usage.rst 26 KB

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  1. .. include:: global.rst.inc
  2. .. _detailed_usage:
  3. Usage
  4. =====
  5. |project_name| consists of a number of commands. Each command accepts
  6. a number of arguments and options. The following sections will describe each
  7. command in detail.
  8. General
  9. -------
  10. Type of log output
  11. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
  12. The log level of the builtin logging configuration defaults to WARNING.
  13. This is because we want |project_name| to be mostly silent and only output
  14. warnings (plus errors and critical messages).
  15. Use ``--verbose`` or ``--info`` to set INFO (you will get informative output then
  16. additionally to warnings, errors, critical messages).
  17. Use ``--debug`` to set DEBUG to get output made for debugging.
  18. All log messages created with at least the set level will be output.
  19. Log levels: DEBUG < INFO < WARNING < ERROR < CRITICAL
  20. While you can set misc. log levels, do not expect that every command will
  21. give different output on different log levels - it's just a possibility.
  22. .. warning:: While some options (like ``--stats`` or ``--list``) will emit more
  23. informational messages, you have to use INFO (or lower) log level to make
  24. them show up in log output. Use ``-v`` or a logging configuration.
  25. Return codes
  26. ~~~~~~~~~~~~
  27. |project_name| can exit with the following return codes (rc):
  28. ::
  29. 0 = success (logged as INFO)
  30. 1 = warning (operation reached its normal end, but there were warnings -
  31. you should check the log, logged as WARNING)
  32. 2 = error (like a fatal error, a local or remote exception, the operation
  33. did not reach its normal end, logged as ERROR)
  34. 128+N = killed by signal N (e.g. 137 == kill -9)
  35. The return code is also logged at the indicated level as the last log entry.
  36. Environment Variables
  37. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
  38. |project_name| uses some environment variables for automation:
  39. General:
  40. BORG_REPO
  41. When set, use the value to give the default repository location. If a command needs an archive
  42. parameter, you can abbreviate as `::archive`. If a command needs a repository parameter, you
  43. can either leave it away or abbreviate as `::`, if a positional parameter is required.
  44. BORG_PASSPHRASE
  45. When set, use the value to answer the passphrase question for encrypted repositories.
  46. BORG_LOGGING_CONF
  47. When set, use the given filename as INI_-style logging configuration.
  48. BORG_RSH
  49. When set, use this command instead of ``ssh``. This can be used to specify ssh options, such as
  50. a custom identity file ``ssh -i /path/to/private/key``. See ``man ssh`` for other options.
  51. TMPDIR
  52. where temporary files are stored (might need a lot of temporary space for some operations)
  53. Some automatic "answerers" (if set, they automatically answer confirmation questions):
  54. BORG_UNKNOWN_UNENCRYPTED_REPO_ACCESS_IS_OK=no (or =yes)
  55. For "Warning: Attempting to access a previously unknown unencrypted repository"
  56. BORG_RELOCATED_REPO_ACCESS_IS_OK=no (or =yes)
  57. For "Warning: The repository at location ... was previously located at ..."
  58. BORG_CHECK_I_KNOW_WHAT_I_AM_DOING=NO (or =YES)
  59. For "Warning: 'check --repair' is an experimental feature that might result in data loss."
  60. BORG_DELETE_I_KNOW_WHAT_I_AM_DOING=NO (or =YES)
  61. For "You requested to completely DELETE the repository *including* all archives it contains:"
  62. Note: answers are case sensitive. setting an invalid answer value might either give the default
  63. answer or ask you interactively, depending on whether retries are allowed (they by default are
  64. allowed). So please test your scripts interactively before making them a non-interactive script.
  65. Directories:
  66. BORG_KEYS_DIR
  67. Default to '~/.config/borg/keys'. This directory contains keys for encrypted repositories.
  68. BORG_CACHE_DIR
  69. Default to '~/.cache/borg'. This directory contains the local cache and might need a lot
  70. of space for dealing with big repositories).
