and restores the blobstorage if you have that.
You can restore the very latest snapshotbackup with bin/snapshotrestore
.
You can restore the zipbackup with bin/ziprestore
.
You can also restore the backup as of a certain date. Just pass a date argument.
According to repozo
: specify UTC (not local) time.
The format is yyyy-mm-dd[-hh[-mm[-ss]]]
.
So as a simple example, restore to 25 december 1972:
bin/restore 1972-12-25
or to that same date, at 2,03 seconds past 1:
bin/restore 1972-12-25-01-02-03
Since version 2.3 this also works for restoring blobs. We restore the directory from the first backup at or before the specified date. (Note that before version 4.0 we restored the directory from the first backup after the specified date, which should be fine as long as you did not do a database pack in between.)
Since version 2.0, the restore scripts ask for confirmation before starting the restore, as this is a potentially dangerous command. ("Oops, I have restored the live site but I meant to restore the test site.") You need to explicitly type 'yes':
This will replace the filestorage (Data.fs). This will replace the blobstorage. Are you sure? (yes/No)?
Note that for large filestorages and blobstorages it may take long to restore. You should do a test restore and check how long it takes. Seconds? Minutes? Hours? Is that time acceptable or should you take other measures?
A backup part will normally be called [backup]
, leading to a
bin/backup
and bin/snapshotbackup
. Should you name your part
something else, the script names will also be different, as will the created
var/
directories (since version 1.2):
[buildout] parts = plonebackup [plonebackup] recipe = collective.recipe.backup enable_zipbackup = true
That buildout snippet will create these scripts:
bin/plonebackup bin/plonebackup-full bin/plonebackup-zip bin/plonebackup-snapshot bin/plonebackup-restore bin/plonebackup-ziprestore bin/plonebackup-snapshotrestore
The recipe supports the following options, none of which are needed by
default. The most common ones to change are location
and
blobbackuplocation
, as those allow you to place your backups in
some system-wide directory like /var/zopebackups/instancename/
and
/var/zopebackups/instancename-blobs/
.
archive_blob
- Use
tar
archiving functionality.false
by default. Set it totrue
and backup/restore will be done withtar
command. Note thattar
command must be available on machine if this option is set totrue
. This option also works with snapshot backup/restore commands. As this counts as a full backupkeep_blob_days
is ignored. See thecompress_blob
option if you want to compress the archive. alternative_restore_source
- You can restore from an alternative source. Use case: first make a backup of your production site, then go to the testing or staging server and restore the production data there. See Alternative restore source
alternative_restore_sources
- Backwards compatibility spelling for
alternative_restore_source
. This will no longer work in version 7. backup_blobs
- Backup the blob storage. Default is
True
on Python 2.6 (Plone 4) and higher, andFalse
otherwise. This requires theblob_storage
location to be set. If noblob_storage
location has been set and we cannot find one by looking in the other buildout parts, we quit with an error (since version 2.22). Ifbackup_blobs
is false,enable_zipbackup
cannot be true, because thezipbackup
script is not useful then. blob_storage
- Location of the directory where the blobs (binary large objects)
are stored. This is used in Plone 4 and higher, or on Plone 3 if
you use
plone.app.blob
. This option is ignored if backup_blobs isfalse
. The location is not set by default. When there is a part usingplone.recipe.zeoserver
,plone.recipe.zope2instance
orplone.recipe.zope2zeoserver
, we check if that has a blob-storage option and use that as default. Note that we pick the first one that has this option and we do not care about shared-blob settings, so there are probably corner cases where we do not make the best decision here. Use this option to override it in that case. blob-storage
- Alternative spelling for the preferred
blob_storage
, asplone.recipe.zope2instance
spells it asblob-storage
and we are using underscores in all the other options. Pick one. blob_timestamps
- New in version 4.0. Default is true (this was false before version 4.2).
If false, we create
blobstorage.0
. The next time, we rotate this toblobstorage.1
and create a newblobstorage.0
. Withblob_timestamps = true
, we create stable directories that we do not rotate. They get a timestamp, the same timestamp that the ZODB filestorage backup gets. For example:blobstorage.1972-12-25-01-02-03
. Or witharchive_blob = true
:blobstorage.1972-12-25-01-02-03.tar
. Because the filename is unpredictable, since version 4.1 we create alatest
symlink to the most recent backup. Blob timestamps are not used with zipbackup, because this only keeps 1 backup, which means there is no confusion about which filestorage backup it belongs to. blobbackuplocation
- Directory where the blob storage will be backed up to. Defaults
to
var/blobstoragebackups
inside the buildout directory. blobsnapshotlocation
- Directory where the blob storage snapshots will be created.
Defaults to
var/blobstoragesnapshots
inside the buildout directory. blobziplocation
- Directory where the blob storage zipbackups will be created.
Defaults to
var/blobstoragezips
inside the buildout directory. compress_blob
- New in version 4.0. Default is false.
