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bash-cloud-backup is a set of bash scripts, which can be used to automate local and cloud backup in Linux/Unix machines.

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bash-cloud-backup

bash-cloud-backup is a bash script, which can be used to automate local and cloud backup in Linux/Unix machines.

RELEASE 2.2.0 (3 Feb 2018)

CHANGELOG https://github.com/pontikis/bash-cloud-backup/blob/master/CHANGELOG.md

ATTENTION

Version 2.* is not compatible with previous (deprecated) version 1.*

Version 1 has its own branch (version1).

More at https://github.com/pontikis/bash-cloud-backup/blob/version1/README.md

Features

  • bash-cloud-backup keeps rotating compressed tarballs of certain directories/files or databases.
  • supported databases
  • it uses tar (for archiving) and gzip (for compression) or 7z (for compression and AES256 encryption - RECOMMENDED).
  • backup files are stored in specified directories and (optionally) deleted with rotation (14 days default).
  • Amazon S3 sync: After local backup has been completed, the backup directory can be synchronized with Amazon S3, using aws s3 sync or s3cmd sync (optional but recommended).
  • detailed logs, error reporting, email report
  • option to use nice and ionice
  • option to usetrickle bandwidth shaper
  • advanced customization using configuration files

(NOTE: 7-zip does not store the owner/group of the file. On Linux/Unix, in order to backup directories keeping permissions you must use tar.)

Copyright

Christos Pontikis (http://www.pontikis.gr)

License

MIT (see https://opensource.org/licenses/MIT)

Configuration files

  • conf.default/global.conf: global options (sample file)
  • conf.default/backup.conf: configuration of a backup set (sample file)

Scripts

  • bash-cloud-backup.sh: the main script

You may create and use custom scripts (see below - Configuration)

Logs

main log file

bash-cloud-backup is keeping logs (as defined in global.conf).

logfilepath=/root/backup/log
logfilename=bash-cloud-backup.log

The main log file is logfilepath/logfilename

You should take care for logfile rotation.

nano /etc/logrotate.d/bash-cloud-backup

Add something like

/path/to/backup.log {
    weekly
    missingok
    rotate 14
    notifempty
    create
}

Leave blank both logfilepath and logfilename if you DO NOT WANT to keep the main log file.

temporary log files

Inside tmp_path bash-cloud-backup is keeping temporary log files, in order to create current session log file. This will be sent by email if you set value to mail_to parameter.
After current session finished, both the temporary path and its contents are deleted.

  • logfile_tmp_header="$tmp_path/header.log"
  • logfile_tmp_main="$tmp_path/main.log"
  • logfile_tmp_errors="$tmp_path/errors.log"
  • logfile_tmp_time_elapsed="$tmp_path/time_elapsed.log"
  • logfile_tmp_whole_session="$tmp_path/whole_session.log"

Keep tmp_path outside backup root.

If you do not set a value, the default value is applied:

tmp_path=/tmp/bash-cloud-backup

External software

NOTE: to select which AWS front-end you will use, set value to parameter amazon_front_end in global.conf.

Amazon S3 account

For cloud backup, an Amazon S3 account is needed (http://aws.amazon.com/s3/)

Setup using git (recommended)

installation

cd /path/to/scripts
git clone https://github.com/pontikis/bash-cloud-backup.git

get updates

cd /path/to/scripts/bash-cloud-backup
git fetch
git merge origin

If you are interested on (deprecated) version 1

installation

cd /path/to/scripts
git clone https://github.com/pontikis/bash-cloud-backup.git
cd /path/to/scripts/bash-cloud-backup
git checkout -b version1 origin/version1

get updates

cd /path/to/scripts/bash-cloud-backup
git fetch
git merge origin/version1

Setup by download

If git is not available, download the source:

https://github.com/pontikis/bash-cloud-backup/archive/master.zip

If you are interested on (deprecated) version 1

https://github.com/pontikis/bash-cloud-backup/archive/version1.zip

Configuration

bash-cloud-backup uses two configuration files (samples available in /conf.default folder):

  • global.conf which defines global parameters
  • backup.conf which defines which files or databases will be backed up (a backup set)

By default, bash-cloud-backup expects these files to be

  • /etc/bash-cloud-backup/global.conf
  • /etc/bash-cloud-backup/backup.conf

You may define your own global.conf and as many backup.conf you like. So:

Edit global.conf (global parameters)

cp conf.default/global.conf /etc/bash-cloud-backup/global.conf
nano /etc/bash-cloud-backup/global.conf

For instructions, see sample conf.default/global.conf

https://github.com/pontikis/bash-cloud-backup/blob/master/conf.default/global.conf

ATTENTION: remember to configure properly global.conf after each update

Edit backup.conf (create your own backup set)

cp conf.default/backup.conf /etc/bash-cloud-backup/backup.conf
nano /etc/bash-cloud-backup/backup.conf