  71. Building:
  72. BORG_OPENSSL_PREFIX
  73. Adds given OpenSSL header file directory to the default locations (setup.py).
  74. BORG_LZ4_PREFIX
  75. Adds given LZ4 header file directory to the default locations (setup.py).
  76. Please note:
  77. - be very careful when using the "yes" sayers, the warnings with prompt exist for your / your data's security/safety
  78. - also be very careful when putting your passphrase into a script, make sure it has appropriate file permissions
  79. (e.g. mode 600, root:root).
  80. .. _INI: https://docs.python.org/3.4/library/logging.config.html#configuration-file-format
  81. Resource Usage
  82. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
  83. |project_name| might use a lot of resources depending on the size of the data set it is dealing with.
  84. CPU:
  85. It won't go beyond 100% of 1 core as the code is currently single-threaded.
  86. Especially higher zlib and lzma compression levels use significant amounts
  87. of CPU cycles.
  88. Memory (RAM):
  89. The chunks index and the files index are read into memory for performance
  90. reasons.
  91. Compression, esp. lzma compression with high levels might need substantial
  92. amounts of memory.
  93. Temporary files:
  94. Reading data and metadata from a FUSE mounted repository will consume about
  95. the same space as the deduplicated chunks used to represent them in the
  96. repository.
  97. Cache files:
  98. Contains the chunks index and files index (plus a compressed collection of
  99. single-archive chunk indexes).
  100. Chunks index:
  101. Proportional to the amount of data chunks in your repo. Lots of small chunks
  102. in your repo imply a big chunks index. You may need to tweak the chunker
  103. params (see create options) if you have a lot of data and you want to keep
  104. the chunks index at some reasonable size.
  105. Files index:
  106. Proportional to the amount of files in your last backup. Can be switched
  107. off (see create options), but next backup will be much slower if you do.
  108. Network:
  109. If your repository is remote, all deduplicated (and optionally compressed/
  110. encrypted) data of course has to go over the connection (ssh: repo url).
  111. If you use a locally mounted network filesystem, additionally some copy
  112. operations used for transaction support also go over the connection. If
  113. you backup multiple sources to one target repository, additional traffic
  114. happens for cache resynchronization.
  115. In case you are interested in more details, please read the internals documentation.
  116. Units
  117. ~~~~~
  118. To display quantities, |project_name| takes care of respecting the
  119. usual conventions of scale. Disk sizes are displayed in `decimal
  120. <https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Decimal>`_, using powers of ten (so
  121. ``kB`` means 1000 bytes). For memory usage, `binary prefixes
  122. <https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Binary_prefix>`_ are used, and are
  123. indicated using the `IEC binary prefixes
  124. <https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/IEC_80000-13#Prefixes_for_binary_multiples>`_,
  125. using powers of two (so ``KiB`` means 1024 bytes).
  126. Date and Time
  127. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~
  128. We format date and time conforming to ISO-8601, that is: YYYY-MM-DD and HH:MM:SS
  129. For more information, see: https://xkcd.com/1179/
  130. .. include:: usage/init.rst.inc
  131. Examples
  132. ~~~~~~~~
  133. ::
  134. # Local repository
  135. $ borg init /mnt/backup
  136. # Remote repository (accesses a remote borg via ssh)
  137. $ borg init user@hostname:backup
  138. # Encrypted remote repository, store the key in the repo
  139. $ borg init --encryption=repokey user@hostname:backup
  140. # Encrypted remote repository, store the key your home dir
  141. $ borg init --encryption=keyfile user@hostname:backup
  142. Important notes about encryption:
  143. Use encryption! Repository encryption protects you e.g. against the case that
  144. an attacker has access to your backup repository.
  145. But be careful with the key / the passphrase:
  146. If you want "passphrase-only" security, use the ``repokey`` mode. The key will
  147. be stored inside the repository (in its "config" file). In above mentioned
  148. attack scenario, the attacker will have the key (but not the passphrase).
