Awesome
Tarsnapper
A wrapper around tarsnap which does two things:
-
Lets you define "backup jobs" (tarsnap invocations) in a config file, though on it's own this has little advantage over just using a a shell script.
-
The ability to expire old backups using a Grandfather-father-son backup scheme. This feature can be used in conjunction with tarsnapper backup jobs, or standalone, to be applied to any existing set of tarsnap backup archives, regardless of how they have been created.
Installation
Using pip
:
$ pip install tarsnapper
Making a single backup without a configuration file
tarsnapper --target foobar-\$date --sources /etc/ --deltas 6h 7d 31d - make
This will backup the /etc/
folder every time you call this command
(put it in cron, for example), and after each backup made, attempts to
expire old backups to match the deltas given.
Note the following:
-
You need to give the
$date
placeholder for expiration to work, and you will need to escape the dollar sign in your shell. -
You need to end the list of deltas with a
-
character. -
tarsnap
needs to be setup on your machine correctly, that is, tarsnap needs to be able to find it's keyfile and so on viatarsnap.conf
. The ability to pass through options to tarsnap via thetarsnapper
CLI exists, though.
Using a configuration file
We also support a configuration file. It allows multiple jobs to be defined, and has more feature, such as pre-/post job commands. It looks like this:
# Global values, valid for all jobs unless overridden:
# A job's delta controls when old backups are expired
# (see "How expiring backups works" below)
deltas: 1d 7d 30d
# You can avoid repetition by giving deltas names
delta-names:
super-important: 1h 1d 30d 90d 360d
# A job's target sets the name of the created archive
target: /localmachine/$name-$date
# You can also include jobs from separate files
include-jobs: /usr/local/etc/tarsnapper/*.yml
jobs:
# define a job called images (names must be unique)
images:
source: /var/lib/mysql
exclude: /var/lib/mysql/temp
exec_before: service mysql stop
exec_after: service mysql start
# Aliases can be used when renaming a job to match old archives.
alias: img
some-other-job:
sources:
- /var/dir/1
- /etc/google
excludes:
- /etc/google/cache
target: /custom-target-$date.zip
deltas: 1h 6h 1d 7d 24d 180d
For the images
job, the global target will be used, with the name
placeholder replaced by the backup job name, in this case images
.
You can then ask tarsnapper to create new backups for each job:
$ tarsnapper -c myconfigfile make
The name of the archive will be the target
option, with the $date
placeholder replaced by the current timestamp, using either the
dateformat
option, or %Y%m%d-%H%M%S
.
Or to expire those archives no longer needed, as per the chosen deltas:
$ tarsnapper -c myconfigfile expire
If you need to pass arguments through to tarsnap, you can do this as well:
$ tarsnapper -o configfile tarsnap.conf -o v -c tarsnapper.conf make
This will use tarsnap.conf
as the tarsnap configuration file,
tarsnapper.conf
as the tarsnapper configuration file, and will also
put tarsnap into verbose mode via the -v
flag.
Using the include-jobs
option, you could insert 1 or more jobs in (for
example) /usr/local/etc/tarsnapper/extra-backup-jobs.yml
:
# Included jobs act just like jobs in the main config file, so for
# example the default target is active and named deltas are
# available, and job names must still be globally unique.
yet-another-job:
source: /var/dir/2
deltas: 1h 1d 30d
an-important-job:
source: /var/something-important
delta: super-important
include-jobs
uses Python's globbing to find job files and hence is subject to the limitations thereof.
Expiring backups
Note that if you're running tarsnapper with make
, it will implicitly expire
backups as well; there is no need to run make
AND expire
both.
If you want to create the backups yourself, and are only interested in the expiration functionality, you can do just that:
$ tarsnapper --target "foobar-\$date" --deltas 1d 7d 30d - expire
The --target
argument selects which set of backups to apply the expire
operation to. All archives that match this expression are considered
to be part of the same backup set that you want to operate on.
tarsnapper will then look at the date of each archive (this is why
you need the $date
placeholder) and determine those which are not
needed to accommodate the given given delta range. It will parse the date
using the python-dateutil
library, which supports a vast array of
different formats, though some restrictions apply: If you are using
yyyy-dd-mm
, it cannot generally differentiate that from yyyy-mm-dd
.
You can specify a custom dateformat using the --dateformat
option,
which should be a format string as expected by the Python strptime
function (e.g. %Y%m%d-%H%M%S
). Usually, a custom format is not
necessary.
Note the single "-" that needs to be given between the --deltas
argument and the command.
The expire
command supports a --dry-run
argument that will allow
you to see what would be deleted:
$ tarsnapper --target "foobar-\$date" --deltas 1d 7d 30d - expire --dry-run
How expiring backups works
The design goals for this were as follows:
-
Do not require backup names to include information on which generation a backup belongs to, like for example
tarsnap-generations
does. That is, you can create your backups anyway you wish, and simply use this utility to delete old backups. -
Do not use any fixed generations (weekly, monthly etc), but freeform timespans.
-
Similarily, do not make any assumptions about when or if backup jobs have actually run or will run, but try to match the given deltas as closely as possible.
The generations are defined by a list of deltas. 60s
means a minute,
12h
is half a day, 7d
is a week. The number of backups in each
generation is implied by it's and the parent generation's delta.
For example, given the deltas 1h 1d 7d
, the first generation will
consist of 24 backups each one hour older than the previous (or the closest
approximation possible given the available backups), the second generation
of 7 backups each one day older than the previous, and backups older than
7 days will be discarded for good.
The most recent backup is always kept.
As an example, here is a list of backups from a Desktop computer that has
often been running non-stop for days, but also has on occasion been turned
off for weeks at a time, using the deltas 1d 7d 30d 360d 18000d
:
dropbox-20140424-054252
dropbox-20140423-054120
dropbox-20140422-053921
dropbox-20140421-053920
dropbox-20140420-054246
dropbox-20140419-054007
dropbox-20140418-060211
dropbox-20140226-065032
dropbox-20140214-063824
dropbox-20140115-072109
dropbox-20131216-100926
dropbox-20131115-211256
dropbox-20131012-054438
dropbox-20130912-054731
dropbox-20130813-090621
dropbox-20130713-160422
dropbox-20130610-054348
dropbox-20130511-055537
dropbox-20130312-064042
dropbox-20120325-054505
dropbox-20110331-12174