data-structures.rst 51 KB

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  1. .. include:: ../global.rst.inc
  2. .. highlight:: none
  3. .. _data-structures:
  4. Data structures and file formats
  5. ================================
  6. This page documents the internal data structures and storage
  7. mechanisms of Borg. It is partly based on `mailing list
  8. discussion about internals`_ and also on static code analysis.
  9. .. todo:: Clarify terms, perhaps create a glossary.
  10. ID (client?) vs. key (repository?),
  11. chunks (blob of data in repo?) vs. object (blob of data in repo, referred to from another object?),
  12. .. _repository:
  13. Repository
  14. ----------
  15. .. Some parts of this description were taken from the Repository docstring
  16. Borg stores its data in a `Repository`, which is a file system based
  17. transactional key-value store. Thus the repository does not know about
  18. the concept of archives or items.
  19. Each repository has the following file structure:
  20. README
  21. simple text file telling that this is a Borg repository
  22. config
  23. repository configuration
  24. data/
  25. directory where the actual data is stored
  26. hints.%d
  27. hints for repository compaction
  28. index.%d
  29. repository index
  30. lock.roster and lock.exclusive/*
  31. used by the locking system to manage shared and exclusive locks
  32. Transactionality is achieved by using a log (aka journal) to record changes. The log is a series of numbered files
  33. called segments_. Each segment is a series of log entries. The segment number together with the offset of each
  34. entry relative to its segment start establishes an ordering of the log entries. This is the "definition" of
  35. time for the purposes of the log.
  36. .. _config-file:
  37. Config file
  38. ~~~~~~~~~~~
  39. Each repository has a ``config`` file which is a ``INI``-style file
  40. and looks like this::
  41. [repository]
  42. version = 2
  43. segments_per_dir = 1000
  44. max_segment_size = 524288000
  45. id = 57d6c1d52ce76a836b532b0e42e677dec6af9fca3673db511279358828a21ed6
  46. This is where the ``repository.id`` is stored. It is a unique
  47. identifier for repositories. It will not change if you move the
  48. repository around so you can make a local transfer then decide to move
  49. the repository to another (even remote) location at a later time.
  50. Keys
  51. ~~~~
  52. Repository keys are byte-strings of fixed length (32 bytes), they
  53. don't have a particular meaning (except for the Manifest_).
  54. Normally the keys are computed like this::
  55. key = id = id_hash(unencrypted_data)
  56. The id_hash function depends on the :ref:`encryption mode <borg_rcreate>`.
  57. As the id / key is used for deduplication, id_hash must be a cryptographically
  58. strong hash or MAC.
  59. Segments
  60. ~~~~~~~~
  61. Objects referenced by a key are stored inline in files (`segments`) of approx.
  62. 500 MB size in numbered subdirectories of ``repo/data``. The number of segments
  63. per directory is controlled by the value of ``segments_per_dir``. If you change
  64. this value in a non-empty repository, you may also need to relocate the segment
  65. files manually.
  66. A segment starts with a magic number (``BORG_SEG`` as an eight byte ASCII string),
  67. followed by a number of log entries. Each log entry consists of (in this order):
  68. * crc32 checksum (uint32):
  69. - for PUT2: CRC32(size + tag + key + digest)
  70. - for PUT: CRC32(size + tag + key + data)
  71. - for DELETE: CRC32(size + tag + key)
  72. - for COMMIT: CRC32(size + tag)
  73. * size (uint32) of the entry (including the whole header)
  74. * tag (uint8): PUT(0), DELETE(1), COMMIT(2) or PUT2(3)
  75. * key (256 bit) - only for PUT/PUT2/DELETE
  76. * data (size - 41 bytes) - only for PUT
  77. * xxh64 digest (64 bit) = XXH64(size + tag + key + data) - only for PUT2
  78. * data (size - 41 - 8 bytes) - only for PUT2
  79. PUT2 is new since repository version 2. For new log entries PUT2 is used.
  80. PUT is still supported to read version 1 repositories, but not generated any more.
  81. If we talk about ``PUT`` in general, it shall usually mean PUT2 for repository
  82. version 2+.
  83. Those files are strictly append-only and modified only once.
  84. When an object is written to the repository a ``PUT`` entry is written
  85. to the file containing the object id and data. If an object is deleted
  86. a ``DELETE`` entry is appended with the object id.
  87. A ``COMMIT`` tag is written when a repository transaction is
  88. committed. The segment number of the segment containing
  89. a commit is the **transaction ID**.
  90. When a repository is opened any ``PUT`` or ``DELETE`` operations not
  91. followed by a ``COMMIT`` tag are discarded since they are part of a
  92. partial/uncommitted transaction.
  93. The size of individual segments is limited to 4 GiB, since the offset of entries
  94. within segments is stored in a 32-bit unsigned integer in the repository index.
  95. Index, hints and integrity
  96. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
  97. The **repository index** is stored in ``index.<TRANSACTION_ID>`` and is used to
  98. determine an object's location in the repository. It is a HashIndex_,
  99. a hash table using open addressing. It maps object keys_ to two
  100. unsigned 32-bit integers; the first integer gives the segment number,
  101. the second indicates the offset of the object's entry within the segment.
  102. The **hints file** is a msgpacked file named ``hints.<TRANSACTION_ID>``.
  103. It contains:
  104. * version
  105. * list of segments
  106. * compact
  107. The **integrity file** is a msgpacked file named ``integrity.<TRANSACTION_ID>``.
  108. It contains checksums of the index and hints files and is described in the
  109. :ref:`Checksumming data structures <integrity_repo>` section below.
  110. If the index or hints are corrupted, they are re-generated automatically.
  111. If they are outdated, segments are replayed from the index state to the currently
  112. committed transaction.
  113. Compaction
  114. ~~~~~~~~~~
  115. For a given key only the last entry regarding the key, which is called current (all other entries are called
  116. superseded), is relevant: If there is no entry or the last entry is a DELETE then the key does not exist.
  117. Otherwise the last PUT defines the value of the key.
  118. By superseding a PUT (with either another PUT or a DELETE) the log entry becomes obsolete. A segment containing
  119. such obsolete entries is called sparse, while a segment containing no such entries is called compact.
  120. Since writing a ``DELETE`` tag does not actually delete any data and
  121. thus does not free disk space any log-based data store will need a
  122. compaction strategy (somewhat analogous to a garbage collector).
  123. Borg uses a simple forward compacting algorithm,
  124. which avoids modifying existing segments.
  125. Compaction runs when a commit is issued with ``compact=True`` parameter, e.g.
  126. by the ``borg compact`` command (unless the :ref:`append_only_mode` is active).
