installation.rst 16 KB

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  1. .. include:: global.rst.inc
  2. .. highlight:: bash
  3. .. _installation:
  4. Installation
  5. ============
  6. There are different ways to install |project_name|:
  7. - :ref:`distribution-package` - easy and fast if a package is
  8. available from your distribution.
  9. - :ref:`pyinstaller-binary` - easy and fast, we provide a ready-to-use binary file
  10. that comes bundled with all dependencies.
  11. - :ref:`source-install`, either:
  12. - :ref:`pip-installation` - installing a source package with pip needs
  13. more installation steps and requires all dependencies with
  14. development headers and a compiler.
  15. - :ref:`git-installation` - for developers and power users who want to
  16. have the latest code or use revision control (each release is
  17. tagged).
  18. .. _installation-requirements:
  19. Pre-Installation Considerations
  20. -------------------------------
  21. (G)LIBC requirements
  22. --------------------
  23. Borg uses some filesytem functions from Python's `os` standard library module
  24. with `follow_symlinks=False`. These are implemented since quite a while with
  25. the non-symlink-following (g)libc functions like e.g. `lstat` or `lutimes`
  26. (not: `stat` or `utimes`).
  27. Some stoneage systems (like RHEL/CentOS 5) and also Python interpreter binaries
  28. compiled to be able to run on such systems (like Python installed via Anaconda)
  29. might miss these functions and Borg won't be able to work correctly.
  30. This issue will be detected early and Borg will abort with a fatal error.
  31. For the Borg binaries, there are additional (g)libc requirements, see below.
  32. .. _distribution-package:
  33. Distribution Package
  34. --------------------
  35. Some distributions might offer a ready-to-use ``borgbackup``
  36. package which can be installed with the package manager.
  37. .. important:: Those packages may not be up to date with the latest
  38. |project_name| releases. Before submitting a bug
  39. report, check the package version and compare that to
  40. our latest release then review :doc:`changes` to see if
  41. the bug has been fixed. Report bugs to the package
  42. maintainer rather than directly to |project_name| if the
  43. package is out of date in the distribution.
  44. .. keep this list in alphabetical order
  45. ============ ============================================= =======
  46. Distribution Source Command
  47. ============ ============================================= =======
  48. Arch Linux `[community]`_ ``pacman -S borg``
  49. Debian `Debian packages`_ ``apt install borgbackup``
  50. Gentoo `ebuild`_ ``emerge borgbackup``
  51. GNU Guix `GNU Guix`_ ``guix package --install borg``
  52. Fedora/RHEL `Fedora official repository`_ ``dnf install borgbackup``
  53. FreeBSD `FreeBSD ports`_ ``cd /usr/ports/archivers/py-borgbackup && make install clean``
  54. Mageia `cauldron`_ ``urpmi borgbackup``
  55. NetBSD `pkgsrc`_ ``pkg_add py-borgbackup``
  56. NixOS `.nix file`_ N/A
  57. OpenBSD `OpenBSD ports`_ ``pkg_add borgbackup``
  58. OpenIndiana `OpenIndiana hipster repository`_ ``pkg install borg``
  59. openSUSE `openSUSE official repository`_ ``zypper in borgbackup``
  60. OS X `Brew cask`_ ``brew cask install borgbackup``
  61. Raspbian `Raspbian testing`_ ``apt install borgbackup``
  62. Ubuntu `Ubuntu packages`_, `Ubuntu PPA`_ ``apt install borgbackup``
  63. ============ ============================================= =======
  64. .. _[community]: https://www.archlinux.org/packages/?name=borg
  65. .. _Debian packages: https://packages.debian.org/search?keywords=borgbackup&searchon=names&exact=1&suite=all&section=all
  66. .. _Fedora official repository: https://apps.fedoraproject.org/packages/borgbackup
  67. .. _FreeBSD ports: http://www.freshports.org/archivers/py-borgbackup/
  68. .. _ebuild: https://packages.gentoo.org/packages/app-backup/borgbackup
  69. .. _GNU Guix: https://www.gnu.org/software/guix/package-list.html#borg
  70. .. _pkgsrc: http://pkgsrc.se/sysutils/py-borgbackup
  71. .. _cauldron: http://madb.mageia.org/package/show/application/0/release/cauldron/name/borgbackup
  72. .. _.nix file: https://github.com/NixOS/nixpkgs/blob/master/pkgs/tools/backup/borg/default.nix
  73. .. _OpenBSD ports: http://cvsweb.openbsd.org/cgi-bin/cvsweb/ports/sysutils/borgbackup/
  74. .. _OpenIndiana hipster repository: http://pkg.openindiana.org/hipster/en/search.shtml?token=borg&action=Search
  75. .. _openSUSE official repository: http://software.opensuse.org/package/borgbackup
  76. .. _Brew cask: https://caskroom.github.io/
  77. .. _Raspbian testing: http://archive.raspbian.org/raspbian/pool/main/b/borgbackup/
  78. .. _Ubuntu packages: http://packages.ubuntu.com/xenial/borgbackup
  79. .. _Ubuntu PPA: https://launchpad.net/~costamagnagianfranco/+archive/ubuntu/borgbackup
  80. Please ask package maintainers to build a package or, if you can package /
  81. submit it yourself, please help us with that! See :issue:`105` on
  82. github to followup on packaging efforts.