This is only used when the
archive_blob
option is true. When switched on, it will compress the archive, resulting in a.tar.gz
instead of atar
file. When restoring, we always look for both compressed and normal archives. We used to always compress them, but in most cases it hardly decreases the size and it takes a long time anyway. I have seen archiving take 15 seconds, and compressing take an additional 45 seconds. The result was an archive of 5.0 GB instead of 5.1 GB. datafs
- In case the
Data.fs
isn't in the defaultvar/filestorage/Data.fs
location, this option can overwrite it. debug
- In rare cases when you want to know exactly what's going on, set debug to
true
to get debug level logging of the recipe itself.repozo
is also run with--verbose
if this option is enabled. enable_snapshotrestore
- Having a
snapshotrestore
script is very useful in development environments, but can be harmful in a production buildout. The script restores the latest snapshot directly to your filestorage and it used to do this without asking any questions whatsoever (this has been changed to require an explicityes
as answer). If you don't want asnapshotrestore
script, set this option to false. enable_zipbackup
- Create
zipbackup
andziprestore
scripts. Default: false. Ifbackup_blobs
is not on, these scripts are always disabled, because they are not useful then. full
- By default, incremental backups are made. If this option is set to
true
,bin/backup
will always make a full backup. incremental_blobs
- New in version 4.0. Default is false.
When switched on, it will use the
--listed-incremental
option oftar
. Note: this only works with the GNU version oftar
. On Mac you may need to install this withbrew install gnu-tar
and change yourPATH
according to the instructions. It will create a metadata or snapshot file so that a second call to the backup script will create a second tarball with only the differences. For some reason, all directories always end up in the second tarball, even when there are no changes; this may depend on the used file system. This option is ignored when thearchive_blob
option is false. This option requires theblob_timestamps
option to be true, because it needs the tarball names to be stable, instead of getting rotated. If you have explicitly setblob_timestamps
to false, buildout will exit with an error. Note that thelatest
symlink to the most recent backup is not created withincremental_blobs
true. For large blobstorages it may take long to restore, so do test it out. But that is wise in all cases. Essentially, this feature seems to trade off storage space reduction with restore time. keep
- Number of full backups to keep. Defaults to
2
, which means that the current and the previous full backup are kept. Older backups are removed, including their incremental backups. Set it to0
to keep all backups. keep_blob_days
- Number of days of blob backups to keep. Defaults to
14
, so two weeks. This is only used for partial (full=False) backups, so this is what gets used normally when you do abin/backup
. This option has been added in 2.2. For full backups (snapshots) we just use thekeep
option. Recommended is to keep these values in sync with how often you do azeopack
on theData.fs
, according to the formulakeep * days_between_zeopacks = keep_blob_days
. The default matches one zeopack per seven days (2*7=14
). Since version 4.0, this option is ignored unlessonly_blobs
is true. Instead, we remove the blob backups that have no matching filestorage backup. location
- Location where backups are stored. Defaults to
var/backups
inside the buildout directory. locationprefix
- Location of the folder where all other backup and snapshot folders will
be created. Defaults to
var/
. Note that this does not influence where we look for a source filestorage or blobstorage. only_blobs
- Only backup the blobstorage, not the
Data.fs
filestorage. False by default. May be a useful option if for example you want to create onebin/filestoragebackup
script and onebin/blobstoragebackup
script, usingonly_blobs
in one andbackup_blobs
in the other. post_command
- Command to execute after the backup has finished. One use case
would be to unmount the remote file system that you mounted
earlier using the
pre_command
. See thatpre_command
above for more info. pre_command
- Command to execute before starting the backup. One use case would
be to mount a remote file system using NFS or sshfs and put the
backup there. Any output will be printed. If you do not like
that, you can always redirect output somewhere else (
mycommand > /dev/null
on Unix). Refer to your local Unix guru for more information. If the command fails, the backup script quits with an error. You can specify multiple commands. quick
Call
repozo
with the--quick
option. This option was introduced tocollective.recipe.backup
in version 2.19, with default value true. Due to all the checksums that the repozo default non-quick behavior does, an amount of data is read that is three to four times as much as is in the actual filestorage. With the quick option it could easily be just a few kilobytes. Theoretically the quick option is less safe, but it looks like it can only go wrong when someone edits the.dat
file in the repository or removes a.deltafs
file.The
quick
option only influences the createdbin/backup
script. It has no effect on the snapshot or restore scripts.The repozo help says about this option: "Verify via md5 checksum only the last incremental written. This significantly reduces the disk i/o at the (theoretical) cost of inconsistency. This is a probabilistic way of determining whether a full backup is necessary."
rsync_options
- Add extra options to the default
rsync -a
command. Default is no extra parameters. This can be useful for example when you want to restore a backup from a symlinked directory, in which casersync_options = --no-l -k
does the trick. rsync_hard_links_on_first_copy
- When using
rsync
, the blob files for the first backup are copied and then subsequent backups make use of hard links from this initial copy, to save time and disk space. Enable this option to also use hard links for the initial copy to further reduce disk usage. This is safe for ZODB blobs, since they are not modified in place. Theblob_storage
and the backup folderblobbackuplocation
have to be in the same partition for hard links to be possible. snapshotlocation
- Location where snapshot backups of the filestorage are stored. Defaults to
var/snapshotbackups
inside the buildout directory. use_rsync
- Use
rsync
with hard links for backing up the blobs. Default is true.rsync
is probably not available on all machines though, and I guess hard links will not work on Windows. When you set this to false, we fall back to a simple copy (shutil.copytree
from Python in fact). ziplocation
- Location where zip backups of the filestorage are stored. Defaults to
var/zipbackups
inside the buildout directory.