  127. One client transaction can manifest as multiple physical transactions,
  128. since compaction is transacted, too, and Borg does not distinguish between the two::
  129. Perspective| Time -->
  130. -----------+--------------
  131. Client | Begin transaction - Modify Data - Commit | <client waits for repository> (done)
  132. Repository | Begin transaction - Modify Data - Commit | Compact segments - Commit | (done)
  133. The compaction algorithm requires two inputs in addition to the segments themselves:
  134. (i) Which segments are sparse, to avoid scanning all segments (impractical).
  135. Further, Borg uses a conditional compaction strategy: Only those
  136. segments that exceed a threshold sparsity are compacted.
  137. To implement the threshold condition efficiently, the sparsity has
  138. to be stored as well. Therefore, Borg stores a mapping ``(segment
  139. id,) -> (number of sparse bytes,)``.
  140. The 1.0.x series used a simpler non-conditional algorithm,
  141. which only required the list of sparse segments. Thus,
  142. it only stored a list, not the mapping described above.
  143. (ii) Each segment's reference count, which indicates how many live objects are in a segment.
  144. This is not strictly required to perform the algorithm. Rather, it is used to validate
  145. that a segment is unused before deleting it. If the algorithm is incorrect, or the reference
  146. count was not accounted correctly, then an assertion failure occurs.
  147. These two pieces of information are stored in the hints file (`hints.N`)
  148. next to the index (`index.N`).
  149. When loading a hints file, Borg checks the version contained in the file.
  150. The 1.0.x series writes version 1 of the format (with the segments list instead
  151. of the mapping, mentioned above). Since Borg 1.0.4, version 2 is read as well.
  152. The 1.1.x series writes version 2 of the format and reads either version.
  153. When reading a version 1 hints file, Borg 1.1.x will
  154. read all sparse segments to determine their sparsity.
  155. This process may take some time if a repository has been kept in append-only mode
  156. or ``borg compact`` has not been used for a longer time, which both has caused
  157. the number of sparse segments to grow.
  158. Compaction processes sparse segments from oldest to newest; sparse segments
  159. which don't contain enough deleted data to justify compaction are skipped. This
  160. avoids doing e.g. 500 MB of writing current data to a new segment when only
  161. a couple kB were deleted in a segment.
  162. Segments that are compacted are read in entirety. Current entries are written to
  163. a new segment, while superseded entries are omitted. After each segment an intermediary
  164. commit is written to the new segment. Then, the old segment is deleted
  165. (asserting that the reference count diminished to zero), freeing disk space.
  166. A simplified example (excluding conditional compaction and with simpler
  167. commit logic) showing the principal operation of compaction:
  168. .. figure:: compaction.png
  169. :figwidth: 100%
  170. :width: 100%
  171. (The actual algorithm is more complex to avoid various consistency issues, refer to
  172. the ``borg.repository`` module for more comments and documentation on these issues.)
  173. .. _internals_storage_quota:
  174. Storage quotas
  175. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
  176. Quotas are implemented at the Repository level. The active quota of a repository
  177. is determined by the ``storage_quota`` `config` entry or a run-time override (via :ref:`borg_serve`).
  178. The currently used quota is stored in the hints file. Operations (PUT and DELETE) during
  179. a transaction modify the currently used quota:
  180. - A PUT adds the size of the *log entry* to the quota,
  181. i.e. the length of the data plus the 41 byte header.
  182. - A DELETE subtracts the size of the deleted log entry from the quota,
  183. which includes the header.
  184. Thus, PUT and DELETE are symmetric and cancel each other out precisely.
  185. The quota does not track on-disk size overheads (due to conditional compaction
  186. or append-only mode). In normal operation the inclusion of the log entry headers
  187. in the quota act as a faithful proxy for index and hints overheads.
  188. By tracking effective content size, the client can *always* recover from a full quota
  189. by deleting archives. This would not be possible if the quota tracked on-disk size,
  190. since journaling DELETEs requires extra disk space before space is freed.
  191. Tracking effective size on the other hand accounts DELETEs immediately as freeing quota.
  192. .. rubric:: Enforcing the quota
  193. The storage quota is meant as a robust mechanism for service providers, therefore
  194. :ref:`borg_serve` has to enforce it without loopholes (e.g. modified clients).
  195. The following sections refer to using quotas on remotely accessed repositories.
  196. For local access, consider *client* and *serve* the same.
  197. Accordingly, quotas cannot be enforced with local access,
  198. since the quota can be changed in the repository config.
  199. The quota is enforcible only if *all* :ref:`borg_serve` versions
  200. accessible to clients support quotas (see next section). Further, quota is
  201. per repository. Therefore, ensure clients can only access a defined set of repositories
  202. with their quotas set, using ``--restrict-to-repository``.
  203. If the client exceeds the storage quota the ``StorageQuotaExceeded`` exception is
  204. raised. Normally a client could ignore such an exception and just send a ``commit()``
  205. command anyway, circumventing the quota. However, when ``StorageQuotaExceeded`` is raised,
  206. it is stored in the ``transaction_doomed`` attribute of the repository.
  207. If the transaction is doomed, then commit will re-raise this exception, aborting the commit.
  208. The transaction_doomed indicator is reset on a rollback (which erases the quota-exceeding
  209. state).
  210. .. rubric:: Compatibility with older servers and enabling quota after-the-fact
  211. If no quota data is stored in the hints file, Borg assumes zero quota is used.
  212. Thus, if a repository with an enabled quota is written to with an older ``borg serve``
  213. version that does not understand quotas, then the quota usage will be erased.
  214. The client version is irrelevant to the storage quota and has no part in it.
  215. The form of error messages due to exceeding quota varies with client versions.
  216. A similar situation arises when upgrading from a Borg release that did not have quotas.
  217. Borg will start tracking quota use from the time of the upgrade, starting at zero.
  218. If the quota shall be enforced accurately in these cases, either
  219. - delete the ``index.N`` and ``hints.N`` files, forcing Borg to rebuild both,
  220. re-acquiring quota data in the process, or
  221. - edit the msgpacked ``hints.N`` file (not recommended and thus not
  222. documented further).
  223. The object graph
  224. ----------------
  225. On top of the simple key-value store offered by the Repository_,
  226. Borg builds a much more sophisticated data structure that is essentially
  227. a completely encrypted object graph. Objects, such as archives_, are referenced
  228. by their chunk ID, which is cryptographically derived from their contents.
