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- .. include:: ../global.rst.inc
- .. highlight:: none
- Backing up in pull mode
- =======================
- Assuming you have a pull backup system set up with borg, where a backup server
- pulls the data from the target via SSHFS. In this mode, the backup client's file
- system is mounted remotely on the backup server. Pull mode is even possible if
- the SSH connection must be established by the client via a remote tunnel. Other
- network file systems like NFS or SMB could be used as well, but SSHFS is very
- simple to set up and probably the most secure one.
- There are some restrictions caused by SSHFS. For example, unless you define UID
- and GID mappings when mounting via ``sshfs``, owners and groups of the mounted
- file system will probably change, and you may not have access to those files if
- BorgBackup is not run with root privileges.
- SSHFS is a FUSE file system and uses the SFTP protocol, so there may be also
- other unsupported features that the actual implementations of ssfs, libfuse and
- sftp on the backup server do not support, like file name encodings, ACLs, xattrs
- or bsdflags. So there is no guarantee that you are able to restore a system
- completely in every aspect from such a backup.
- .. warning::
- To mount the client's root file system you will need root access to the
- client. This contradicts to the usual threat model of BorgBackup, where
- clients don't need to trust the backup server (data is encrypted). In pull
- mode the server (when logged in as root) could cause unlimited damage to the
- client. Therefore, pull mode should be used only from servers you do fully
- trust!
- Creating a backup
- -----------------
- Generally, in a pull backup situation there is no direct way for borg to know
- the client's original UID:GID name mapping of files, because Borg would use
- ``/etc/passwd`` and ``/etc/group`` of the backup server to map the names. To
- derive the right names, Borg needs to have access to the client's passwd and
- group files and use them in the backup process.
- The solution to this problem is chrooting into an sshfs mounted directory. In
- this example the whole client root file system is mounted. We use the
- stand-alone BorgBackup executable and copy it into the mounted file system to
- make Borg available after entering chroot; this can be skipped if Borg is
- already installed on the client.
- ::
- # Mount client root file system.
- mkdir /tmp/sshfs
- sshfs root@host:/ /tmp/sshfs
- # Mount BorgBackup repository inside it.
- mkdir /tmp/sshfs/borgrepo
- mount --bind /path/to/repo /tmp/sshfs/borgrepo
- # Make borg executable available.
- cp /usr/local/bin/borg /tmp/sshfs/usr/local/bin/borg
- # Mount important system directories and enter chroot.
- cd /tmp/sshfs
- for i in dev proc sys; do mount --bind /$i $i; done
- chroot /tmp/sshfs
- Now we are on the backup system but inside a chroot with the client's root file
- system. We have a copy of Borg binary in ``/usr/local/bin`` and the repository
- in ``/borgrepo``. Borg will back up the client's user/group names, and we can
- create the backup, retaining the original paths, excluding the repository:
- ::
- borg create --exclude /borgrepo --files-cache ctime,size /borgrepo::archive /
- For the sake of simplicity only ``/borgrepo`` is excluded here. You may want to
- set up an exclude file with additional files and folders to be excluded. Also
- note that we have to modify Borg's file change detection behaviour – SSHFS
- cannot guarantee stable inode numbers, so we have to supply the
- ``--files-cache`` option.
- Finally, we need to exit chroot, unmount all the stuff and clean up:
- ::
- exit # exit chroot
- rm /tmp/sshfs/usr/local/bin/borg
- cd /tmp/sshfs
- for i in dev proc sys borgrepo; do umount ./$i; done
- rmdir borgrepo
- cd ~
- umount /tmp/sshfs
- rmdir /tmp/sshfs
- Thanks to secuser on IRC for this how-to!
- Restore methods
- ---------------
- The counterpart of a pull backup is a push restore. Depending on the type of
- restore – full restore or partial restore – there are different methods to make
- sure the correct IDs are restored.
- Partial restore
- ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
- In case of a partial restore, using the archived UIDs/GIDs might lead to wrong
- results if the name-to-ID mapping on the target system has changed compared to
- backup time (might be the case e.g. for a fresh OS install).
- The workaround again is chrooting into an sshfs mounted directory, so Borg is
- able to map the user/group names of the backup files to the actual IDs on the
- client. This example is similar to the backup above – only the Borg command is
- different:
- ::
- # Mount client root file system.
- mkdir /tmp/sshfs
- sshfs root@host:/ /tmp/sshfs
- # Mount BorgBackup repository inside it.
- mkdir /tmp/sshfs/borgrepo
- mount --bind /path/to/repo /tmp/sshfs/borgrepo
- # Make borg executable available.
- cp /usr/local/bin/borg /tmp/sshfs/usr/local/bin/borg
- # Mount important system directories and enter chroot.
- cd /tmp/sshfs
- for i in dev proc sys; do mount --bind /$i $i; done
- chroot /tmp/sshfs
- Now we can run
- ::
- borg extract /borgrepo::archive PATH
- to partially restore whatever we like. Finally, do the clean-up:
- ::
- exit # exit chroot
- rm /tmp/sshfs/usr/local/bin/borg
- cd /tmp/sshfs
- for i in dev proc sys borgrepo; do umount ./$i; done
- rmdir borgrepo
- cd ~
- umount /tmp/sshfs
- rmdir /tmp/sshfs
- Full restore
- ~~~~~~~~~~~~
- When doing a full restore, we restore all files (including the ones containing
- the ID-to-name mapping, ``/etc/passwd`` and ``/etc/group``). Everything will be
- consistent automatically if we restore the numeric IDs stored in the archive. So
- there is no need for a chroot environment; we just mount the client file system
- and extract a backup, utilizing the ``--numeric-owner`` option:
- ::
- sshfs root@host:/ /mnt/sshfs
- cd /mnt/sshfs
- borg extract --numeric-owner /path/to/repo::archive
- cd ~
- umount /mnt/sshfs
- Simple (lossy) full restore
- ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
- Using ``borg export-tar`` it is possible to stream a backup to the client and
- directly extract it without the need of mounting with SSHFS:
- ::
- borg export-tar /path/to/repo::archive - | ssh root@host 'tar -C / -x'
- Note that in this scenario the tar format is the limiting factor – it cannot
- restore all the advanced features that BorgBackup supports. See
- :ref:`borg_export-tar` for limitations.