  149. If you want "passphrase and having-the-key" security, use the ``keyfile`` mode.
  150. The key will be stored in your home directory (in ``.config/borg/keys``). In
  151. the attack scenario, the attacker who has just access to your repo won't have
  152. the key (and also not the passphrase).
  153. Make a backup copy of the key file (``keyfile`` mode) or repo config file
  154. (``repokey`` mode) and keep it at a safe place, so you still have the key in
  155. case it gets corrupted or lost.
  156. The backup that is encrypted with that key won't help you with that, of course.
  157. Make sure you use a good passphrase. Not too short, not too simple. The real
  158. encryption / decryption key is encrypted with / locked by your passphrase.
  159. If an attacker gets your key, he can't unlock and use it without knowing the
  160. passphrase.
  161. You can change your passphrase for existing repos at any time, it won't affect
  162. the encryption/decryption key or other secrets.
  163. .. include:: usage/create.rst.inc
  164. Examples
  165. ~~~~~~~~
  166. ::
  167. # Backup ~/Documents into an archive named "my-documents"
  168. $ borg create /mnt/backup::my-documents ~/Documents
  169. # same, but verbosely list all files as we process them
  170. $ borg create -v --list /mnt/backup::my-documents ~/Documents
  171. # Backup ~/Documents and ~/src but exclude pyc files
  172. $ borg create /mnt/backup::my-files \
  173. ~/Documents \
  174. ~/src \
  175. --exclude '*.pyc'
  176. # Backup home directories excluding image thumbnails (i.e. only
  177. # /home/*/.thumbnails is excluded, not /home/*/*/.thumbnails)
  178. $ borg create /mnt/backup::my-files /home \
  179. --exclude 're:^/home/[^/]+/\.thumbnails/'
  180. # Do the same using a shell-style pattern
  181. $ borg create /mnt/backup::my-files /home \
  182. --exclude 'sh:/home/*/.thumbnails'
  183. # Backup the root filesystem into an archive named "root-YYYY-MM-DD"
  184. # use zlib compression (good, but slow) - default is no compression
  185. NAME="root-`date +%Y-%m-%d`"
  186. $ borg create -C zlib,6 /mnt/backup::$NAME / --one-file-system
  187. # Make a big effort in fine granular deduplication (big chunk management
  188. # overhead, needs a lot of RAM and disk space, see formula in internals
  189. # docs - same parameters as borg < 1.0 or attic):
  190. $ borg create --chunker-params 10,23,16,4095 /mnt/backup::small /smallstuff
  191. # Backup a raw device (must not be active/in use/mounted at that time)
  192. $ dd if=/dev/sdx bs=10M | borg create /mnt/backup::my-sdx -
  193. # No compression (default)
  194. $ borg create /mnt/backup::repo ~
  195. # Super fast, low compression
  196. $ borg create --compression lz4 /mnt/backup::repo ~
  197. # Less fast, higher compression (N = 0..9)
  198. $ borg create --compression zlib,N /mnt/backup::repo ~
  199. # Even slower, even higher compression (N = 0..9)
  200. $ borg create --compression lzma,N /mnt/backup::repo ~
  201. .. include:: usage/extract.rst.inc
  202. Examples
  203. ~~~~~~~~
  204. ::
  205. # Extract entire archive
  206. $ borg extract /mnt/backup::my-files
  207. # Extract entire archive and list files while processing
  208. $ borg extract -v --list /mnt/backup::my-files
  209. # Extract the "src" directory
  210. $ borg extract /mnt/backup::my-files home/USERNAME/src
  211. # Extract the "src" directory but exclude object files
  212. $ borg extract /mnt/backup::my-files home/USERNAME/src --exclude '*.o'
  213. # Restore a raw device (must not be active/in use/mounted at that time)
  214. $ borg extract --stdout /mnt/backup::my-sdx | dd of=/dev/sdx bs=10M
  215. Note: currently, extract always writes into the current working directory ("."),
  216. so make sure you ``cd`` to the right place before calling ``borg extract``.