  229. More on how this helps security in :ref:`security_structural_auth`.
  230. .. figure:: object-graph.png
  231. :figwidth: 100%
  232. :width: 100%
  233. .. _manifest:
  234. The manifest
  235. ~~~~~~~~~~~~
  236. The manifest is the root of the object hierarchy. It references
  237. all archives in a repository, and thus all data in it.
  238. Since no object references it, it cannot be stored under its ID key.
  239. Instead, the manifest has a fixed all-zero key.
  240. The manifest is rewritten each time an archive is created, deleted,
  241. or modified. It looks like this:
  242. .. code-block:: python
  243. {
  244. 'version': 1,
  245. 'timestamp': '2017-05-05T12:42:23.042864',
  246. 'item_keys': ['acl_access', 'acl_default', ...],
  247. 'config': {},
  248. 'archives': {
  249. '2017-05-05-system-backup': {
  250. 'id': b'<32 byte binary object ID>',
  251. 'time': '2017-05-05T12:42:22.942864',
  252. },
  253. },
  254. 'tam': ...,
  255. }
  256. The *version* field can be either 1 or 2. The versions differ in the
  257. way feature flags are handled, described below.
  258. The *timestamp* field is used to avoid logical replay attacks where
  259. the server just resets the repository to a previous state.
  260. *item_keys* is a list containing all Item_ keys that may be encountered in
  261. the repository. It is used by *borg check*, which verifies that all keys
  262. in all items are a subset of these keys. Thus, an older version of *borg check*
  263. supporting this mechanism can correctly detect keys introduced in later versions.
  264. The *tam* key is part of the :ref:`tertiary authentication mechanism <tam_description>`
  265. (formerly known as "tertiary authentication for metadata") and authenticates
  266. the manifest, since an ID check is not possible.
  267. *config* is a general-purpose location for additional metadata. All versions
  268. of Borg preserve its contents (it may have been a better place for *item_keys*,
  269. which is not preserved by unaware Borg versions, releases predating 1.0.4).
  270. Feature flags
  271. +++++++++++++
  272. Feature flags are used to add features to data structures without causing
  273. corruption if older versions are used to access or modify them. The main issues
  274. to consider for a feature flag oriented design are flag granularity,
  275. flag storage, and cache_ invalidation.
  276. Feature flags are divided in approximately three categories, detailed below.
  277. Due to the nature of ID-based deduplication, write (i.e. creating archives) and
  278. read access are not symmetric; it is possible to create archives referencing
  279. chunks that are not readable with the current feature set. The third
  280. category are operations that require accurate reference counts, for example
  281. archive deletion and check.
  282. As the manifest is always updated and always read, it is the ideal place to store
  283. feature flags, comparable to the super-block of a file system. The only problem
  284. is to recover from a lost manifest, i.e. how is it possible to detect which feature
  285. flags are enabled, if there is no manifest to tell. This issue is left open at this time,
  286. but is not expected to be a major hurdle; it doesn't have to be handled efficiently, it just
  287. needs to be handled.
  288. Lastly, cache_ invalidation is handled by noting which feature
  289. flags were and which were not understood while manipulating a cache.
  290. This allows borg to detect whether the cache needs to be invalidated,
  291. i.e. rebuilt from scratch. See `Cache feature flags`_ below.
  292. The *config* key stores the feature flags enabled on a repository:
  293. .. code-block:: python
  294. config = {
  295. 'feature_flags': {
  296. 'read': {
  297. 'mandatory': ['some_feature'],
  298. },
  299. 'check': {
  300. 'mandatory': ['other_feature'],
  301. }
  302. 'write': ...,
  303. 'delete': ...
  304. },
  305. }
  306. The top-level distinction for feature flags is the operation the client intends
  307. to perform,
  308. | the *read* operation includes extraction and listing of archives,
  309. | the *write* operation includes creating new archives,
  310. | the *delete* (archives) operation,
  311. | the *check* operation requires full understanding of everything in the repository.
  312. |
  313. These are weakly set-ordered; *check* will include everything required for *delete*,
  314. *delete* will likely include *write* and *read*. However, *read* may require more
  315. features than *write* (due to ID-based deduplication, *write* does not necessarily
  316. require reading/understanding repository contents).
  317. Each operation can contain several sets of feature flags. Only one set,
  318. the *mandatory* set is currently defined.
  319. Upon reading the manifest, the Borg client has already determined which operation
  320. should be performed. If feature flags are found in the manifest, the set
  321. of feature flags supported by the client is compared to the mandatory set
  322. found in the manifest. If any unsupported flags are found (i.e. the mandatory set is
  323. not a subset of the features supported by the Borg client used), the operation
  324. is aborted with a *MandatoryFeatureUnsupported* error:
  325. Unsupported repository feature(s) {'some_feature'}. A newer version of borg is required to access this repository.
  326. Older Borg releases do not have this concept and do not perform feature flags checks.
  327. These can be locked out with manifest version 2. Thus, the only difference between
  328. manifest versions 1 and 2 is that the latter is only accepted by Borg releases
  329. implementing feature flags.
  330. Therefore, as soon as any mandatory feature flag is enabled in a repository,
  331. the manifest version must be switched to version 2 in order to lock out all
  332. Borg releases unaware of feature flags.
  333. .. _Cache feature flags:
  334. .. rubric:: Cache feature flags
  335. `The cache`_ does not have its separate set of feature flags. Instead, Borg stores
  336. which flags were used to create or modify a cache.
  337. All mandatory manifest features from all operations are gathered in one set.
  338. Then, two sets of features are computed;
  339. - those features that are supported by the client and mandated by the manifest
  340. are added to the *mandatory_features* set,
  341. - the *ignored_features* set comprised of those features mandated by the manifest,
  342. but not supported by the client.
  343. Because the client previously checked compliance with the mandatory set of features
  344. required for the particular operation it is executing, the *mandatory_features* set
  345. will contain all necessary features required for using the cache safely.
  346. Conversely, the *ignored_features* set contains only those features which were not
  347. relevant to operating the cache. Otherwise, the client would not pass the feature
  348. set test against the manifest.
  349. When opening a cache and the *mandatory_features* set is not a subset of the features
  350. supported by the client, the cache is wiped out and rebuilt,
  351. since a client not supporting a mandatory feature that the cache was built with
  352. would be unable to update it correctly.
  353. The assumption behind this behaviour is that any of the unsupported features could have
  354. been reflected in the cache and there is no way for the client to discern whether
  355. that is the case.
  356. Meanwhile, it may not be practical for every feature to have clients using it track
  357. whether the feature had an impact on the cache.