- ssh-agent
- =========
- In this scenario *borg-server* initiates an SSH connection to *borg-client* and forwards the authentication
- agent connection.
- After that, it works similar to the push mode:
- *borg-client* initiates another SSH connection back to *borg-server* using the forwarded authentication agent
- connection to authenticate itself, starts ``borg serve`` and communicates with it.
- Using this method requires ssh access of user *borgs* to *borgc@borg-client*, where:
- * *borgs* is the user on the server side with read/write access to local borg repository.
- * *borgc* is the user on the client side with read access to files meant to be backed up.
- Applying this method for automated backup operations
- ----------------------------------------------------
- Assume that the borg-client host is untrusted.
- Therefore we do some effort to prevent a hostile user on the borg-client side to do something harmful.
- In case of a fully trusted borg-client the method could be simplified.
- Preparing the server side
- ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
- Do this once for each client on *borg-server* to allow *borgs* to connect itself on *borg-server* using a
- dedicated ssh key:
- ::
- borgs@borg-server$ install -m 700 -d ~/.ssh/
- borgs@borg-server$ ssh-keygen -N '' -t rsa -f ~/.ssh/borg-client_key
- borgs@borg-server$ { echo -n 'command="borg serve --append-only --restrict-to-repo ~/repo",restrict '; cat ~/.ssh/borg-client_key.pub; } >> ~/.ssh/authorized_keys
- borgs@borg-server$ chmod 600 ~/.ssh/authorized_keys
- ``install -m 700 -d ~/.ssh/``
- Create directory ~/.ssh with correct permissions if it does not exist yet.
- ``ssh-keygen -N '' -t rsa -f ~/.ssh/borg-client_key``
- Create an ssh key dedicated to communication with borg-client.
- .. note::
- Another more complex approach is using a unique ssh key for each pull operation.
- This is more secure as it guarantees that the key will not be used for other purposes.
- ``{ echo -n 'command="borg serve --append-only --restrict-to-repo ~/repo",restrict '; cat ~/.ssh/borg-client_key.pub; } >> ~/.ssh/authorized_keys``
- Add borg-client's ssh public key to ~/.ssh/authorized_keys with forced command and restricted mode.
- The borg client is restricted to use one repo at the specified path and to append-only operation.
- Commands like *delete*, *prune* and *compact* have to be executed another way, for example directly on *borg-server*
- side or from a privileged, less restricted client (using another authorized_keys entry).
- ``chmod 600 ~/.ssh/authorized_keys``
- Fix permissions of ~/.ssh/authorized_keys.
- Pull operation
- ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
- Initiating borg command execution from *borg-server* (e.g. init)::
- borgs@borg-server$ (
- eval $(ssh-agent) > /dev/null
- ssh-add -q ~/.ssh/borg-client_key
- echo 'your secure borg key passphrase' | \
- ssh -A -o StrictHostKeyChecking=no borgc@borg-client "BORG_PASSPHRASE=\$(cat) borg --rsh 'ssh -o StrictHostKeyChecking=no' init --encryption repokey ssh://borgs@borg-server/~/repo"
- kill "${SSH_AGENT_PID}"
- )
- Parentheses around commands are needed to avoid interference with a possibly already running ssh-agent.
- Parentheses are not needed when using a dedicated bash process.
- ``eval $(ssh-agent) > /dev/null``
- Run the SSH agent in the background and export related environment variables to the current bash session.
- ``ssh-add -q ~/.ssh/borg-client_key``
- Load the SSH private key dedicated to communication with the borg-client into the SSH agent.
- Look at ``man 1 ssh-add`` for a more detailed explanation.
- .. note::
- Care needs to be taken when loading keys into the SSH agent. Users on the *borg-client* having read/write permissions
- to the agent's UNIX-domain socket (at least borgc and root in our case) can access the agent on *borg-server* through
- the forwarded connection and can authenticate using any of the identities loaded into the agent
- (look at ``man 1 ssh`` for more detailed explanation). Therefore there are some security considerations:
- * Private keys loaded into the agent must not be used to enable access anywhere else.
- * The keys meant to be loaded into the agent must be specified explicitly, not from default locations.
- * The *borg-client*'s entry in *borgs@borg-server:~/.ssh/authorized_keys* must be as restrictive as possible.
- ``echo 'your secure borg key passphrase' | ssh -A -o StrictHostKeyChecking=no borgc@borg-client "BORG_PASSPHRASE=\$(cat) borg --rsh 'ssh -o StrictHostKeyChecking=no' init --encryption repokey ssh://borgs@borg-server/~/repo"``
- Run the *borg init* command on *borg-client*.
- *ssh://borgs@borg-server/~/repo* refers to the repository *repo* within borgs's home directory on *borg-server*.
- *StrictHostKeyChecking=no* is used to automatically add host keys to *~/.ssh/known_hosts* without user intervention.
- ``kill "${SSH_AGENT_PID}"``
- Kill ssh-agent with loaded keys when it is not needed anymore.
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