  217. .. include:: usage/check.rst.inc
  218. .. include:: usage/rename.rst.inc
  219. Examples
  220. ~~~~~~~~
  221. ::
  222. $ borg create /mnt/backup::archivename ~
  223. $ borg list /mnt/backup
  224. archivename Mon, 2016-02-15 19:50:19
  225. $ borg rename /mnt/backup::archivename newname
  226. $ borg list /mnt/backup
  227. newname Mon, 2016-02-15 19:50:19
  228. .. include:: usage/list.rst.inc
  229. Examples
  230. ~~~~~~~~
  231. ::
  232. $ borg list /mnt/backup
  233. Monday Mon, 2016-02-15 19:15:11
  234. repo Mon, 2016-02-15 19:26:54
  235. root-2016-02-15 Mon, 2016-02-15 19:36:29
  236. newname Mon, 2016-02-15 19:50:19
  237. ...
  238. $ borg list /mnt/backup::root-2016-02-15
  239. drwxr-xr-x root root 0 Mon, 2016-02-15 17:44:27 .
  240. drwxrwxr-x root root 0 Mon, 2016-02-15 19:04:49 bin
  241. -rwxr-xr-x root root 1029624 Thu, 2014-11-13 00:08:51 bin/bash
  242. lrwxrwxrwx root root 0 Fri, 2015-03-27 20:24:26 bin/bzcmp -> bzdiff
  243. -rwxr-xr-x root root 2140 Fri, 2015-03-27 20:24:22 bin/bzdiff
  244. ...
  245. $ borg list /mnt/backup::archiveA --list-format="{mode} {user:6} {group:6} {size:8d} {isomtime} {path}{extra}{NEWLINE}"
  246. drwxrwxr-x user user 0 Sun, 2015-02-01 11:00:00 .
  247. drwxrwxr-x user user 0 Sun, 2015-02-01 11:00:00 code
  248. drwxrwxr-x user user 0 Sun, 2015-02-01 11:00:00 code/myproject
  249. -rw-rw-r-- user user 1416192 Sun, 2015-02-01 11:00:00 code/myproject/file.ext
  250. ...
  251. # see what is changed between archives, based on file modification time, size and file path
  252. $ borg list /mnt/backup::archiveA --list-format="{mtime:%s}{TAB}{size}{TAB}{path}{LF}" |sort -n > /tmp/list.archiveA
  253. $ borg list /mnt/backup::archiveB --list-format="{mtime:%s}{TAB}{size}{TAB}{path}{LF}" |sort -n > /tmp/list.archiveB
  254. $ diff -y /tmp/list.archiveA /tmp/list.archiveB
  255. 1422781200 0 . 1422781200 0 .
  256. 1422781200 0 code 1422781200 0 code
  257. 1422781200 0 code/myproject 1422781200 0 code/myproject
  258. 1422781200 1416192 code/myproject/file.ext | 1454664653 1416192 code/myproject/file.ext
  259. ...
  260. .. include:: usage/delete.rst.inc
  261. Examples
  262. ~~~~~~~~
  263. ::
  264. # delete a single backup archive:
  265. $ borg delete /mnt/backup::Monday
  266. # delete the whole repository and the related local cache:
  267. $ borg delete /mnt/backup
  268. You requested to completely DELETE the repository *including* all archives it contains:
  269. repo Mon, 2016-02-15 19:26:54
  270. root-2016-02-15 Mon, 2016-02-15 19:36:29
  271. newname Mon, 2016-02-15 19:50:19
  272. Type 'YES' if you understand this and want to continue: YES
  273. .. include:: usage/prune.rst.inc
  274. Examples
  275. ~~~~~~~~
  276. Be careful, prune is a potentially dangerous command, it will remove backup
  277. archives.
  278. The default of prune is to apply to **all archives in the repository** unless
  279. you restrict its operation to a subset of the archives using ``--prefix``.