  358. Therefore, the cache is wiped.
  359. When opening a cache and the intersection of *ignored_features* and the features
  360. supported by the client contains any elements, i.e. the client possesses features
  361. that the previous client did not have and those new features are enabled in the repository,
  362. the cache is wiped out and rebuilt.
  363. While the former condition likely requires no tweaks, the latter condition is formulated
  364. in an especially conservative way to play it safe. It seems likely that specific features
  365. might be exempted from the latter condition.
  366. .. rubric:: Defined feature flags
  367. Currently no feature flags are defined.
  368. From currently planned features, some examples follow,
  369. these may/may not be implemented and purely serve as examples.
  370. - A mandatory *read* feature could be using a different encryption scheme (e.g. session keys).
  371. This may not be mandatory for the *write* operation - reading data is not strictly required for
  372. creating an archive.
  373. - Any additions to the way chunks are referenced (e.g. to support larger archives) would
  374. become a mandatory *delete* and *check* feature; *delete* implies knowing correct
  375. reference counts, so all object references need to be understood. *check* must
  376. discover the entire object graph as well, otherwise the "orphan chunks check"
  377. could delete data still in use.
  378. .. _archive:
  379. Archives
  380. ~~~~~~~~
  381. Each archive is an object referenced by the manifest. The archive object
  382. itself does not store any of the data contained in the archive it describes.
  383. Instead, it contains a list of chunks which form a msgpacked stream of items_.
  384. The archive object itself further contains some metadata:
  385. * *version*
  386. * *name*, which might differ from the name set in the manifest.
  387. When :ref:`borg_check` rebuilds the manifest (e.g. if it was corrupted) and finds
  388. more than one archive object with the same name, it adds a counter to the name
  389. in the manifest, but leaves the *name* field of the archives as it was.
  390. * *items*, a list of chunk IDs containing item metadata (size: count * ~34B)
  391. * *cmdline*, the command line which was used to create the archive
  392. * *hostname*
  393. * *username*
  394. * *time* and *time_end* are the start and end timestamps, respectively
  395. * *comment*, a user-specified archive comment
  396. * *chunker_params* are the :ref:`chunker-params <chunker-params>` used for creating the archive.
  397. This is used by :ref:`borg_recreate` to determine whether a given archive needs rechunking.
  398. * Some other pieces of information related to recreate.
  399. .. _archive_limitation:
  400. .. rubric:: Note about archive limitations
  401. The archive is currently stored as a single object in the repository
  402. and thus limited in size to MAX_OBJECT_SIZE (20MiB).
  403. As one chunk list entry is ~40B, that means we can reference ~500.000 item
  404. metadata stream chunks per archive.
  405. Each item metadata stream chunk is ~128kiB (see hardcoded ITEMS_CHUNKER_PARAMS).
  406. So that means the whole item metadata stream is limited to ~64GiB chunks.
  407. If compression is used, the amount of storable metadata is bigger - by the
  408. compression factor.
  409. If the medium size of an item entry is 100B (small size file, no ACLs/xattrs),
  410. that means a limit of ~640 million files/directories per archive.
  411. If the medium size of an item entry is 2kB (~100MB size files or more
  412. ACLs/xattrs), the limit will be ~32 million files/directories per archive.
  413. If one tries to create an archive object bigger than MAX_OBJECT_SIZE, a fatal
  414. IntegrityError will be raised.
  415. A workaround is to create multiple archives with fewer items each, see
  416. also :issue:`1452`.
  417. .. _item:
  418. Items
  419. ~~~~~
  420. Each item represents a file, directory or other file system item and is stored as a
  421. dictionary created by the ``Item`` class that contains:
  422. * path
  423. * list of data chunks (size: count * ~40B)
  424. * user
  425. * group
  426. * uid
  427. * gid
  428. * mode (item type + permissions)
  429. * source (for symlinks)
  430. * rdev (for device files)
  431. * mtime, atime, ctime in nanoseconds
  432. * xattrs
  433. * acl (various OS-dependent fields)
  434. * flags
  435. All items are serialized using msgpack and the resulting byte stream
  436. is fed into the same chunker algorithm as used for regular file data
  437. and turned into deduplicated chunks. The reference to these chunks is then added
  438. to the archive metadata. To achieve a finer granularity on this metadata
  439. stream, we use different chunker params for this chunker, which result in
  440. smaller chunks.
  441. A chunk is stored as an object as well, of course.
  442. .. _chunks:
  443. .. _chunker_details:
  444. Chunks
  445. ~~~~~~
  446. Borg has these chunkers:
  447. - "fixed": a simple, low cpu overhead, fixed blocksize chunker, optionally
  448. supporting a header block of different size.
  449. - "buzhash": variable, content-defined blocksize, uses a rolling hash
  450. computed by the Buzhash_ algorithm.
  451. For some more general usage hints see also ``--chunker-params``.
  452. "fixed" chunker
  453. +++++++++++++++
  454. The fixed chunker triggers (chunks) at even-spaced offsets, e.g. every 4MiB,
  455. producing chunks of same block size (the last chunk is not required to be
  456. full-size).
  457. Optionally, it supports processing a differently sized "header" first, before
  458. it starts to cut chunks of the desired block size.
  459. The default is not to have a differently sized header.
  460. ``borg create --chunker-params fixed,BLOCK_SIZE[,HEADER_SIZE]``
  461. - BLOCK_SIZE: no default value, multiple of the system page size (usually 4096
  462. bytes) recommended. E.g.: 4194304 would cut 4MiB sized chunks.
  463. - HEADER_SIZE: optional, defaults to 0 (no header).
  464. The fixed chunker also supports processing sparse files (reading only the ranges
  465. with data and seeking over the empty hole ranges).
  466. ``borg create --sparse --chunker-params fixed,BLOCK_SIZE[,HEADER_SIZE]``
  467. "buzhash" chunker
  468. +++++++++++++++++
  469. The buzhash chunker triggers (chunks) when the last HASH_MASK_BITS bits of the
  470. hash are zero, producing chunks with a target size of 2^HASH_MASK_BITS bytes.
  471. Buzhash is **only** used for cutting the chunks at places defined by the
  472. content, the buzhash value is **not** used as the deduplication criteria (we
  473. use a cryptographically strong hash/MAC over the chunk contents for this, the
  474. id_hash).
  475. The idea of content-defined chunking is assigning every byte where a
  476. cut *could* be placed a hash. The hash is based on some number of bytes
  477. (the window size) before the byte in question. Chunks are cut
  478. where the hash satisfies some condition
  479. (usually "n numbers of trailing/leading zeroes"). This causes chunks to be cut
  480. in the same location relative to the file's contents, even if bytes are inserted
  481. or removed before/after a cut, as long as the bytes within the window stay the same.
