readme: initial sections adapted from nextcloud backup script readme
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# Mailcow Backup Using borgbackup <!-- omit in toc -->
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This script automates backing up your Mailcow installation using borgbackup
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and a remote ssh-capable storage system. I suggest using rsync.net since they
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have great speeds and a special pricing structure for borgbackup/attic users
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([details here](https://www.rsync.net/products/attic.html)).
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This script automates the following tasks:
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- Optionally copies a 503 error page to your webserver so users know when your
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server is unavailable due to backups being performed. The 503 file is removed
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when the backup is completed so users can login again
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- Dumps the Mailcow mySQL database and adds it to the backup
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- Handles stopping and re-starting mailflow containers (postfix and dovecot) so
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everything is in a consistent state during the backup
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- Allows you to specify additional files you want backed up
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- Allows you to specify files/directories to exclude from your backups
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- Runs 'borg prune' to make sure you are trimming old backups on your schedule
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- Creates a clear, easy to parse log file so you can keep an eye on your backups
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and any errors/warnings
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## Installation/copying
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Once you've either cloned this git or downloaded the release file, simply copy
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the files within the archive to whatever location(s) that work for your setup.
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I've stored the files in the git archive in a directory structure that should
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match most default setups. I suggest keeping the contents of the
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*'/root/scripts'* folder in that location since the root user must execute the
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script anyways. If you edit the 503.html and mc_borg.details files in place,
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then you don't have to specify their locations when running the script.
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Remember to make the script executable!
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```Bash
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chmod +x backup.sh
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```
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In addition, you can rename this script file to anything you like. The log file
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will use that same name by default when naming itself and any mention of this
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file in the logs will automatically use whatever name you choose to give it.
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## Environment notes
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The script is designed to be easy to use but still be flexible enough to
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accommodate a wide range of Mailcow setups. The script pulls nearly all it's
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configuration from the Mailcow configuration files themselves, so it adapts to
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nearly all customizations you may have in your environment. The script accepts
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several optional parameters to override its default or detected settings. In
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addition, it reads easy to edit external plain-text files for borg settings so
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you don't have to weed through the script code to supply things like passwords.
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## Why this script must be run as root
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This script must be run by the root user and will exit with an error if you try
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running it otherwise. This is because a default secured setup of borgbackup
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contains things like the repository private key that are locked out to root user
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access only. In addition, the root user is guaranteed to have access to all
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files you might want to backup.
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## Script parameters
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You can run the script with the *'-?'* parameter to access the built-in help
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which explains the parameters. However, the following is a more detailed
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explanation of each parameter and how to use them.
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**Note that any parameters needing a directory (webroot, Mailcow root, etc.)
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can be entered with or without the trailing / since it's stripped by the script
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anyways.**
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General usage:
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```Bash
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/path/to/script/scriptname.sh -parameter argument -parameter argument ...
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```
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### Required parameters
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#### Mailcow data directory: -d _/path/to/data/_
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This is the full path to the location where Mailcow actually stores data. In
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a setup such as I recommend on my blog at
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[https://mytechiethoughts.com](https://www.mytechiethoughts.com), you would be
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using an entry such as *'/var/nc_data'*. This directory and all subdirectories
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are automatically included in the backup.
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#### Mailcow webroot: -n _/path/to/Mailcow/_
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This is the directory in which Mailcow's php and html files are located. It
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is generally somewhere under your webroot directory. This is required so the
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script can find the 'OCC' command to invoke maintenance mode.
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#### webuser account: -w _accountName_
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This is the account that Mailcow runs under via your webserver. This is
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almost always *'www-data'*. You would have to check your NGINX/Apache config to
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be sure. 'OCC' will not run as any other user thus, the script cannot
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enter/exit maintenance mode without knowing which user to emulate.
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### Optional parameters
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#### Path to 503 error page: -5 _/path/to/filename.html_
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The path to an html file for the script to copy to your webroot during the
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backup process. This file can be scanned by your webserver and a 503 error can
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be issued to users letting them know that your Mailcow is 'temporarily
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unavailable' while being backed up. A sample 503 page is included for you.