  83. .. _pyinstaller-binary:
  84. Standalone Binary
  85. -----------------
  86. .. note:: Releases are signed with an OpenPGP key, see
  87. :ref:`security-contact` for more instructions.
  88. |project_name| binaries (generated with `pyinstaller`_) are available
  89. on the releases_ page for the following platforms:
  90. * **Linux**: glibc >= 2.13 (ok for most supported Linux releases). Maybe older
  91. glibc versions also work, if they are compatible to 2.13.
  92. * **Mac OS X**: 10.10 (does not work with older OS X releases)
  93. * **FreeBSD**: 10.2 (unknown whether it works for older releases)
  94. To install such a binary, just drop it into a directory in your ``PATH``,
  95. make borg readable and executable for its users and then you can run ``borg``::
  96. sudo cp borg-linux64 /usr/local/bin/borg
  97. sudo chown root:root /usr/local/bin/borg
  98. sudo chmod 755 /usr/local/bin/borg
  99. Optionally you can create a symlink to have ``borgfs`` available, which is an
  100. alias for ``borg mount``::
  101. ln -s /usr/local/bin/borg /usr/local/bin/borgfs
  102. Note that the binary uses /tmp to unpack |project_name| with all dependencies.
  103. It will fail if /tmp has not enough free space or is mounted with the ``noexec`` option.
  104. You can change the temporary directory by setting the ``TEMP`` environment variable before running |project_name|.
  105. If a new version is released, you will have to manually download it and replace
  106. the old version using the same steps as shown above.
  107. .. _pyinstaller: http://www.pyinstaller.org
  108. .. _releases: https://github.com/borgbackup/borg/releases
  109. .. _platforms:
  110. Features & platforms
  111. --------------------
  112. Besides regular file and directory structures, |project_name| can preserve
  113. * Symlinks (stored as symlink, the symlink is not followed)
  114. * Special files:
  115. * Character and block device files (restored via mknod)
  116. * FIFOs ("named pipes")
  117. * Special file *contents* can be backed up in ``--read-special`` mode.
  118. By default the metadata to create them with mknod(2), mkfifo(2) etc. is stored.
  119. * Hardlinked regular files, devices, FIFOs (considering all items in the same archive)
  120. * Timestamps in nanosecond precision: mtime, atime, ctime
  121. * Permissions:
  122. * IDs of owning user and owning group
  123. * Names of owning user and owning group (if the IDs can be resolved)
  124. * Unix Mode/Permissions (u/g/o permissions, suid, sgid, sticky)
  125. On some platforms additional features are supported:
  126. .. Yes/No's are grouped by reason/mechanism/reference.
  127. +------------------+----------+-----------+------------+
  128. | Platform | ACLs | xattr | Flags |
  129. | | [#acls]_ | [#xattr]_ | [#flags]_ |
  130. +==================+==========+===========+============+
  131. | Linux x86 | Yes | Yes | Yes [1]_ |
  132. +------------------+ | | |
  133. | Linux PowerPC | | | |
  134. +------------------+ | | |
  135. | Linux ARM | | | |
  136. +------------------+----------+-----------+------------+
  137. | Mac OS X | Yes | Yes | Yes (all) |
  138. +------------------+----------+-----------+ |
  139. | FreeBSD | Yes | Yes | |
  140. +------------------+----------+-----------+ |
  141. | OpenBSD | n/a | n/a | |
  142. +------------------+----------+-----------+ |
  143. | NetBSD | n/a | No [2]_ | |
  144. +------------------+----------+-----------+------------+
  145. | Solaris 11 | No [3]_ | n/a |
  146. +------------------+ | |
  147. | OpenIndiana | | |
  148. +------------------+----------+-----------+------------+
  149. | Windows (cygwin) | No [4]_ | No | No |
  150. +------------------+----------+-----------+------------+
  151. Some Distributions (e.g. Debian) run additional tests after each release, these
  152. are not reflected here.