  482. This results in a high chance that a single cluster of changes to a file will only
  483. result in 1-2 new chunks, aiding deduplication.
  484. Using normal hash functions this would be extremely slow,
  485. requiring hashing approximately ``window size * file size`` bytes.
  486. A rolling hash is used instead, which allows to add a new input byte and
  487. compute a new hash as well as *remove* a previously added input byte
  488. from the computed hash. This makes the cost of computing a hash for each
  489. input byte largely independent of the window size.
  490. Borg defines minimum and maximum chunk sizes (CHUNK_MIN_EXP and CHUNK_MAX_EXP, respectively)
  491. which narrows down where cuts may be made, greatly reducing the amount of data
  492. that is actually hashed for content-defined chunking.
  493. ``borg create --chunker-params buzhash,CHUNK_MIN_EXP,CHUNK_MAX_EXP,HASH_MASK_BITS,HASH_WINDOW_SIZE``
  494. can be used to tune the chunker parameters, the default is:
  495. - CHUNK_MIN_EXP = 19 (minimum chunk size = 2^19 B = 512 kiB)
  496. - CHUNK_MAX_EXP = 23 (maximum chunk size = 2^23 B = 8 MiB)
  497. - HASH_MASK_BITS = 21 (target chunk size ~= 2^21 B = 2 MiB)
  498. - HASH_WINDOW_SIZE = 4095 [B] (`0xFFF`)
  499. The buzhash table is altered by XORing it with a seed randomly generated once
  500. for the repository, and stored encrypted in the keyfile. This is to prevent
  501. chunk size based fingerprinting attacks on your encrypted repo contents (to
  502. guess what files you have based on a specific set of chunk sizes).
  503. .. _cache:
  504. The cache
  505. ---------
  506. The **files cache** is stored in ``cache/files`` and is used at backup time to
  507. quickly determine whether a given file is unchanged and we have all its chunks.
  508. In memory, the files cache is a key -> value mapping (a Python *dict*) and contains:
  509. * key: id_hash of the encoded, absolute file path
  510. * value:
  511. - file inode number
  512. - file size
  513. - file mtime_ns
  514. - age (0 [newest], 1, 2, 3, ..., BORG_FILES_CACHE_TTL - 1)
  515. - list of chunk ids representing the file's contents
  516. To determine whether a file has not changed, cached values are looked up via
  517. the key in the mapping and compared to the current file attribute values.
  518. If the file's size, mtime_ns and inode number is still the same, it is
  519. considered to not have changed. In that case, we check that all file content
  520. chunks are (still) present in the repository (we check that via the chunks
  521. cache).
  522. If everything is matching and all chunks are present, the file is not read /
  523. chunked / hashed again (but still a file metadata item is written to the
  524. archive, made from fresh file metadata read from the filesystem). This is
  525. what makes borg so fast when processing unchanged files.
  526. If there is a mismatch or a chunk is missing, the file is read / chunked /
  527. hashed. Chunks already present in repo won't be transferred to repo again.
  528. The inode number is stored and compared to make sure we distinguish between
  529. different files, as a single path may not be unique across different
  530. archives in different setups.
  531. Not all filesystems have stable inode numbers. If that is the case, borg can
  532. be told to ignore the inode number in the check via --ignore-inode.
  533. The age value is used for cache management. If a file is "seen" in a backup
  534. run, its age is reset to 0, otherwise its age is incremented by one.
  535. If a file was not seen in BORG_FILES_CACHE_TTL backups, its cache entry is
  536. removed. See also: :ref:`always_chunking` and :ref:`a_status_oddity`
  537. The files cache is a python dictionary, storing python objects, which
  538. generates a lot of overhead.
  539. Borg can also work without using the files cache (saves memory if you have a
  540. lot of files or not much RAM free), then all files are assumed to have changed.
  541. This is usually much slower than with files cache.
  542. The on-disk format of the files cache is a stream of msgpacked tuples (key, value).
  543. Loading the files cache involves reading the file, one msgpack object at a time,
  544. unpacking it, and msgpacking the value (in an effort to save memory).
  545. The **chunks cache** is stored in ``cache/chunks`` and is used to determine
  546. whether we already have a specific chunk, to count references to it and also
  547. for statistics.
  548. The chunks cache is a key -> value mapping and contains:
  549. * key:
  550. - chunk id_hash
  551. * value:
  552. - reference count
  553. - size
  554. The chunks cache is a HashIndex_. Due to some restrictions of HashIndex,
  555. the reference count of each given chunk is limited to a constant, MAX_VALUE
  556. (introduced below in HashIndex_), approximately 2**32.
  557. If a reference count hits MAX_VALUE, decrementing it yields MAX_VALUE again,
  558. i.e. the reference count is pinned to MAX_VALUE.
  559. .. _cache-memory-usage:
  560. Indexes / Caches memory usage
  561. -----------------------------
  562. Here is the estimated memory usage of Borg - it's complicated::
  563. chunk_size ~= 2 ^ HASH_MASK_BITS (for buzhash chunker, BLOCK_SIZE for fixed chunker)
  564. chunk_count ~= total_file_size / chunk_size
  565. repo_index_usage = chunk_count * 48
  566. chunks_cache_usage = chunk_count * 40
  567. files_cache_usage = total_file_count * 240 + chunk_count * 80
  568. mem_usage ~= repo_index_usage + chunks_cache_usage + files_cache_usage
  569. = chunk_count * 164 + total_file_count * 240
  570. Due to the hashtables, the best/usual/worst cases for memory allocation can
  571. be estimated like that::
  572. mem_allocation = mem_usage / load_factor # l_f = 0.25 .. 0.75
  573. mem_allocation_peak = mem_allocation * (1 + growth_factor) # g_f = 1.1 .. 2
  574. All units are Bytes.
  575. It is assuming every chunk is referenced exactly once (if you have a lot of
  576. duplicate chunks, you will have fewer chunks than estimated above).
  577. It is also assuming that typical chunk size is 2^HASH_MASK_BITS (if you have
  578. a lot of files smaller than this statistical medium chunk size, you will have
  579. more chunks than estimated above, because 1 file is at least 1 chunk).
  580. If a remote repository is used the repo index will be allocated on the remote side.
  581. The chunks cache, files cache and the repo index are all implemented as hash
  582. tables. A hash table must have a significant amount of unused entries to be
  583. fast - the so-called load factor gives the used/unused elements ratio.