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If you remove the default file or the one you specify is missing, a warning will
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be issued by the script but, it will continue executing. More details on the
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503 notification can be found later in the [503 functionality](#503-functionality) section of this
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document. **Default: _scriptpath/503.html_**
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#### Path to borg details file: -b _/path/to/filename.file_
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This is a text file that lays out various borg options such as repo name,
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password, additional files to include, exclusion patters, etc. A sample file is
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included for your reference. More details, including the *required order* of
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entries can be found later in this document in the [borg details
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file](#borg-details-file) section. **Default: _scriptpat and mc_borg.detailsog
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file location: -l _/path/to/filename.file_
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If you have a particular place and filename you'd like this script use for it's
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log, then you can specify it using this parameter. I would recommend
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*'/var/log/backup.log'*. By default, the script will name the log file
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*scriptname*.log and will save it in the same directory as the script itself.
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**Default: _scriptpath/scriptname.log_**
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#### Path to SQL details file: -s _/path/to/filename.file_
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This is a text file containing the details needed to connect to Mailcow's SQL
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database. More information about the *required order* of entries can be found
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later in this document in the [sql details file](#sql-details-file) section.
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**Default: _scriptpath/nc_sql.details_**
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#### Verbose output from borg: -v (no arguments)
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By default, the script will ask borg to generate summary only output and record
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that in the script's log file. If you are running the backup for the first time
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or are troubleshooting, you may want a detailed output of all files and their
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changed/unchanged/excluded status from borg. In that case, specify the -v
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switch. **Note: This will make your log file very large very quickly since EVERY
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file being backed up is written to the log.**
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#### Path to webroot: -w _/path/to/webroot/_
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This is the path to the directory your webserver is using as it's default root.
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In other words, this is the directory that contains the html files served when
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someone browses to your server. Depending on your setup, this might be the same
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as your Mailcow webroot.
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This is used exclusively for 503 functionality since the script has to know
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where to copy the 503 file. If you don't want to use this functionality, you
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can omit this parameter and the script will issue a warning and move on. More
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details can be found in the [503 functionality](#503-functionality) section later in this
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document.
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## Borg details file
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This file contains all the data needed to access your borg remote data repo.
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Each line must contain specific information in a specific order or needs to be
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blank if that data is not required. The sample file includes this data and
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example entries. The file must have the following information in the following
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order:
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1. path to borg base directory **(required)**
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2. path to ssh private key for repo **(required)**
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3. connection string to remote repo **(required)**
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4. password for ssh key/repo **(required)**
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5. path to file listing additional files/directories to backup
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6. path to file containing borg-specific exclusion patterns
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7. purge timeframe options
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8. location of borg remote instance
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### Protect your borg details file
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This file contains information on how to access and decrypt your borg repo,
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therefore, you **must** protect it. You should lock it out for everyone but
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your root user. Putting it in your root folder is not enough! Run the following
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commands to restrict access to the root user only (assuming filename is and
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mc_borg.details root:roo and mc_borg.detailsowner chmod 60 and mc_borg.detailss
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to root only (read/write)
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```
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### borg specific entries (lines 1-4)
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If you need help with these options, then you should consult the borg
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documentation or search my blog at
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[https://mytechiethoughts.com](https://mytechiethoughts.com) for borg. This is
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especially true if you want to understand why an SSH key and passphrase are
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preferred and why just a passphrase on it's own presents problems automating
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borg backups.
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### additional files/directories to backup
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This points to a plain-text file listing additional files and directories you'd
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like borg to include in the backup. The sample file, *'xtraLocations.borg'*
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contains the most likely files you'd want to include assuming you're using a
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standard setup like it outline in my blog.
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The following would include all files in the home folder for users *'foo'* and
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*'bar'* and any conf files in *'/etc/someProgram'*:
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```Bash
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/home/foo/
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/home/bar/
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/etc/someProgram/*.conf
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```
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You can leave this line blank to tell borg to only backup your Mailcow data
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directory and the SQL dump. However, this is pretty unusual since you would not
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be including any configuration files, webserver configurations, etc. If you
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omit this line, the script will log a warning to remind you of this unusual
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situation.