  153. Other Unix-like operating systems may work as well, but have not been tested at all.
  154. Note that most of the platform-dependent features also depend on the file system.
  155. For example, ntfs-3g on Linux isn't able to convey NTFS ACLs.
  156. .. [1] Only "nodump", "immutable", "compressed" and "append" are supported.
  157. Feature request :issue:`618` for more flags.
  158. .. [2] Feature request :issue:`1332`
  159. .. [3] Feature request :issue:`1337`
  160. .. [4] Cygwin tries to map NTFS ACLs to permissions with varying degress of success.
  161. .. [#acls] The native access control list mechanism of the OS. This normally limits access to
  162. non-native ACLs. For example, NTFS ACLs aren't completely accessible on Linux with ntfs-3g.
  163. .. [#xattr] extended attributes; key-value pairs attached to a file, mainly used by the OS.
  164. This includes resource forks on Mac OS X.
  165. .. [#flags] aka *BSD flags*. The Linux set of flags [1]_ is portable across platforms.
  166. The BSDs define additional flags.
  167. .. _source-install:
  168. From Source
  169. -----------
  170. Dependencies
  171. ~~~~~~~~~~~~
  172. To install |project_name| from a source package (including pip), you have to install the
  173. following dependencies first:
  174. * `Python 3`_ >= 3.4.0, plus development headers. Even though Python 3 is not
  175. the default Python version on most systems, it is usually available as an
  176. optional install.
  177. * OpenSSL_ >= 1.0.0, plus development headers.
  178. * libacl_ (that pulls in libattr_ also), both plus development headers.
  179. * liblz4_, plus development headers.
  180. * some Python dependencies, pip will automatically install them for you
  181. * optionally, the llfuse_ Python package is required if you wish to mount an
  182. archive as a FUSE filesystem. See setup.py about the version requirements.
  183. * optionally libb2_. If it is not found a bundled implementation is used instead.
  184. If you have troubles finding the right package names, have a look at the
  185. distribution specific sections below and also at the Vagrantfile in our repo.
  186. In the following, the steps needed to install the dependencies are listed for a
  187. selection of platforms. If your distribution is not covered by these
  188. instructions, try to use your package manager to install the dependencies. On
  189. FreeBSD, you may need to get a recent enough OpenSSL version from FreeBSD
  190. ports.
  191. After you have installed the dependencies, you can proceed with steps outlined
  192. under :ref:`pip-installation`.
  193. Debian / Ubuntu
  194. +++++++++++++++
  195. Install the dependencies with development headers::
  196. sudo apt-get install python3 python3-dev python3-pip python-virtualenv \
  197. libssl-dev openssl \
  198. libacl1-dev libacl1 \
  199. liblz4-dev liblz4-1 \
  200. build-essential
  201. sudo apt-get install libfuse-dev fuse pkg-config # optional, for FUSE support
  202. In case you get complaints about permission denied on ``/etc/fuse.conf``: on
  203. Ubuntu this means your user is not in the ``fuse`` group. Add yourself to that
  204. group, log out and log in again.
