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How to set up backups with borgmatic |
Installation
To get up and running, first install Borg, at least version 1.1.
By default, borgmatic looks for its configuration files in /etc/borgmatic/
and /etc/borgmatic.d/
, where the root user typically has read access.
So, to download and install borgmatic as the root user, run the following commands:
sudo pip3 install --user --upgrade borgmatic
This is a recommended user site
installation.
You will need to ensure that /root/.local/bin
is available on your $PATH
so
that the borgmatic executable is available.
Note that your pip binary may have a different name than "pip3". Make sure you're using Python 3, as borgmatic does not support Python 2.
Other ways to install
Along with the above process, you have several other options for installing borgmatic:
- Docker base image
- Docker image with support for scheduled backups
- Debian
- Ubuntu
- Fedora
- Arch Linux
- OpenBSD
- openSUSE
- stand-alone binary
- virtualenv
Hosting providers
Need somewhere to store your encrypted offsite backups? The following hosting providers include specific support for Borg/borgmatic. Using these links and services helps support borgmatic development and hosting. (These are referral links, but without any tracking scripts or cookies.)
- rsync.net: Cloud Storage provider with full support for borg and any other SSH/SFTP tool
- BorgBase: Borg hosting service with support for monitoring, 2FA, and append-only repos
Configuration
After you install borgmatic, generate a sample configuration file:
sudo generate-borgmatic-config
If that command is not found, then it may be installed in a location that's
not in your system PATH
. Try looking in /usr/local/bin/
.
This generates a sample configuration file at /etc/borgmatic/config.yaml (by default). You should edit the file to suit your needs, as the values are representative. All options are optional except where indicated, so feel free to ignore anything you don't need.
Note that the configuration file is organized into distinct sections, each
with a section name like location:
or storage:
. So take care that if you
uncomment a particular option, also uncomment its containing section name, or
else borgmatic won't recognize the option. Also be sure to use spaces rather
than tabs for indentation; YAML does not allow tabs.
You can also get the same sample configuration file from the configuration reference, the authoritative set of all configuration options. This is handy if borgmatic has added new options since you originally created your configuration file.
Encryption
Note that if you plan to run borgmatic on a schedule with cron, and you
encrypt your Borg repository with a passphrase instead of a key file, you'll
either need to set the borgmatic encryption_passphrase
configuration
variable or set the BORG_PASSPHRASE
environment variable. See the
repository encryption
section
of the Borg Quick Start for more info.
Alternatively, you can specify the passphrase programatically by setting
either the borgmatic encryption_passcommand
configuration variable or the
BORG_PASSCOMMAND
environment variable. See the Borg Security
FAQ
for more info.
Validation
If you'd like to validate that your borgmatic configuration is valid, the following command is available for that:
sudo validate-borgmatic-config
This command's exit status ($?
in Bash) is zero when configuration is valid
and non-zero otherwise.
Validating configuration can be useful if you generate your configuration files via configuration management, or you want to double check that your hand edits are valid.
Initialization
Before you can create backups with borgmatic, you first need to initialize a Borg repository so you have a destination for your backup archives. (But skip this step if you already have a Borg repository.) To create a repository, run a command like the following:
borgmatic init --encryption repokey
(No borgmatic init
action? Try the old-style --init
flag, or upgrade
borgmatic!)
This uses the borgmatic configuration file you created above to determine which local or remote repository to create, and encrypts it with the encryption passphrase specified there if one is provided. Read about Borg encryption modes for the menu of available encryption modes.
Also, optionally check out the Borg Quick Start for more background about repository initialization.
Note that borgmatic skips repository initialization if the repository already exists. This supports use cases like ensuring a repository exists prior to performing a backup.
If the repository is on a remote host, make sure that your local user has key-based SSH access to the desired user account on the remote host.
Backups
Now that you've configured borgmatic and initialized a repository, it's a good idea to test that borgmatic is working. So to run borgmatic and start a backup, you can invoke it like this:
borgmatic --verbosity 1
By default, this will also prune any old backups as per the configured retention policy, and check backups for consistency problems due to things like file damage.
The verbosity flag makes borgmatic list the files that it's archiving, which are those that are new or changed since the last backup. Eyeball the list and see if it matches your expectations based on the configuration.
Autopilot
Running backups manually is good for validating your configuration, but I'm guessing that you want to run borgmatic automatically, say once a day. To do that, you can configure a separate job runner to invoke it periodically.
cron
If you're using cron, download the sample cron file. Then, from the directory where you downloaded it:
sudo mv borgmatic /etc/cron.d/borgmatic
sudo chmod +x /etc/cron.d/borgmatic
You can modify the cron file if you'd like to run borgmatic more or less frequently.
systemd
If you're using systemd instead of cron to run jobs, download the sample systemd service file and the sample systemd timer file. Then, from the directory where you downloaded them:
sudo mv borgmatic.service borgmatic.timer /etc/systemd/system/
sudo systemctl enable borgmatic.timer
sudo systemctl start borgmatic.timer
Feel free to modify the timer file based on how frequently you'd like borgmatic to run.
Colored output
Borgmatic produces colored terminal output by default. It is disabled when a
non-interactive terminal is detected (like a cron job). Otherwise, you can
disable it by passing the --no-color
flag, setting the environment variable
PY_COLORS=False
, or setting the color
option to false
in the output
section of configuration.
Troubleshooting
"found character that cannot start any token" error
If you run borgmatic and see an error looking something like this, it probably means you've used tabs instead of spaces:
test.yaml: Error parsing configuration file
An error occurred while parsing a configuration file at config.yaml:
while scanning for the next token
found character that cannot start any token
in "config.yaml", line 230, column 1
YAML does not allow tabs. So to fix this, replace any tabs in your configuration file with the requisite number of spaces.
libyaml compilation errors
borgmatic depends on a Python YAML library (ruamel.yaml) that will optionally use a C YAML library (libyaml) if present. But if it's not installed, then when installing or upgrading borgmatic, you may see errors about compiling the YAML library. If so, not to worry. borgmatic should install and function correctly even without the C YAML library. And borgmatic won't be any faster with the C library present, so you don't need to go out of your way to install it.