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### exclusion patterns
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This points to a plain-text file containing borg-specific patterns describing
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what files you'd like borg to ignore during the backup. The sample file,
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*'excludeLocations.borg'* contains a list of directories to exclude assuming a
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standard Mailcow install -- the previews directory and the cache directory.
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You need to run *'borg help patterns'* for help on how to specify any additional
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exclusion patterns since the format is not your standard BASH format and only
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sometimes uses standard regex.
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If you leave this line blank, the script will note it is not processing any
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exclusions and will proceed with backing up all files specified.
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### purge timeframe options
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Here you can let borg purge know how you want to manage your backup history.
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Consult the borg documentation and then copy the relevant options directly into
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this line including any spaces, etc. The example file contains the following as
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a staring point:
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```Ini
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--keep-within=7d --keep-daily=30 --keep-weekly=12 --keep-monthly=-1
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```
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This would tell borg prune to keep ALL backups made for any reason within the
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last 7 days, keep 30 days worth of daily backups, 12 weeks of end-of-week
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backups and then an infinite amount of end-of-month backups.
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### borg remote location
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If you're using rsync, then just have this say *'borg1'*. If you are using
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another provider, you'll have to reference their locally installed copy of borg
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relative to your repo path. You can also leave this blank if your provider does
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not run borg locally but your backups/restores will be slower.
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### Examples
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Repo in directory *'NCBackup'*, all fields including pointers to additional
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files to backup, exclusion patterns and a remote borg path. Prune: keep all
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backups made in the last 14 days.
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```Ini
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/var/borgbackup
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/var/borgbackup/SSHprivate.key
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myuser@server001.rsync.net:NCBackup/
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myPaSsWoRd
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/root/NCscripts/xtraLocations.borg
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/root/NCscripts/excludeLocations.borg
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--keep-within=14d
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borg1
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```
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Repo in directory *'myBackup'*, no exclusions, keep 14 days end-of-day, 52 weeks
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end-of-week
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```Ini
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/var/borgbackup
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/root/keys/rsyncPrivate.key
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myuser@server001.rsync.net:myBackup/
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PaSsWoRd
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/var/borgbackup/include.list
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--keep-daily=14 --keep-weekly=52
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borg1
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```
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Repo in directory *'backup'*, no extra file locations, no exclusions, no remote
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borg installation. Keep last 30 backups.
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```Ini
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/root/.borg
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/root/.borg/private.key
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username@server.tld:backup/
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pAsSw0rD
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--keep-within=30d
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```
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**Notice that the blank lines are very important!**
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## SQL details file
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This file contains all the information needed to access your Mailcow SQL
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database in order to dump it's contents into a file that can be easily
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backed-up. Each line must contain specific information in a specific order. The
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sample file includes this data and example entries. The file must have the
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following information in the following order (**all entries required**):
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1. name of machine hosting mySQL (usually localhost)
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2. name of authorized user
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3. password for above user
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4. name of Mailcow database
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For example:
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```Ini
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localhost
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Mailcow
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pAsSwOrD
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MailcowDB
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```
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### Protect your sql details file
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||||||
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||||||
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This file contains information on how to access your SQL installation therefore,
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you **must** protect it. You should lock it out for all users except root.
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Putting it in your root folder is not enough! Run the following commands to
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restrict access to the root user only (assuming filename is *'nc_sql.details'*):
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```Bash
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chown root:root nc_sql.details # make root the owner
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chmod 600 nc_sql.details # restrict access to root only (read/write)
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```
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## 503 functionality
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This script includes an entire section dedicated to copying an html file to act
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as an error 503 notification page. Error 503 is by definition "service
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temporarily unavailable" which is exactly the case for your Mailcow server
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during a backup since it is in maintenance mode and no logins are permitted.