For instructions, see sample conf.default/backup.conf

https://github.com/pontikis/bash-cloud-backup/blob/master/conf.default/backup.conf

ATTENTION: remember to configure properly backup.conf after each update

Directories

bash-cloud-backup will create all directories you define in configuration files (assuming it has the required permissions)

You may add custom commands (optional)

You may create and use

  • on_backup_started.sh - before backup started
  • on_backup_finished.sh - after backup finished (and before Amazon S3 sync)
  • on_s3_sync_finished.sh - after Amazon S3 sync
  • on_logfile_created.sh - after logfile created and main script finished

(these scripts are git ignored)

Security

About MySQL password

DO NOT expose root password to create backups. Create a 'read only' user for backup purposes. In most cases the following commands are enough:

GRANT SELECT,RELOAD,FILE,SUPER,LOCK TABLES,SHOW VIEW ON *.*
TO 'bkpadm'@'localhost' IDENTIFIED BY 'bkpadm_password_here'
WITH MAX_QUERIES_PER_HOUR 0 MAX_CONNECTIONS_PER_HOUR 0 MAX_UPDATES_PER_HOUR 0 MAX_USER_CONNECTIONS 0;
flush privileges;

Create .my.cnf file in home folder and add

[client]
password="bkpadm_password_here"

or

[mysqldump]
password="bkpadm_password_here"

(double quotes are permitted in this file and in some cases of special characters in password are necessary)

then

chmod 600 .my.cnf

So YOU DO NOT NEED TO PROVIDE mysql_password

More at http://dev.mysql.com/doc/refman/5.7/en/password-security-user.html

About Postgresql password

DO NOT expose postgres password to create backups. Create a 'read only' user for backup purposes. In most cases the following commands are enough:

CREATE USER bkpadm SUPERUSER  password 'password';
ALTER USER bkpadm set default_transaction_read_only = on;

In Postgresql you may use .pgpass file (similar to MySQL .my.cnf, but more advanced)

More https://www.postgresql.org/docs/9.5/static/libpq-pgpass.html

So YOU DO NOT NEED TO PROVIDE pg_password

However, providing a password in bash-cloud-backup configuration files is quite secure, as PGPASSWORD ENVIRONMENTAL VARIABLE is used.

About 7z password

It would be nice if 7z could use enviromental variables or text fies for password retrieving. Not an easy way to do it. Alternatively, use hidepid to hide root processes to other users - see below.

How to protect passwords to be exposed in command line

When a 7z (or any other) process is running, all command line arguments (including password) can be exposed to other users using programs like ps, top, htop etc. You may prevent this remounting /proc with hideid=2 option.

Linux kernel version 3.2+ is required.

See here https://git.kernel.org/cgit/linux/kernel/git/torvalds/linux.git/commit/?id=0499680a42141d86417a8fbaa8c8db806bea1201

You may set this option permanently (using /etc/fstab)

To find with which options /proc has been mounted in your system, use

cat /proc/mounts

(in this example /proc had been mounted with options rw,nosuid,nodev,noexec,relatime)

With bash-cloud-backup you may use custom scripts

nano on_backup_started.sh

Set hidepid=2 option

/bin/mount -o remount,rw,nosuid,nodev,noexec,relatime,hidepid=2 /proc

After script finished return to previous status

nano on_s3_sync_finished.sh

Set hidepid=0 option

/bin/mount -o remount,rw,nosuid,nodev,noexec,relatime,hidepid=0 /proc

So, while bash-cloud-backup is running, nobody can see running procesess (eg mysql, postgres, 7z etc) except their owner of course, usually root

A WORKAROUND FOR OLDER SYSTEMS

In older systems (Linux kernel version < 3.2) you may change mod of ps, top, htop etc

at the beginning of the script

chmod 700 /bin/ps

return to original status at the end of the script.

chmod 755 /bin/ps

Secure files permissions

It is recommended all executable (*.sh) to be mod 700 and text files 600:

chown root:root bash-cloud-backup.sh
chmod 700 bash-cloud-backup.sh

chown root:root /etc/bash-cloud-backup/*.conf
chmod 600 /etc/bash-cloud-backup/*.conf

Run

To perform backup, call (as root in most cases)

bash-cloud-backup.sh

You may use your own global.conf and as many backup.conf you like. In this case, use:

bash-cloud-backup.sh -g /path/to/myglobal.conf -b /path/to/mybackup.conf

Cron automation

su -l root
crontab -e
0 1 * * * /root/scripts/bash-cloud-backup/bash-cloud-backup.sh #Daily Backup

(in this example, every night at 01:00)

About

bash-cloud-backup is a set of bash scripts, which can be used to automate local and cloud backup in Linux/Unix machines.

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