  584. When a hash table gets full (load factor getting too high), it needs to be
  585. grown (allocate new, bigger hash table, copy all elements over to it, free old
  586. hash table) - this will lead to short-time peaks in memory usage each time this
  587. happens. Usually does not happen for all hashtables at the same time, though.
  588. For small hash tables, we start with a growth factor of 2, which comes down to
  589. ~1.1x for big hash tables.
  590. E.g. backing up a total count of 1 Mi (IEC binary prefix i.e. 2^20) files with a total size of 1TiB.
  591. a) with ``create --chunker-params buzhash,10,23,16,4095`` (custom, like borg < 1.0 or attic):
  592. mem_usage = 2.8GiB
  593. b) with ``create --chunker-params buzhash,19,23,21,4095`` (default):
  594. mem_usage = 0.31GiB
  595. .. note:: There is also the ``--files-cache=disabled`` option to disable the files cache.
  596. You'll save some memory, but it will need to read / chunk all the files as
  597. it can not skip unmodified files then.
  598. HashIndex
  599. ---------
  600. The chunks cache and the repository index are stored as hash tables, with
  601. only one slot per bucket, spreading hash collisions to the following
  602. buckets. As a consequence the hash is just a start position for a linear
  603. search. If a key is looked up that is not in the table, then the hash table
  604. is searched from the start position (the hash) until the first empty
  605. bucket is reached.
  606. This particular mode of operation is open addressing with linear probing.
  607. When the hash table is filled to 75%, its size is grown. When it's
  608. emptied to 25%, its size is shrinked. Operations on it have a variable
  609. complexity between constant and linear with low factor, and memory overhead
  610. varies between 33% and 300%.
  611. If an element is deleted, and the slot behind the deleted element is not empty,
  612. then the element will leave a tombstone, a bucket marked as deleted. Tombstones
  613. are only removed by insertions using the tombstone's bucket, or by resizing
  614. the table. They present the same load to the hash table as a real entry,
  615. but do not count towards the regular load factor.
  616. Thus, if the number of empty slots becomes too low (recall that linear probing
  617. for an element not in the index stops at the first empty slot), the hash table
  618. is rebuilt. The maximum *effective* load factor, i.e. including tombstones, is 93%.
  619. Data in a HashIndex is always stored in little-endian format, which increases
  620. efficiency for almost everyone, since basically no one uses big-endian processors
  621. any more.
  622. HashIndex does not use a hashing function, because all keys (save manifest) are
  623. outputs of a cryptographic hash or MAC and thus already have excellent distribution.
  624. Thus, HashIndex simply uses the first 32 bits of the key as its "hash".
  625. The format is easy to read and write, because the buckets array has the same layout
  626. in memory and on disk. Only the header formats differ. The on-disk header is
  627. ``struct HashHeader``:
  628. - First, the HashIndex magic, the eight byte ASCII string "BORG_IDX".
  629. - Second, the signed 32-bit number of entries (i.e. buckets which are not deleted and not empty).
  630. - Third, the signed 32-bit number of buckets, i.e. the length of the buckets array
  631. contained in the file, and the modulus for index calculation.
  632. - Fourth, the signed 8-bit length of keys.
  633. - Fifth, the signed 8-bit length of values. This has to be at least four bytes.
  634. All fields are packed.
  635. The HashIndex is *not* a general purpose data structure.
  636. The value size must be at least 4 bytes, and these first bytes are used for in-band
  637. signalling in the data structure itself.
  638. The constant MAX_VALUE (defined as 2**32-1025 = 4294966271) defines the valid range for
  639. these 4 bytes when interpreted as an uint32_t from 0 to MAX_VALUE (inclusive).
  640. The following reserved values beyond MAX_VALUE are currently in use (byte order is LE):
  641. - 0xffffffff marks empty buckets in the hash table
  642. - 0xfffffffe marks deleted buckets in the hash table
  643. HashIndex is implemented in C and wrapped with Cython in a class-based interface.
  644. The Cython wrapper checks every passed value against these reserved values and
  645. raises an AssertionError if they are used.
  646. Encryption
  647. ----------
  648. .. seealso:: The :ref:`borgcrypto` section for an in-depth review.
  649. AEAD modes
  650. ~~~~~~~~~~
  651. Uses modern AEAD ciphers: AES-OCB or CHACHA20-POLY1305.
  652. For each borg invocation, a new sessionkey is derived from the borg key material
  653. and the 48bit IV starts from 0 again (both ciphers internally add a 32bit counter
  654. to our IV, so we'll just count up by 1 per chunk).
  655. The chunk layout is best seen at the bottom of this diagram:
  656. .. figure:: encryption-aead.png
  657. :figwidth: 100%
  658. :width: 100%
  659. No special IV/counter management is needed here due to the use of session keys.
  660. A 48 bit IV is way more than needed: If you only backed up 4kiB chunks (2^12B),
  661. the IV would "limit" the data encrypted in one session to 2^(12+48)B == 2.3 exabytes,
  662. meaning you would run against other limitations (RAM, storage, time) way before that.
  663. In practice, chunks are usually bigger, for big files even much bigger, giving an
  664. even higher limit.
  665. Legacy modes
  666. ~~~~~~~~~~~~
  667. AES_-256 is used in CTR mode (so no need for padding). A 64 bit initialization
  668. vector is used, a MAC is computed on the encrypted chunk
  669. and both are stored in the chunk. Encryption and MAC use two different keys.
  670. Each chunk consists of ``TYPE(1)`` + ``MAC(32)`` + ``NONCE(8)`` + ``CIPHERTEXT``:
  671. .. figure:: encryption.png
  672. :figwidth: 100%
  673. :width: 100%
  674. In AES-CTR mode you can think of the IV as the start value for the counter.
  675. The counter itself is incremented by one after each 16 byte block.
  676. The IV/counter is not required to be random but it must NEVER be reused.
  677. So to accomplish this Borg initializes the encryption counter to be
  678. higher than any previously used counter value before encrypting new data.
  679. To reduce payload size, only 8 bytes of the 16 bytes nonce is saved in the
  680. payload, the first 8 bytes are always zeros. This does not affect security but
  681. limits the maximum repository capacity to only 295 exabytes (2**64 * 16 bytes).
  682. Both modes
  683. ~~~~~~~~~~
  684. Encryption keys (and other secrets) are kept either in a key file on the client
  685. ('keyfile' mode) or in the repository config on the server ('repokey' mode).
  686. In both cases, the secrets are generated from random and then encrypted by a
  687. key derived from your passphrase (this happens on the client before the key
  688. is stored into the keyfile or as repokey).