  205. Fedora / Korora
  206. +++++++++++++++
  207. Install the dependencies with development headers::
  208. sudo dnf install python3 python3-devel python3-pip python3-virtualenv
  209. sudo dnf install openssl-devel openssl
  210. sudo dnf install libacl-devel libacl
  211. sudo dnf install lz4-devel
  212. sudo dnf install gcc gcc-c++
  213. sudo dnf install redhat-rpm-config # not needed in Korora
  214. sudo dnf install fuse-devel fuse pkgconfig # optional, for FUSE support
  215. openSUSE Tumbleweed / Leap
  216. ++++++++++++++++++++++++++
  217. Install the dependencies automatically using zypper::
  218. sudo zypper source-install --build-deps-only borgbackup
  219. Alternatively, you can enumerate all build dependencies in the command line::
  220. sudo zypper install python3 python3-devel \
  221. libacl-devel liblz4-devel openssl-devel \
  222. python3-Cython python3-Sphinx python3-msgpack-python \
  223. python3-pytest python3-setuptools python3-setuptools_scm \
  224. python3-sphinx_rtd_theme python3-llfuse gcc gcc-c++
  225. Mac OS X
  226. ++++++++
  227. Assuming you have installed homebrew_, the following steps will install all the
  228. dependencies::
  229. brew install python3 lz4 openssl
  230. brew install pkg-config # optional, for FUSE support
  231. pip3 install virtualenv
  232. For FUSE support to mount the backup archives, you need at least version 3.0 of
  233. FUSE for OS X, which is available as a pre-release_.
  234. .. _pre-release: https://github.com/osxfuse/osxfuse/releases
  235. FreeBSD
  236. ++++++++
  237. Listed below are packages you will need to install |project_name|, its dependencies,
  238. and commands to make FUSE work for using the mount command.
  239. ::
  240. pkg install -y python3 openssl liblz4 fusefs-libs pkgconf
  241. pkg install -y git
  242. python3.4 -m ensurepip # to install pip for Python3
  243. To use the mount command:
  244. echo 'fuse_load="YES"' >> /boot/loader.conf
  245. echo 'vfs.usermount=1' >> /etc/sysctl.conf
  246. kldload fuse
  247. sysctl vfs.usermount=1
  248. Windows 10's Linux Subsystem
  249. ++++++++++++++++++++++++++++
  250. .. note::
  251. Running under Windows 10's Linux Subsystem is experimental and has not been tested much yet.
  252. Just follow the Ubuntu Linux installation steps. You can omit the FUSE stuff, it won't work anyway.
  253. Cygwin
  254. ++++++
  255. .. note::
  256. Running under Cygwin is experimental and has only been tested with Cygwin
  257. (x86-64) v2.5.2. Remote repositories are known broken, local repositories should work.
  258. Use the Cygwin installer to install the dependencies::
  259. python3 python3-devel python3-setuptools
  260. binutils gcc-g++
  261. libopenssl openssl-devel
  262. liblz4_1 liblz4-devel
  263. git make openssh
  264. You can then install ``pip`` and ``virtualenv``::
  265. easy_install-3.4 pip
  266. pip install virtualenv
  267. .. _pip-installation:
  268. Using pip
  269. ~~~~~~~~~
  270. Virtualenv_ can be used to build and install |project_name| without affecting
  271. the system Python or requiring root access. Using a virtual environment is
  272. optional, but recommended except for the most simple use cases.
  273. .. note::
  274. If you install into a virtual environment, you need to **activate** it
  275. first (``source borg-env/bin/activate``), before running ``borg``.
  276. Alternatively, symlink ``borg-env/bin/borg`` into some directory that is in
  277. your ``PATH`` so you can just run ``borg``.
  278. This will use ``pip`` to install the latest release from PyPi::
  279. virtualenv --python=python3 borg-env
  280. source borg-env/bin/activate
  281. # install Borg + Python dependencies into virtualenv
  282. pip install borgbackup
  283. # or alternatively (if you want FUSE support):
  284. pip install borgbackup[fuse]
  285. To upgrade |project_name| to a new version later, run the following after
  286. activating your virtual environment::
  287. pip install -U borgbackup # or ... borgbackup[fuse]
  288. .. _git-installation:
  289. Using git
  290. ~~~~~~~~~
  291. This uses latest, unreleased development code from git.
  292. While we try not to break master, there are no guarantees on anything. ::
  293. # get borg from github
  294. git clone https://github.com/borgbackup/borg.git
  295. virtualenv --python=python3 borg-env
  296. source borg-env/bin/activate # always before using!
  297. # install borg + dependencies into virtualenv
  298. cd borg
  299. pip install -r requirements.d/development.txt
  300. pip install -r requirements.d/docs.txt # optional, to build the docs
  301. pip install -r requirements.d/fuse.txt # optional, for FUSE support
  302. pip install -e . # in-place editable mode
  303. # optional: run all the tests, on all supported Python versions
  304. # requires fakeroot, available through your package manager
  305. fakeroot -u tox
  306. .. note:: As a developer or power user, you always want to use a virtual environment.