  280. When using ``--prefix``, be careful to choose a good prefix - e.g. do not use a
  281. prefix "foo" if you do not also want to match "foobar".
  282. It is strongly recommended to always run ``prune --dry-run ...`` first so you
  283. will see what it would do without it actually doing anything.
  284. ::
  285. # Keep 7 end of day and 4 additional end of week archives.
  286. # Do a dry-run without actually deleting anything.
  287. $ borg prune --dry-run --keep-daily=7 --keep-weekly=4 /mnt/backup
  288. # Same as above but only apply to archive names starting with "foo":
  289. $ borg prune --keep-daily=7 --keep-weekly=4 --prefix=foo /mnt/backup
  290. # Keep 7 end of day, 4 additional end of week archives,
  291. # and an end of month archive for every month:
  292. $ borg prune --keep-daily=7 --keep-weekly=4 --keep-monthly=-1 /mnt/backup
  293. # Keep all backups in the last 10 days, 4 additional end of week archives,
  294. # and an end of month archive for every month:
  295. $ borg prune --keep-within=10d --keep-weekly=4 --keep-monthly=-1 /mnt/backup
  296. .. include:: usage/info.rst.inc
  297. Examples
  298. ~~~~~~~~
  299. ::
  300. $ borg info /mnt/backup::root-2016-02-15
  301. Name: root-2016-02-15
  302. Fingerprint: 57c827621f21b000a8d363c1e163cc55983822b3afff3a96df595077a660be50
  303. Hostname: myhostname
  304. Username: root
  305. Time (start): Mon, 2016-02-15 19:36:29
  306. Time (end): Mon, 2016-02-15 19:39:26
  307. Command line: /usr/local/bin/borg create -v --list -C zlib,6 /mnt/backup::root-2016-02-15 / --one-file-system
  308. Number of files: 38100
  309. Original size Compressed size Deduplicated size
  310. This archive: 1.33 GB 613.25 MB 571.64 MB
  311. All archives: 1.63 GB 853.66 MB 584.12 MB
  312. Unique chunks Total chunks
  313. Chunk index: 36858 48844
  314. .. include:: usage/mount.rst.inc
  315. Examples
  316. ~~~~~~~~
  317. ::
  318. $ borg mount /mnt/backup::root-2016-02-15 /tmp/mymountpoint
  319. $ ls /tmp/mymountpoint
  320. bin boot etc home lib lib64 lost+found media mnt opt root sbin srv tmp usr var
  321. $ fusermount -u /tmp/mymountpoint
  322. .. include:: usage/change-passphrase.rst.inc
  323. Examples
  324. ~~~~~~~~
  325. ::
  326. # Create a key file protected repository
  327. $ borg init --encryption=keyfile -v /mnt/backup
  328. Initializing repository at "/mnt/backup"
  329. Enter new passphrase:
  330. Enter same passphrase again:
  331. Remember your passphrase. Your data will be inaccessible without it.
  332. Key in "/root/.config/borg/keys/mnt_backup" created.
  333. Keep this key safe. Your data will be inaccessible without it.
  334. Synchronizing chunks cache...
  335. Archives: 0, w/ cached Idx: 0, w/ outdated Idx: 0, w/o cached Idx: 0.
  336. Done.
  337. # Change key file passphrase
  338. $ borg change-passphrase -v /mnt/backup
  339. Enter passphrase for key /root/.config/borg/keys/mnt_backup:
  340. Enter new passphrase:
  341. Enter same passphrase again:
  342. Remember your passphrase. Your data will be inaccessible without it.
  343. Key updated
  344. .. include:: usage/serve.rst.inc
  345. Examples
  346. ~~~~~~~~
  347. borg serve has special support for ssh forced commands (see ``authorized_keys``
  348. example below): it will detect that you use such a forced command and extract
  349. the value of the ``--restrict-to-path`` option(s).
  350. It will then parse the original command that came from the client, makes sure
  351. that it is also ``borg serve`` and enforce path restriction(s) as given by the
  352. forced command. That way, other options given by the client (like ``--info`` or
  353. ``--umask``) are preserved (and are not fixed by the forced command).
