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Borg Backup for YunoHost

Integration level Install Borg with YunoHost

A Borg implementation to backup a YunoHost server. This is the Borg Backup App to be installed on a server to backup. It works together with a Borg Server App installed on a host server.

⚠️ NB. : This doc is partially obsolete and should be reworked! ⚠️

How to backup your server with this app?

You want to backup a critical "guest" Server A onto a remote "host" Server B, you need:

  • Domain name of server B: host.serverb
  • Name of the server B SSH user (to be created by borgserver) for connection from Server A: borgservera
  • Strong passphrase to encrypt your backups on host Server B. And to restore your backups!!
  • IDs of YunoHost apps you want to backup
  • Regular time schedule for your backups, see below
  • Install Borg Backup App (borg) on guest Server A
  • Install Borg Server App (borgserver) on host Server B
  • Save the passphrase in another place than your server. Without the passphrase, you won't be able to restore data.

You should received an email after the first backup succeeded.

Set up Borg Backup App on guest Server A

Firstly, set up the Borg Backup App (borg) on the guest Server A you want to backup:

$ yunohost app install borg
In which borg repository location do you want to backup your files ?: [email protected]:/remote/repository
Provide a strong passphrase to encrypt your backups. No blank space:
Should Borg backup your YunoHost configuration? [yes | no] (default: yes):
Should Borg backup emails and user home directory? [yes | no] (default: yes):
Which apps should Borg backup ? (default: all):
With which regular time schedule should the backups be performed? (see systemd OnCalendar format) (default: Daily):
Do you want admin to receive mail notifications on backups ? [always | errors_only | never]: never

Syntax to define a backup time schedule

You can schedule regular backups at specific time. Only one regular time schedule is possible for one borg instance, see below for workaround. Some examples:

Information generated by Borg Backup

At the end of the installation, the Borg Backup App (borg) displays the SSH public key and the SSH user to give to the person who has access to the host Server B and will set up Borg Server App.

You should now install the "Borg Server" app on host.serverb and fill questions like this:
User: servera
Public key: ssh-ed25519 AAAA[...] [email protected]

This information is also sent by email to the admin of guest Server A. If you don't find the email and you don't see the message in the log bar you can find the SSH public key with this command:

$ cat /root/.ssh/id_borg_ed25519.pub
ssh-ed25519 AAAA[...] [email protected]

Set up Borg Server App on host Server B

Secondly, set up the Borg Server App (borgserver) on the host Server B that will store your backups:

$ yunohost app install borgserver
Indicate the ssh user to create: servera
Indicate the public key given by Borg Backup app (borg) setup: ssh-ed25519 AAAA[...] [email protected]
Indicate the storage quota: 5G

Test the Borg Apps setup

At this step your backup should run at the scheduled time. Note that the first backup can take very long, as much data has to be copied through ssh. Following backups are incremental: only newly generated data since last backup will be copied.

If you want to test correct Borg Apps setup before scheduled time, you can start a backup manually on guest Server A:

$ systemctl start borg

Next you can check presence of your backup repository on host Server B:

$ BORG_RSH="ssh -i /root/.ssh/id_borg_ed25519 -oStrictHostKeyChecking=yes " borg list [email protected]:~/backup

You will need the passphrase to run borg commands on the backup repository created on the host Server B.

Check regularly your backup

If you want to be sure to be able to restore your server, you should try to restore regularly the archives. But this process is quite time consumming.

You should at least:

  • Keep your apps up to date (if apps are too old, they could be difficult to restore on a more recent recent version)
  • Check regularly the presence of info.json and db.sql or dump.sql in your apps archives
borg list ./::ARCHIVE_NAME | grep info.json
borg list ./::ARCHIVE_NAME | grep db.sql
borg list ./::ARCHIVE_NAME | grep dump.sql
  • Be sure to have your passphrase available even if your server is completely broken

How to restore a complete system

For infos on restoring process, check this yunohost forum thread and that one, also using Borg with sshkeys, the borg extract documentation, and this general tutorial on Borg Backup.

In the following explanations:

  • the server to backup/restore will be called: yuno
  • the remote server that receives and store the back will be called: rem
  • rem is accessible at the domain rem.tld
  • the remote user on rem which owns the Borg backups will be called yurem
  • backup files will be stored in rem in the directory: /home/yurem/backup

Overview

The idea here, if you need to restore a whole yunohost system is:

  1. Install a new Debian VM
  2. Install YunoHost in it the usual way
  3. Go through YunoHost postinstall (parameters you will supply are not crucial, as they will be replaced by the restore)
  4. Install Borg
  5. Setup rem to accept ssh connections from yuno
  6. Use Borg to import backups from rem to yuno
  7. Restore Borg backups with the yunohost backup restore command, first config, then data, then each app one at a time
  8. Remove the Borg app and restore it

Make it possible for yuno to connect to rem with Borg

At this stage, we will assume that yuno is a freshly installed YunoHost (based on Buster in my case). You should also have performed the YunoHost postinstall.