An example buildout snippet using various options, would look like this:
[backup] recipe = collective.recipe.backup location = ${buildout:directory}/myproject keep = 2 datafs = subfolder/myproject.fs full = true debug = true snapshotlocation = snap/my enable_snapshotrestore = true pre_command = echo 'Can I have a backup?' post_command = echo 'Thanks a lot for the backup.' echo 'We are done.'
Paths in directories or files can use relative (../
) paths, and
~
(home dir) and $BACKUP
-style environment variables are
expanded.
bin/backup
is of course ideal to put in your cronjob instead of a whole
bin/repozo ....
line. But you don't want the "INFO" level logging that you
get, as you'll get that in your mailbox. In your cronjob, just add -q
or
--quiet
, and bin/backup
will shut up unless there's a problem.
This option ignores the debug variable, if set to true in buildout.
Speaking of cron jobs? Take a look at zc.recipe.usercrontab if you want to handle cronjobs from within your buildout. For example:
[backupcronjob] recipe = z3c.recipe.usercrontab times = 0 12 * * * command = ${buildout:directory}/bin/backup
Added in version 2.0.
We can backup the blob storage. Plone 4 uses a blob storage to store
files (Binary Large OBjects) on the file system. In Plone 3 this is
optional. When this is used, it should be backed up of course. You
must specify the source blob_storage directory where Plone (or Zope)
stores its blobs. As indicated earlier, when we do not set it
specifically, we try to get the location from other parts, for example
the plone.recipe.zope2instance
recipe:
[buildout] parts = instance backup [instance] recipe = plone.recipe.zope2instance user = admin:admin blob-storage = ${buildout:directory}/var/somewhere [backup] recipe = collective.recipe.backup
If needed, we can tell buildout that we only want to backup blobs or
specifically do not want to backup the blobs. Specifying this using
the backup_blobs
and only_blobs
options might be useful in
case you want to separate this into several scripts:
[buildout] newest = false parts = filebackup blobbackup [filebackup] recipe = collective.recipe.backup backup_blobs = false [blobbackup] recipe = collective.recipe.backup blob_storage = ${buildout:directory}/var/blobstorage only_blobs = true
With this setup bin/filebackup
now only backs up the filestorage
and bin/blobbackup
only backs up the blobstorage.
New in version 4.0: you may want to specify blob_timestamps = true
.
Then we create stable directories that we do not rotate.
For example: blobstorage.1972-12-25-01-02-03
instead of blobstorage.0
.
By default we use rsync
to create backups. We create hard links
with this tool, to save disk space and still have incremental backups.
This probably requires a unixy (Linux, Mac OS X) operating system.
It is based on this article by Mike Rubel:
http://www.mikerubel.org/computers/rsync_snapshots/
We have not tried this on Windows. Reports are welcome, but best is
probably to set the use_rsync = false
option in the backup part.
Then we simply copy the blobstorage directory.
Added in version 2.17. Changed in version 5: only one source is supported.
You can restore from an alternative source. Use case: first make a backup of your production site, then go to the testing or staging server and restore the production data there.
In the alternative_restore_source
option you can define different
filestorage and blobstorage backup source directories using this
syntax:
alternative_restore_source = storagename datafs1_backup [blobdir1_backup]
The storagename must be Data
(or 1
) for the standard Data.fs
and optionally its blobstorage.
The result is a bin/altrestore
script.
This will work for a standard buildout with a single filestorage and blobstorage:
[backup] recipe = collective.recipe.backup alternative_restore_source = Data /path/to/production/var/backups /path/to/production/var/blobstoragebackups
The above configuration uses repozo
to restore the Data.fs from
the /path/to/production/var/backups
repository to the standard
var/filestorage/Data.fs
location. It copies the most recent
blobstorage backup from
/path/to/production/var/blobstoragebackups/
to the standard
var/blobstorage
location.
Calling the script with a specific date is supported just like the normal restore script:
bin/altrestore 2000-12-31-23-59
The recipe will fail if the alternative source does not match the
standard filestorage and blobstorage. For
example, you get an error when the alternative_restore_source
is
missing the Data
key, when it has an extra key, when a
key has no paths, when a key has an extra or missing blobstorage.
During install of the recipe, so during the bin/buildout
run, it
does not check if the sources exist: you might have the production
backups on a different server and need to setup a remote shared
directory, or you copy the data over manually.
Note that the script takes the archive_blob
and use_rsync
options
into account. So if the alternative restore source contains a blob
backup that was made with archive_blob = true
, you need an
altrestore
script that also uses this setting.