  354. ::
  355. # Allow an SSH keypair to only run borg, and only have access to /mnt/backup.
  356. # Use key options to disable unneeded and potentially dangerous SSH functionality.
  357. # This will help to secure an automated remote backup system.
  358. $ cat ~/.ssh/authorized_keys
  359. command="borg serve --restrict-to-path /mnt/backup",no-pty,no-agent-forwarding,no-port-forwarding,no-X11-forwarding,no-user-rc ssh-rsa AAAAB3[...]
  360. .. include:: usage/upgrade.rst.inc
  361. Examples
  362. ~~~~~~~~
  363. ::
  364. # Upgrade the borg repository to the most recent version.
  365. $ borg upgrade -v /mnt/backup
  366. making a hardlink copy in /mnt/backup.upgrade-2016-02-15-20:51:55
  367. opening attic repository with borg and converting
  368. no key file found for repository
  369. converting repo index /mnt/backup/index.0
  370. converting 1 segments...
  371. converting borg 0.xx to borg current
  372. no key file found for repository
  373. Miscellaneous Help
  374. ------------------
  375. .. include:: usage/help.rst.inc
  376. Debug Commands
  377. --------------
  378. There are some more commands (all starting with "debug-") which are all
  379. **not intended for normal use** and **potentially very dangerous** if used incorrectly.
  380. They exist to improve debugging capabilities without direct system access, e.g.
  381. in case you ever run into some severe malfunction. Use them only if you know
  382. what you are doing or if a trusted |project_name| developer tells you what to do.
  383. Additional Notes
  384. ----------------
  385. Here are misc. notes about topics that are maybe not covered in enough detail in the usage section.
  386. Item flags
  387. ~~~~~~~~~~
  388. ``borg create -v --list`` outputs a verbose list of all files, directories and other
  389. file system items it considered (no matter whether they had content changes
  390. or not). For each item, it prefixes a single-letter flag that indicates type
  391. and/or status of the item.
  392. If you are interested only in a subset of that output, you can give e.g.
  393. ``--filter=AME`` and it will only show regular files with A, M or E status (see
  394. below).
  395. A uppercase character represents the status of a regular file relative to the
  396. "files" cache (not relative to the repo -- this is an issue if the files cache
  397. is not used). Metadata is stored in any case and for 'A' and 'M' also new data
  398. chunks are stored. For 'U' all data chunks refer to already existing chunks.
  399. - 'A' = regular file, added (see also :ref:`a_status_oddity` in the FAQ)
  400. - 'M' = regular file, modified
  401. - 'U' = regular file, unchanged
  402. - 'E' = regular file, an error happened while accessing/reading *this* file
  403. A lowercase character means a file type other than a regular file,
  404. borg usually just stores their metadata:
  405. - 'd' = directory
  406. - 'b' = block device
  407. - 'c' = char device
  408. - 'h' = regular file, hardlink (to already seen inodes)
  409. - 's' = symlink
  410. - 'f' = fifo
  411. Other flags used include:
  412. - 'i' = backup data was read from standard input (stdin)
  413. - '-' = dry run, item was *not* backed up
  414. - '?' = missing status code (if you see this, please file a bug report!)
  415. --chunker-params
  416. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
  417. The chunker params influence how input files are cut into pieces (chunks)
  418. which are then considered for deduplication. They also have a big impact on
  419. resource usage (RAM and disk space) as the amount of resources needed is
  420. (also) determined by the total amount of chunks in the repository (see
  421. `Indexes / Caches memory usage` for details).
  422. ``--chunker-params=10,23,16,4095`` results in a fine-grained deduplication
  423. and creates a big amount of chunks and thus uses a lot of resources to manage
  424. them. This is good for relatively small data volumes and if the machine has a
  425. good amount of free RAM and disk space.