If you don't want to restore the whole system, just some apps, you can skip some of the steps below.

Install the Borg YunoHost app in yuno

The idea here is just to install Borg, not in order to create backups, but only to use Borg commands to import remote backups.

So for example, you can install it doing the following:

sudo yunohost app install borg -a "server=rem.tld&ssh_user=yurem&conf=0&data=0&apps=hextris&on_calendar=2:30"

Make sure that rem accepts ssh connections from yuno

In yuno you will need to get the ssh key that borg just created while installing: sudo cat /root/.ssh/id_borg_ed25519.pub, copy it to clipboard.

Connect via ssh to rem, go to /home/yurem/.ssh/authorized_keys, and past the Borg public key you got at previous step.

Now to make sure this worked, you can try to SSH from yuno to rem. In yuno : ssh -i /root/.ssh/id_borg_ed25519 [email protected] . If you can get into rem , without it prompting for a password, then you're good to continue :)

Restore backups to yuno

⚠️ For the commands in the following section to work, you will need to be root in yuno (you can become root running sudo su).

⚠️ Restoration of backups can take quite a while, you'd better do them in a separate process, so that it doesn't stop if your terminal session gets closed. For this, you can for example use tmux.

In yuno now, you should be able to list backups in rem with the following command:

[email protected]:/home/yurem/backup
BORG_RSH="ssh -i /root/.ssh/id_borg_ed25519 -oStrictHostKeyChecking=yes " borg list $SRV

You can then reimport one to yuno with:

BORG_RSH="ssh -i /root/.ssh/id_borg_ed25519 -oStrictHostKeyChecking=yes " borg export-tar $SRV::auto_BACKUP_NAME /home/yunohost.backup/archives/auto_BACKUP_NAME.tar.gz

And then restore the archive in yuno with:

yunohost backup restore auto_BACKUP_NAME --system # for config and data backups
yunohost backup restore auto_BACKUP_NAME --apps # for other backups (=apps)

And Nextcloud? It's super heavy!!

For Nextcloud, the best is probably to reimport the backup without the data. And to import the data manually.

For that, you can do the following (as root):

[email protected]:/home/yurem/backup

# export the app without data
BORG_RSH="ssh -i /root/.ssh/id_borg_ed25519 -oStrictHostKeyChecking=yes " borg export-tar -e apps/nextcloud/backup/home/yunohost.app $SRV::auto_nextcloud_XX_XX_XX_XX:XX /home/yunohost.backup/archives/auto_nextcloud_XX_XX_XX_XX:XX.tar.gz

# extract the data from the backup to the nextcloud folder
cd /home/yunohost.app/nextcloud
BORG_RSH="ssh -i /root/.ssh/id_borg_ed25519 -oStrictHostKeyChecking=yes " borg extract $SRV::auto_nextcloud_XX_XX_XX_XX:XX apps/nextcloud/backup/home/yunohost.app/nextcloud/
mv apps/nextcloud/backup/home/yunohost.app/nextcloud/data data
rm -r apps

# now you can simply restore nextcloud app
yunohost backup restore auto_nextcloud_XX_XX_XX_XX:XX --apps

Restore Borg

Once you've restored the whole system, you will probably want to restore the Borg app as well.

For that, remove the "dummy" Borg you installed to do the restoration, and restore Borg the same ways as for other apps:

sudo yunohost app remove borg
sudo yunohost backup restore auto_borg_XX_XX_XX_XX:XX --apps

Tips

Edit the list of YunoHost apps to backup

yunohost app setting borg apps -v "nextcloud,wordpress"

Other usefull borg commands

Get the storage space used by the backup repository on the host server borg info /home/servera/backup

Backup YunoHost apps with different criticallity levels

If you want to backup your guest server:

  • with different YunoHost apps
  • at different regular time schedule
  • on different host servers

Then you can set up multiple instances of the Borg Apps on same servers. For instance:

  • Borg Backup instance borg: backup nextcloud daily on host Server B
  • Borg Backup instance borg__2: backup all other YunoHost apps weekly on host Server C

Settings location

Settings of apps are in /etc/yunohost/apps/*/settings.yml, so are the settings for borg_ynh as well. Be careful though to not savagely manually edit them if you don't know what you're doing.

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An experimental Borg implementation for YunoHost

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