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The script copies whatever file is defined by the *'-5'* parameter (or the
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default located at *'scriptpath/503.html'*) to whatever path is defined as the
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'webroot' by the *'-w'* parameter. This means that if you omit the *'-w'*
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parameter, the script will necessarily skip this entire process and just issue a
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warning to let you know about it.
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||||||
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### Conditional forwarding by your webserver
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||||||
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The script copying the file to the webroot is the easy part. Your webserver has
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to look for the presence of that file and generate a 503 error in order for the
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magic to happen. To do that, you have to include an instruction to that effect
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in your default server definition and/or your Mailcow virtual server
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||||||
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definition file depending on your setup.
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||||||
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#### NGINX
|
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||||||
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You can copy the following code into the relevant server definition(s) on an
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NGINX server:
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||||||
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```Perl
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server {
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...
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if (-f /usr/share/nginx/html/503.html) {
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return 503;
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}
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...
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error_page 530 @backup
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location @backup {
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root /usr/share/nginx/html;
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rewrite ^(.*)$ /503.html break;
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}
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}
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```
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||||||
|
This tells NGINX that if it finds the file *'503.html'* at the path
|
||||||
|
*'/usr/share/nginx/html'* (webroot) then return an error code 503. Next,
|
||||||
|
rewrite any url to *'domain.tld/503.html'* and thus, display the custom 503
|
||||||
|
error page. On the other hand, if it can't find 503.html at the path specified
|
||||||
|
(i.e. the script has deleted it because the backup is completed), then go about
|
||||||
|
business as usual.
|
||||||
|
|
||||||
|
#### Apache
|
||||||
|
|
||||||
|
I don't use apache for anything, ever... so I'm not sure how exactly you'd do
|
||||||
|
this but I think you'd have to use something like:
|
||||||
|
|
||||||
|
```Perl
|
||||||
|
RewriteEngine On
|
||||||
|
RewriteCond %{ENV:REDIRECT_STATUS} !=503
|
||||||
|
RewriteCond "/var/www/503.html" -f
|
||||||
|
RewriteRule ^ - [R=503,L]
|
||||||
|
...
|
||||||
|
ErrorDocument 503 /503.html
|
||||||
|
...
|
||||||
|
```
|
||||||
|
|
||||||
|
Let me know if that works and I'll update this document accordingly. Like I
|
||||||
|
said, I don't use Apache so I can't really test it very easily.
|
||||||
|
|
||||||
|
#### Disabling 503 functionality altogether
|
||||||
|
|
||||||
|
If you don't want to use the 503 functionality for whatever reason and don't
|
||||||
|
want your log file junked up with warnings about it, then find the section of
|
||||||
|
the script file that starts with *'--- Begin 503 section ---'* and either
|
||||||
|
comment all the lines (put a *'#'* at the beginning of each line) or delete all
|
||||||
|
the lines until you get to *'--- End 503 section ---'*.
|
||||||
|
|
||||||
|
## Scheduling: Cron
|
||||||
|
|
||||||
|
After running this script at least once manually to test your settings, you
|
||||||
|
should schedule it to run automatically so things stay backed up. This is
|
||||||
|
easiest with a simple cron job.
|
||||||
|
|
||||||
|
1. Open root's crontab:
|
||||||
|
|
||||||
|
```Bash
|
||||||
|
sudo crontab -e
|
||||||
|
```
|
||||||
|
|
||||||
|
2. Add your script command line and set the time. I'm assuming your script is
|
||||||
|
located at *'/root/NCscripts'*, all files are at their default locations and
|
||||||
|
you want to run your backup at 1:07am daily.