  689. The passphrase is passed through the ``BORG_PASSPHRASE`` environment variable
  690. or prompted for interactive usage.
  691. .. _key_files:
  692. Key files
  693. ---------
  694. .. seealso:: The :ref:`key_encryption` section for an in-depth review of the key encryption.
  695. When initialized with the ``init -e keyfile`` command, Borg
  696. needs an associated file in ``$HOME/.config/borg/keys`` to read and write
  697. the repository. The format is based on msgpack_, base64 encoding and
  698. PBKDF2_ SHA256 hashing, which is then encoded again in a msgpack_.
  699. The same data structure is also used in the "repokey" modes, which store
  700. it in the repository in the configuration file.
  701. The internal data structure is as follows:
  702. version
  703. currently always an integer, 1
  704. repository_id
  705. the ``id`` field in the ``config`` ``INI`` file of the repository.
  706. enc_key
  707. the key used to encrypt data with AES (256 bits)
  708. enc_hmac_key
  709. the key used to HMAC the encrypted data (256 bits)
  710. id_key
  711. the key used to HMAC the plaintext chunk data to compute the chunk's id
  712. chunk_seed
  713. the seed for the buzhash chunking table (signed 32 bit integer)
  714. These fields are packed using msgpack_. The utf-8 encoded passphrase
  715. is processed with PBKDF2_ (SHA256_, 100000 iterations, random 256 bit salt)
  716. to derive a 256 bit key encryption key (KEK).
  717. A `HMAC-SHA256`_ checksum of the packed fields is generated with the KEK,
  718. then the KEK is also used to encrypt the same packed fields using AES-CTR.
  719. The result is stored in a another msgpack_ formatted as follows:
  720. version
  721. currently always an integer, 1
  722. salt
  723. random 256 bits salt used to process the passphrase
  724. iterations
  725. number of iterations used to process the passphrase (currently 100000)
  726. algorithm
  727. the hashing algorithm used to process the passphrase and do the HMAC
  728. checksum (currently the string ``sha256``)
  729. hash
  730. HMAC-SHA256 of the *plaintext* of the packed fields.
  731. data
  732. The encrypted, packed fields.
  733. The resulting msgpack_ is then encoded using base64 and written to the
  734. key file, wrapped using the standard ``textwrap`` module with a header.
  735. The header is a single line with a MAGIC string, a space and a hexadecimal
  736. representation of the repository id.
  737. Compression
  738. -----------
  739. Borg supports the following compression methods:
  740. - none (no compression, pass through data 1:1)
  741. - lz4 (low compression, but super fast)
  742. - zstd (level 1-22 offering a wide range: level 1 is lower compression and high
  743. speed, level 22 is higher compression and lower speed) - since borg 1.1.4
  744. - zlib (level 0-9, level 0 is no compression [but still adding zlib overhead],
  745. level 1 is low, level 9 is high compression)
  746. - lzma (level 0-9, level 0 is low, level 9 is high compression).
  747. Speed: none > lz4 > zlib > lzma, lz4 > zstd
  748. Compression: lzma > zlib > lz4 > none, zstd > lz4
  749. Be careful, higher compression levels might use a lot of resources (CPU/memory).
  750. The overall speed of course also depends on the speed of your target storage.
  751. If that is slow, using a higher compression level might yield better overall
  752. performance. You need to experiment a bit. Maybe just watch your CPU load, if
  753. that is relatively low, increase compression until 1 core is 70-100% loaded.
  754. Even if your target storage is rather fast, you might see interesting effects:
  755. while doing no compression at all (none) is a operation that takes no time, it
  756. likely will need to store more data to the storage compared to using lz4.
  757. The time needed to transfer and store the additional data might be much more
  758. than if you had used lz4 (which is super fast, but still might compress your
  759. data about 2:1). This is assuming your data is compressible (if you backup
  760. already compressed data, trying to compress them at backup time is usually
  761. pointless).
  762. Compression is applied after deduplication, thus using different compression
  763. methods in one repo does not influence deduplication.
  764. See ``borg create --help`` about how to specify the compression level and its default.
  765. Lock files
  766. ----------
  767. Borg uses locks to get (exclusive or shared) access to the cache and
  768. the repository.
  769. The locking system is based on renaming a temporary directory
  770. to `lock.exclusive` (for
  771. exclusive locks). Inside this directory, there is a file indicating
  772. hostname, process id and thread id of the lock holder.
  773. There is also a json file `lock.roster` that keeps a directory of all shared
  774. and exclusive lockers.
  775. If the process is able to rename a temporary directory (with the
  776. host/process/thread identifier prepared inside it) in the resource directory
  777. to `lock.exclusive`, it has the lock for it. If renaming fails
  778. (because this directory already exists and its host/process/thread identifier
  779. denotes a thread on the host which is still alive), lock acquisition fails.
  780. The cache lock is usually in `~/.cache/borg/REPOID/lock.*`.
  781. The repository lock is in `repository/lock.*`.
  782. In case you run into troubles with the locks, you can use the ``borg break-lock``
  783. command after you first have made sure that no Borg process is
  784. running on any machine that accesses this resource. Be very careful, the cache
  785. or repository might get damaged if multiple processes use it at the same time.
  786. Checksumming data structures
  787. ----------------------------
  788. As detailed in the previous sections, Borg generates and stores various files
  789. containing important meta data, such as the repository index, repository hints,
  790. chunks caches and files cache.
  791. Data corruption in these files can damage the archive data in a repository,
  792. e.g. due to wrong reference counts in the chunks cache. Only some parts of Borg
  793. were designed to handle corrupted data structures, so a corrupted files cache
  794. may cause crashes or write incorrect archives.
  795. Therefore, Borg calculates checksums when writing these files and tests checksums
  796. when reading them. Checksums are generally 64-bit XXH64 hashes.
  797. The canonical xxHash representation is used, i.e. big-endian.
  798. Checksums are stored as hexadecimal ASCII strings.
  799. For compatibility, checksums are not required and absent checksums do not trigger errors.
  800. The mechanisms have been designed to avoid false-positives when various Borg
  801. versions are used alternately on the same repositories.
  802. Checksums are a data safety mechanism. They are not a security mechanism.
  803. .. rubric:: Choice of algorithm
  804. XXH64 has been chosen for its high speed on all platforms, which avoids performance
  805. degradation in CPU-limited parts (e.g. cache synchronization).
  806. Unlike CRC32, it neither requires hardware support (crc32c or CLMUL)
  807. nor vectorized code nor large, cache-unfriendly lookup tables to achieve good performance.
