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ZFS snapshot tool written in Python

Project description

README

pyznap is a ZFS snapshot management tool. It automatically takes and deletes snapshots and can send them to different backup locations. You can specify a policy for a given filesystem in the pyznap.conf file and then use cron to let it run regularly. pyznap includes zfs bindings for python, forked and modified from https://bitbucket.org/stevedrake/weir/.

How does it work?

pyznap regularly takes and deletes snapshots according to a specified policy. You can take frequent, hourly, daily, weekly, monthly and yearly snapshots. 'frequent' snapshots can be taken up to once per minute, the frequency can be adjusted by the cronjob frequency. Old snapshots are deleted as you take new ones, thinning out the history as it gets older.

Datasets can also be replicated to other pools on the same system or remotely over ssh. After an initial sync, backups will be done incrementally as long as there are common snapshots between the source and the destination.

Requirements

pyznap is written in python 3.5+ and has no dependencies. For developing and running the tests you need:

pytest
pytest-dependency
paramiko

You also need the faketime program for some tests to simulate pyznap running over time.

I suggest installing virtualenv & virtualenvwrapper, so you don't clutter your system python installation with additional packages.

pyznap uses mbuffer and lzop (by default) to speed up zfs send/recv, and pv to show progress, but also works if they are not installed. Other supported compression methods are: none, lz4, gzip, pigz, bzip2 and xz.

Note that ZFS needs root access to run commands. Due to this you should install pyznap under your root user.

How do I set it up?

pyznap can easily be installed with pip. In your virtualenv just run

pip install pyznap

and pyznap & its requirements will be installed. This should also create an executable in your PATH, either at /path/to/virtualenv/pyznap/bin/pyznap or /usr/local/bin/pyznap. If you use your system python installation you might want to use the --user flag. In this case the executable will be located at ~/.local/bin/pyznap.

Before you can use pyznap, you will need to create a config file. For initial setup run

pyznap setup [-p PATH]

This will create a directory PATH (default is /etc/pyznap/) and copy a sample config there. A config for your system might look like this (remove the comments):

[rpool/filesystem]
frequent = 4                          # Keep 4 frequent snapshots
hourly = 24                           # Keep 24 hourly snapshots
daily = 7                             # Keep 7 daily snapshots
weekly = 4                            # Keep 4 weekly snapshots
monthly = 6                           # Keep 6 monthly snapshots
yearly = 1                            # Keep 1 yearly snapshot
snap = yes                            # Take snapshots on this filesystem
clean = yes                           # Delete old snapshots on this filesystem
dest = backup/filesystem              # Backup this filesystem on this location
exclude = rpool/filesystem/data/*     # Exclude these datasets for pyznap send

Then set up a cronjob by creating a file under /etc/cron.d/

nano /etc/cron.d/pyznap

and let pyznap run regularly by adding the following lines

SHELL=/bin/sh
PATH=/usr/local/sbin:/usr/local/bin:/sbin:/bin:/usr/sbin:/usr/bin

*/15 * * * *   root    /path/to/pyznap snap >> /var/log/pyznap.log 2>&1

This will run pyznap every quarter hour to take and delete snapshots. 'frequent' snapshots can be taken up to once per minute, so adjust your cronjob accordingly.

If you also want to send your filesystems to another location you can add a line

0 0 * * *   root    /path/to/pyznap send >> /var/log/pyznap.log 2>&1

This will backup your data once per day at 12pm.

You can also manage, send to and pull from remote ssh locations. Always specify ssh locations with

ssh:port:user@host:rpool/data

If you omit the port (ssh::user@host:...) the default 22 is assumed. A sample config which backs up a filesystem to a remote location looks like:

[rpool/data]
hourly = 24
snap = yes
clean = yes
dest = ssh:22:user@host:backup/data   # Specify ssh destination
dest_keys = /home/user/.ssh/id_rsa    # Provide key for ssh login. If none given, look in home dir
compress = gzip                       # Use gzip compression for sending over ssh

To pull a filesystem from a remote location use:

[ssh::user@host:rpool/data]           # Specify ssh source
key = /home/user/.ssh/id_rsa          # Provide key for ssh login. If none given, look in home dir
dest = tank/data
compress = lz4

You can exclude datasets when sending using Unix shell-style wildcards:

[rpool]
dest = backup/rpool, tank/rpool
exclude = rpool/data rpool/home/*/documents rpool/home/user1, rpool/home*

Note that exclude rules are separated by a , for the different dests, and you can specify multiple rules for a single dest by separating them with a space. Exclude rules thus cannot contain any comma or whitespace.

I would also suggest making sure that root has ownership for all files, s.t. no user can modify them. If that is not the case just run

chown root:root -R /etc/pyznap/

Command line options

Run pyznap -h to see all available options.

  • --config

    Specify config file. Default is /etc/pyznap/pyznap.conf.

  • -v, --versbose

    Print more verbose output.

  • setup [-p PATH]

    Initial setup. Creates a config dir and puts a sample config file there. You can specify the path to the config dir with the -p flag, default is /etc/pyznap/.

  • snap

    Interface to the snapshot management tool. Has three optional arguments:

    • --take

      Takes snapshots according to policy in the config file.

    • --clean

      Deletes old snapshots according to policy.

    • --full

      First takes snapshots, then deletes old ones. Default when no other option is given.

  • send

    Interface to the zfs send/receive tool. Has two usages:

    • No further option is given

      Send snapshots to backup locations according to policy.

    • -s SOURCE -d DESTINATION [-c COMPRESSION] [-i KEYFILE] [-j SOURCE_KEY] [-k DEST_KEY] [-e EXCLUDE]

      Send source filesystem to destination filesystem. If either source OR dest is a remote location, you can specify the keyfile with the -i flag. If both source AND dest are remote, you specify the keyfiles with the flag -j for the source and -k for the dest. You can also turn on compression with the -c flag. Currently supported options are: none, lzop, lz4, gzip, pigz, bzip2 and xz. If no option is given, lzop is used if available. You can specify multiple (whitespace separated) wildcard exclude rules with the -e flag. Note that you should probably pass these as strings or escape the wildcard (e.g. -e '*/data' or -e \*/data), else your shell might expand the pattern.

Usage examples

  • Take snapshots according to policy in default config file:

    pyznap snap --take

  • Clean snapshots according to policy in another config file:

    pyznap --config /etc/pyznap/data.conf snap --clean

  • Take and clean snapshots according to policy in default config file:

    pyznap snap

  • Backup snapshots according to policy in default config file:

    pyznap send

  • Backup a single filesystem locally:

    pyznap send -s tank/data -d backup/data

  • Send a single filesystem to a remote location, using pigz compression:

    pyznap send -s tank/data -d ssh:20022:root@example.com:backup/data -i /root/.ssh/id_rsa -c pigz

  • Pull a single filesystem from a remote location:

    pyznap send -s ssh::root@example.com:tank/data -d backup/data -c lz4

  • Pull a single filesystem from a remote location and send it to another remote location:

    pyznap send -s ssh::root@example1.com:tank/data -d ssh::root@example2.com:backup/data -j /root/.ssh/id_rsa_1 -k /root/.ssh/id_rsa_2

  • Backup a single filesystem and exclude some datasets:

    pyznap send -s tank -d backup/tank -e '/tank/data*' '/tank/home/user1*' '*/user2/docs'

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