|
||||||
|
|
||||||
|
```Bash
|
||||||
|
7 1 * * * /root/NCscripts/backup.sh -d /var/nc_data -n /usr/share/nginx/html/Mailcow -u www-data -l /var/log/backup.log -w /usr/share/nginx/html > /dev/null 2>&1
|
||||||
|
```
|
||||||
|
|
||||||
|
The last part redirects all output to 'null' and forwards any errors to
|
||||||
|
'null' also. You don't need output because the script creates a wonderfully
|
||||||
|
detailed log file that you can review :-)
|
||||||
|
3. Save the file and exit.
|
||||||
|
4. Confirm by listing the root user's crontab:
|
||||||
|
|
||||||
|
```Bash
|
||||||
|
sudo crontab -l
|
||||||
|
```
|
||||||
|
|
||||||
|
## The log file
|
||||||
|
|
||||||
|
The script creates a very detailed log file of all major operations along with
|
||||||
|
any errors and warnings. Everything is timestamped so you can see how long
|
||||||
|
things take and when any errors took place. The script includes debugging
|
||||||
|
notes such as where temp files are located, where it's looking for data, whether
|
||||||
|
it created/moved/copied files, etc. All major operations are tagged *'-- [INFO]
|
||||||
|
message here --'*. Similarily, warnings are tagged *'-- [WARNING] message here
|
||||||
|
(code: xxxx) --'* and errors are tagged *'-- [ERROR] message here (code: xxx)
|
||||||
|
--'*. Successful operations generate a *'-- [SUCCESS] message here --'* stamp.
|
||||||
|
|
||||||
|
Sections of the script are all colour-coded to make viewing it easier. This
|
||||||
|
means you should use something like *'cat backup.log | more'* or *'tail -n
|
||||||
|
numberOfLines backup.log'* to view the file since the ansi colour codes
|
||||||
|
would make it difficult to read in nano or vi.
|
||||||
|
|
||||||
|
This tagging makes it easy for you to set up a log screening program to make
|
||||||
|
keeping an eye on your backup results easier. If you plan on using Logwatch
|
||||||
|
(highly recommended, great program!) then I've done the work for you...
|
||||||
|
|
||||||
|
### Using Logwatch
|
||||||
|
|
||||||
|
Log-group, conf and service files are included so that you can easily setup
|
||||||
|
Logwatch to monitor the script's log file and report at your desired detail
|
||||||
|
level as follows:
|
||||||
|
|
||||||
|
1. 0: Summary of total success, warnings & errors only
|
||||||
|
2. 1-4: Actual success, error & warning messages
|
||||||
|
3. 5: Same as above, but includes info messages
|
||||||
|
4. 6+: Dumps entire raw log file including debugging messages
|
||||||
|
|
||||||
|
A detailed breakdown of the files and all options are included in a separate
|
||||||
|
readme in the *'/etc/logwatch'* folder of this git archive.
|
||||||
|
|
||||||
|
### Remember to rotate your logs
|
||||||
|
|
||||||
|
The log file generated by this script is fairly detailed so it can grow quite
|
||||||
|
large over time. This is especially true if you are using verbose output from
|
||||||
|
borg for any troubleshooting or for compliance/auditing. I've included a sample
|
||||||
|
commented logrotate config file in this git archive at *'/etc/logrotate.d'*
|
||||||
|
which you can modify and drop into that same directory on your Debian/Ubuntu
|
||||||
|
system. If you are using another log rotating solution, then please remember to
|
||||||
|
configure it so that your log files don't get overwhelmingly large should you
|
||||||
|
need to parse them if something goes wrong with your backups.
|
||||||
|
|
||||||
|
## Final notes
|
||||||
|
|
||||||
|
I think that's everything. If I've forgotten to document something, please let
|
||||||
|
me know. I know this readme is long but, I hate how much stuff for linux and
|
||||||
|
open-source programs/scripts in general are so poorly documented especially for
|
||||||
|
newbies and I didn't want to make that same mistake.
|
||||||
|
|
||||||
|
I don't script too often and I'm a horrible programmer, so if you see anything
|
||||||
|
that can be/should be improved, please let me know or submit your changes! I
|
||||||
|
love learning new ways of doing things and getting feedback, so suggestions and
|
||||||
|
comments are more than welcome.
|
||||||
|
|
||||||
|
If this has helped you out, then please visit my blog at
|
||||||
|
[https://mytechiethoughts.com](https://mytechiethoughts.com) where I solve
|
||||||
|
problems like this all the time on a shoe-string or zero budget. Thanks!
|
Loading…
Reference in New Issue
Block a user