  426. ``--chunker-params=19,23,21,4095`` (default) results in a coarse-grained
  427. deduplication and creates a much smaller amount of chunks and thus uses less
  428. resources. This is good for relatively big data volumes and if the machine has
  429. a relatively low amount of free RAM and disk space.
  430. If you already have made some archives in a repository and you then change
  431. chunker params, this of course impacts deduplication as the chunks will be
  432. cut differently.
  433. In the worst case (all files are big and were touched in between backups), this
  434. will store all content into the repository again.
  435. Usually, it is not that bad though:
  436. - usually most files are not touched, so it will just re-use the old chunks
  437. it already has in the repo
  438. - files smaller than the (both old and new) minimum chunksize result in only
  439. one chunk anyway, so the resulting chunks are same and deduplication will apply
  440. If you switch chunker params to save resources for an existing repo that
  441. already has some backup archives, you will see an increasing effect over time,
  442. when more and more files have been touched and stored again using the bigger
  443. chunksize **and** all references to the smaller older chunks have been removed
  444. (by deleting / pruning archives).
  445. If you want to see an immediate big effect on resource usage, you better start
  446. a new repository when changing chunker params.
  447. For more details, see :ref:`chunker_details`.
  448. --read-special
  449. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
  450. The option ``--read-special`` is not intended for normal, filesystem-level (full or
  451. partly-recursive) backups. You only give this option if you want to do something
  452. rather ... special -- and if you have hand-picked some files that you want to treat
  453. that way.
  454. ``borg create --read-special`` will open all files without doing any special
  455. treatment according to the file type (the only exception here are directories:
  456. they will be recursed into). Just imagine what happens if you do ``cat
  457. filename`` --- the content you will see there is what borg will backup for that
  458. filename.
  459. So, for example, symlinks will be followed, block device content will be read,
  460. named pipes / UNIX domain sockets will be read.
  461. You need to be careful with what you give as filename when using ``--read-special``,
  462. e.g. if you give ``/dev/zero``, your backup will never terminate.
  463. The given files' metadata is saved as it would be saved without
  464. ``--read-special`` (e.g. its name, its size [might be 0], its mode, etc.) -- but
  465. additionally, also the content read from it will be saved for it.
  466. Restoring such files' content is currently only supported one at a time via
  467. ``--stdout`` option (and you have to redirect stdout to where ever it shall go,
  468. maybe directly into an existing device file of your choice or indirectly via
  469. ``dd``).
  470. Example
  471. +++++++
  472. Imagine you have made some snapshots of logical volumes (LVs) you want to backup.
  473. .. note::
  474. For some scenarios, this is a good method to get "crash-like" consistency
  475. (I call it crash-like because it is the same as you would get if you just
  476. hit the reset button or your machine would abrubtly and completely crash).
  477. This is better than no consistency at all and a good method for some use
  478. cases, but likely not good enough if you have databases running.
  479. Then you create a backup archive of all these snapshots. The backup process will
  480. see a "frozen" state of the logical volumes, while the processes working in the
  481. original volumes continue changing the data stored there.
  482. You also add the output of ``lvdisplay`` to your backup, so you can see the LV
  483. sizes in case you ever need to recreate and restore them.
  484. After the backup has completed, you remove the snapshots again. ::
  485. $ # create snapshots here
  486. $ lvdisplay > lvdisplay.txt
  487. $ borg create --read-special /mnt/backup::repo lvdisplay.txt /dev/vg0/*-snapshot
  488. $ # remove snapshots here
  489. Now, let's see how to restore some LVs from such a backup. ::
  490. $ borg extract /mnt/backup::repo lvdisplay.txt
  491. $ # create empty LVs with correct sizes here (look into lvdisplay.txt).
  492. $ # we assume that you created an empty root and home LV and overwrite it now:
  493. $ borg extract --stdout /mnt/backup::repo dev/vg0/root-snapshot > /dev/vg0/root
  494. $ borg extract --stdout /mnt/backup::repo dev/vg0/home-snapshot > /dev/vg0/home