| 123456789101112131415161718192021222324252627282930313233343536373839404142434445464748495051525354555657585960616263646566676869707172737475767778798081828384858687888990919293949596979899100101102103104105106107108109110111112113114115116117118119120121122123124125126127128129130131132133134135136137138139140141142143144145146147148149150151152153154155156157158159160161162163164165166167168169170171172173174175176177178179180181182183184185186187188189190191192193194195196197198199200201202203204205206207208209210211212213214215216217218219220221 | .. include:: ../global.rst.inc.. highlight:: noneCentral repository server with Ansible or Salt==============================================This section will give an example how to setup a borg repository server for multipleclients.Machines--------There are multiple machines used in this section and will further be named by theirrespective fully qualified domain name (fqdn).* The backup server: `backup01.srv.local`* The clients:  - John Doe's desktop: `johndoe.clnt.local`  - Webserver 01: `web01.srv.local`  - Application server 01: `app01.srv.local`User and group--------------The repository server needs to have only one UNIX user for all the clients.Recommended user and group with additional settings:* User: `backup`* Group: `backup`* Shell: `/bin/bash` (or other capable to run the `borg serve` command)* Home: `/home/backup`Most clients shall initiate a backup from the root user to catch allusers, groups and permissions (e.g. when backing up `/home`).Folders-------The following folder tree layout is suggested on the repository server:* User home directory, /home/backup* Repositories path (storage pool): /home/backup/repos* Clients restricted paths (`/home/backup/repos/<client fqdn>`):  - johndoe.clnt.local: `/home/backup/repos/johndoe.clnt.local`  - web01.srv.local: `/home/backup/repos/web01.srv.local`  - app01.srv.local: `/home/backup/repos/app01.srv.local`Restrictions------------Borg is instructed to restrict clients into their own paths:``borg serve --restrict-to-path /home/backup/repos/<client fqdn>``The client will be able to access any file or subdirectory inside of ``/home/backup/repos/<client fqdn>``but no other directories. You can allow a client to access several separate directories by passing multiple``--restrict-to-path`` flags, for instance: ``borg serve --restrict-to-path /home/backup/repos/<client fqdn> --restrict-to-path /home/backup/repos/<other client fqdn>``,which could make sense if multiple machines belong to one person which should then have access to all thebackups of their machines.There is only one ssh key per client allowed. Keys are added for ``johndoe.clnt.local``, ``web01.srv.local`` and``app01.srv.local``. But they will access the backup under only one UNIX user account as:``backup@backup01.srv.local``. Every key in ``$HOME/.ssh/authorized_keys`` has aforced command and restrictions applied as shown below:::  command="cd /home/backup/repos/<client fqdn>;           borg serve --restrict-to-path /home/backup/repos/<client fqdn>",           restrict <keytype> <key> <host>.. note:: The text shown above needs to be written on a single line!The options which are added to the key will perform the following:1. Change working directory2. Run ``borg serve`` restricted to the client base path3. Restrict ssh and do not allow stuff which imposes a security riskDue to the ``cd`` command we use, the server automatically changes the currentworking directory. Then client doesn't need to have knowledge of the absoluteor relative remote repository path and can directly access the repositories at``<user>@<host>:<repo>``... note:: The setup above ignores all client given commandline parameters          which are normally appended to the `borg serve` command.Client------The client needs to initialize the `pictures` repository like this: borg init backup@backup01.srv.local:picturesOr with the full path (should actually never be used, as only for demonstrational purposes).The server should automatically change the current working directory to the `<client fqdn>` folder.  