zrepl/docs/tutorial.rst

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.. include:: global.rst.inc
.. _tutorial:
Tutorial
========
This tutorial shows how zrepl can be used to implement a ZFS-based push backup.
We assume the following scenario:
* Production server ``prod`` with filesystems to back up:
* ``zroot/var/db``
* ``zroot/usr/home`` and all its child filesystems
* **except** ``zroot/usr/home/paranoid`` belonging to a user doing backups themselves
* Backup server ``backups`` with
* Filesystem ``storage/zrepl/sink/prod`` + children dedicated to backups of ``prod``
Our backup solution should fulfill the following requirements:
* Periodically snapshot the filesystems on ``prod`` *every 10 minutes*
* Incrementally replicate these snapshots to ``storage/zrepl/sink/prod/*`` on ``backups``
* Keep only very few snapshots on ``prod`` to save disk space
* Keep a fading history (24 hourly, 30 daily, 6 monthly) of snapshots on ``backups``
Analysis
--------
We can model this situation as two jobs:
* A **push job** on ``prod``
* Creates the snapshots
* Keeps a short history of local snapshots to enable incremental replication to ``backups``
* Connects to the ``zrepl daemon`` process on ``backups``
* Pushes snapshots ``backups``
* Prunes snapshots on ``backups`` after replication is complete
* A **sink job** on ``backups``
* Accepts connections & responds to requests from ``prod``
* Limits client ``prod`` access to filesystem sub-tree ``storage/zrepl/sink/prod``
Install zrepl
-------------
Follow the :ref:`OS-specific installation instructions <installation_toc>` and come back here.
Generate TLS Certificates
-------------------------
We use the :ref:`TLS client authentication transport <transport-tcp+tlsclientauth>` to protect our data on the wire.
To get things going quickly, we skip setting up a CA and generate two self-signed certificates as described :ref:`here <transport-tcp+tlsclientauth-2machineopenssl>`.
For convenience, we generate the key pairs on our local machine and distribute them using ssh:
.. code-block:: bash
:emphasize-lines: 6,13
openssl req -x509 -sha256 -nodes \
-newkey rsa:4096 \
-days 365 \
-keyout backups.key \
-out backups.crt
# ... and use "backups" as Common Name (CN)
openssl req -x509 -sha256 -nodes \
-newkey rsa:4096 \
-days 365 \
-keyout prod.key \
-out prod.crt
# ... and use "prod" as Common Name (CN)
ssh root@backups "mkdir /etc/zrepl"
scp backups.key backups.crt prod.crt root@backups:/etc/zrepl
ssh root@prod "mkdir /etc/zrepl"
scp prod.key prod.crt backups.crt root@prod:/etc/zrepl
Configure server ``prod``
-------------------------
We define a **push job** named ``prod_to_backups`` in ``/etc/zrepl/zrepl.yml`` on host ``prod`` : ::
jobs:
- name: prod_to_backups
type: push
connect:
type: tls
address: "backups.example.com:8888"
ca: /etc/zrepl/backups.crt
cert: /etc/zrepl/prod.crt
key: /etc/zrepl/prod.key
server_cn: "backups"
filesystems: {
"zroot/var/db": true,
"zroot/usr/home<": true,
"zroot/usr/home/paranoid": false
}
snapshotting:
type: periodic
prefix: zrepl_
interval: 10m
pruning:
keep_sender:
- type: not_replicated
- type: last_n
count: 10
keep_receiver:
- type: grid
grid: 1x1h(keep=all) | 24x1h | 30x1d | 6x30d
regex: "^zrepl_"
.. _tutorial-configure-prod:
Configure server ``backups``
----------------------------
We define a corresponding **sink job** named ``sink`` in ``/etc/zrepl/zrepl.yml`` on host ``backups`` : ::
jobs:
- name: sink
type: sink
serve:
type: tls
listen: ":8888"
ca: "/etc/zrepl/prod.crt"
cert: "/etc/zrepl/backups.crt"
key: "/etc/zrepl/backups.key"
client_cns:
- "prod"
root_fs: "storage/zrepl/sink"
Apply Configuration Changes
---------------------------
We use ``zrepl configcheck`` to catch any configuration errors: no output indicates that everything is fine.
If that is the case, restart the zrepl daemon on **both** ``prod`` and ``backups`` using ``service zrepl restart`` or ``systemctl restart zrepl``.
Watch it Work
-------------
Run ``zrepl status`` on ``prod`` to monitor the replication and pruning activity.
To re-trigger replication (snapshots are separate!), use ``zrepl signal wakeup prod_to_backups`` on ``prod``.
If you like tmux, here is a handy script that works on FreeBSD: ::
pkg install gnu-watch tmux
tmux new -s zrepl -d
tmux split-window -t zrepl "tail -f /var/log/messages"
tmux split-window -t zrepl "gnu-watch 'zfs list -t snapshot -o name,creation -s creation | grep zrepl_'"
tmux split-window -t zrepl "zrepl status"
tmux select-layout -t zrepl tiled
tmux attach -t zrepl
The Linux equivalent might look like this: ::
# make sure tmux is installed & let's assume you use systemd + journald
tmux new -s zrepl -d
tmux split-window -t zrepl "journalctl -f -u zrepl.service"
tmux split-window -t zrepl "watch 'zfs list -t snapshot -o name,creation -s creation | grep zrepl_'"
tmux split-window -t zrepl "zrepl status"
tmux select-layout -t zrepl tiled
tmux attach -t zrepl
Summary
-------
Congratulations, you have a working push backup. Where to go next?
* Read more about :ref:`configuration format, options & job types <configuration_toc>`
* Configure :ref:`logging <logging>` \& :ref:`monitoring <monitoring>`.