  808. This simplifies deployment of it considerably (cf. src/borg/algorithms/crc32...).
  809. Further, XXH64 is a non-linear hash function and thus has a "more or less" good
  810. chance to detect larger burst errors, unlike linear CRCs where the probability
  811. of detection decreases with error size.
  812. The 64-bit checksum length is considered sufficient for the file sizes typically
  813. checksummed (individual files up to a few GB, usually less).
  814. xxHash was expressly designed for data blocks of these sizes.
  815. Lower layer — file_integrity
  816. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
  817. To accommodate the different transaction models used for the cache and repository,
  818. there is a lower layer (borg.crypto.file_integrity.IntegrityCheckedFile)
  819. wrapping a file-like object, performing streaming calculation and comparison of checksums.
  820. Checksum errors are signalled by raising an exception (borg.crypto.file_integrity.FileIntegrityError)
  821. at the earliest possible moment.
  822. .. rubric:: Calculating checksums
  823. Before feeding the checksum algorithm any data, the file name (i.e. without any path)
  824. is mixed into the checksum, since the name encodes the context of the data for Borg.
  825. The various indices used by Borg have separate header and main data parts.
  826. IntegrityCheckedFile allows borg to checksum them independently, which avoids
  827. even reading the data when the header is corrupted. When a part is signalled,
  828. the length of the part name is mixed into the checksum state first (encoded
  829. as an ASCII string via `%10d` printf format), then the name of the part
  830. is mixed in as an UTF-8 string. Lastly, the current position (length)
  831. in the file is mixed in as well.
  832. The checksum state is not reset at part boundaries.
  833. A final checksum is always calculated in the same way as the parts described above,
  834. after seeking to the end of the file. The final checksum cannot prevent code
  835. from processing corrupted data during reading, however, it prevents use of the
  836. corrupted data.
  837. .. rubric:: Serializing checksums
  838. All checksums are compiled into a simple JSON structure called *integrity data*:
  839. .. code-block:: json
  840. {
  841. "algorithm": "XXH64",
  842. "digests": {
  843. "HashHeader": "eab6802590ba39e3",
  844. "final": "e2a7f132fc2e8b24"
  845. }
  846. }
  847. The *algorithm* key notes the used algorithm. When reading, integrity data containing
  848. an unknown algorithm is not inspected further.
  849. The *digests* key contains a mapping of part names to their digests.
  850. Integrity data is generally stored by the upper layers, introduced below. An exception
  851. is the DetachedIntegrityCheckedFile, which automatically writes and reads it from
  852. a ".integrity" file next to the data file.
  853. It is used for archive chunks indexes in chunks.archive.d.
  854. Upper layer
  855. ~~~~~~~~~~~
  856. Storage of integrity data depends on the component using it, since they have
  857. different transaction mechanisms, and integrity data needs to be
  858. transacted with the data it is supposed to protect.
  859. .. rubric:: Main cache files: chunks and files cache
  860. The integrity data of the ``chunks`` and ``files`` caches is stored in the
  861. cache ``config``, since all three are transacted together.
  862. The ``[integrity]`` section is used:
  863. .. code-block:: ini
  864. [cache]
  865. version = 1
  866. repository = 3c4...e59
  867. manifest = 10e...21c
  868. timestamp = 2017-06-01T21:31:39.699514
  869. key_type = 2
  870. previous_location = /path/to/repo
  871. [integrity]
  872. manifest = 10e...21c
  873. chunks = {"algorithm": "XXH64", "digests": {"HashHeader": "eab...39e3", "final": "e2a...b24"}}
  874. The manifest ID is duplicated in the integrity section due to the way all Borg
  875. versions handle the config file. Instead of creating a "new" config file from
  876. an internal representation containing only the data understood by Borg,
  877. the config file is read in entirety (using the Python ConfigParser) and modified.
  878. This preserves all sections and values not understood by the Borg version
  879. modifying it.
  880. Thus, if an older versions uses a cache with integrity data, it would preserve
  881. the integrity section and its contents. If a integrity-aware Borg version
  882. would read this cache, it would incorrectly report checksum errors, since
  883. the older version did not update the checksums.
  884. However, by duplicating the manifest ID in the integrity section, it is
  885. easy to tell whether the checksums concern the current state of the cache.
  886. Integrity errors are fatal in these files, terminating the program,
  887. and are not automatically corrected at this time.
  888. .. rubric:: chunks.archive.d
  889. Indices in chunks.archive.d are not transacted and use DetachedIntegrityCheckedFile,
  890. which writes the integrity data to a separate ".integrity" file.
  891. Integrity errors result in deleting the affected index and rebuilding it.
  892. This logs a warning and increases the exit code to WARNING (1).
  893. .. _integrity_repo:
  894. .. rubric:: Repository index and hints
  895. The repository associates index and hints files with a transaction by including the
  896. transaction ID in the file names. Integrity data is stored in a third file
  897. ("integrity.<TRANSACTION_ID>"). Like the hints file, it is msgpacked:
  898. .. code-block:: python
  899. {
  900. 'version': 2,
  901. 'hints': '{"algorithm": "XXH64", "digests": {"final": "411208db2aa13f1a"}}',
  902. 'index': '{"algorithm": "XXH64", "digests": {"HashHeader": "846b7315f91b8e48", "final": "cb3e26cadc173e40"}}'
  903. }
  904. The *version* key started at 2, the same version used for the hints. Since Borg has
  905. many versioned file formats, this keeps the number of different versions in use
  906. a bit lower.
  907. The other keys map an auxiliary file, like *index* or *hints* to their integrity data.
  908. Note that the JSON is stored as-is, and not as part of the msgpack structure.
  909. Integrity errors result in deleting the affected file(s) (index/hints) and rebuilding the index,
  910. which is the same action taken when corruption is noticed in other ways (e.g. HashIndex can
  911. detect most corrupted headers, but not data corruption). A warning is logged as well.
  912. The exit code is not influenced, since remote repositories cannot perform that action.
  913. Raising the exit code would be possible for local repositories, but is not implemented.
  914. Unlike the cache design this mechanism can have false positives whenever an older version
  915. *rewrites* the auxiliary files for a transaction created by a newer version,
  916. since that might result in a different index (due to hash-table resizing) or hints file
  917. (hash ordering, or the older version 1 format), while not invalidating the integrity file.
  918. For example, using 1.1 on a repository, noticing corruption or similar issues and then running
  919. ``borg-1.0 check --repair``, which rewrites the index and hints, results in this situation.
  920. Borg 1.1 would erroneously report checksum errors in the hints and/or index files and trigger
  921. an automatic rebuild of these files.