borg init backup@backup01.srv.local:/home/backup/repos/johndoe.clnt.local/picturesWhen `johndoe.clnt.local` tries to access a not restricted path the following error is raised.John Doe tries to backup into the Web 01 path:  borg init backup@backup01.srv.local:/home/backup/repos/web01.srv.local/pictures::  ~~~ SNIP ~~~  Remote: borg.remote.PathNotAllowed: /home/backup/repos/web01.srv.local/pictures  ~~~ SNIP ~~~  Repository path not allowedAnsible-------Ansible takes care of all the system-specific commands to add the user, create thefolder. Even when the configuration is changed the repository server configuration issatisfied and reproducible.Automate setting up an repository server with the user, group, folders andpermissions a Ansible playbook could be used. Keep in mind the playbookuses the Arch Linux `pacman <https://www.archlinux.org/pacman/pacman.8.html>`_package manager to install and keep borg up-to-date.::  - hosts: backup01.srv.local    vars:      user: backup      group: backup      home: /home/backup      pool: "{{ home }}/repos"      auth_users:        - host: johndoe.clnt.local          key: "{{ lookup('file', '/path/to/keys/johndoe.clnt.local.pub') }}"        - host: web01.clnt.local          key: "{{ lookup('file', '/path/to/keys/web01.clnt.local.pub') }}"        - host: app01.clnt.local          key: "{{ lookup('file', '/path/to/keys/app01.clnt.local.pub') }}"    tasks:    - pacman: name=borg state=latest update_cache=yes    - group: name="{{ group }}" state=present    - user: name="{{ user }}" shell=/bin/bash home="{{ home }}" createhome=yes group="{{ group }}" groups= state=present    - file: path="{{ home }}" owner="{{ user }}" group="{{ group }}" mode=0700 state=directory    - file: path="{{ home }}/.ssh" owner="{{ user }}" group="{{ group }}" mode=0700 state=directory    - file: path="{{ pool }}" owner="{{ user }}" group="{{ group }}" mode=0700 state=directory    - authorized_key: user="{{ user }}"                      key="{{ item.key }}"                      key_options='command="cd {{ pool }}/{{ item.host }};borg serve --restrict-to-path {{ pool }}/{{ item.host }}",restrict'      with_items: "{{ auth_users }}"    - file: path="{{ home }}/.ssh/authorized_keys" owner="{{ user }}" group="{{ group }}" mode=0600 state=file    - file: path="{{ pool }}/{{ item.host }}" owner="{{ user }}" group="{{ group }}" mode=0700 state=directory      with_items: "{{ auth_users }}"Salt----This is a configuration similar to the one above, configured to be deployed withSalt running on a Debian system.::  Install borg backup from pip:    pkg.installed:      - pkgs:        - python3        - python3-dev        - python3-pip        - python-virtualenv        - libssl-dev        - openssl        - libacl1-dev        - libacl1        - liblz4-dev        - liblz4-1        - build-essential        - libfuse-dev        - fuse        - pkg-config    pip.installed:      - pkgs: ["borgbackup"]      - bin_env: /usr/bin/pip3  Setup backup user:    user.present:      - name: backup      - fullname: Backup User      - home: /home/backup      - shell: /bin/bash  # CAUTION!  # If you change the ssh command= option below, it won't necessarily get pushed to the backup  # server correctly unless you delete the ~/.ssh/authorized_keys file and re-create it!  {% for host in backupclients %}  Give backup access to {{host}}:    ssh_auth.present:      - user: backup      - source: salt://conf/ssh-pubkeys/{{host}}-backup.id_ecdsa.pub      - options:        - command="cd /home/backup/repos/{{host}}; borg serve --restrict-to-path /home/backup/repos/{{host}}"        - restrict  {% endfor %}Enhancements------------As this section only describes a simple and effective setup it could be furtherenhanced when supporting (a limited set) of client supplied commands. A wrapperfor starting `borg serve` could be written. Or borg itself could be enhanced toautodetect it runs under SSH by checking the `SSH_ORIGINAL_COMMAND` environmentvariable. This is left open for future improvements.When extending ssh autodetection in borg no external wrapper script is necessaryand no other interpreter or application has to be deployed.See also--------* `SSH Daemon manpage <http://www.openbsd.org/cgi-bin/man.cgi/OpenBSD-current/man8/sshd.8>`_* `Ansible <https://docs.ansible.com>`_* `Salt <https://docs.saltstack.com/>`_
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