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							- .. include:: global.rst.inc
 
- .. highlight:: bash
 
- .. _quickstart:
 
- Quick Start
 
- ===========
 
- This chapter will get you started with |project_name| and covers
 
- various use cases.
 
- A step by step example
 
- ----------------------
 
- .. include:: quickstart_example.rst.inc
 
- Important note about free space
 
- -------------------------------
 
- Before you start creating backups, please make sure that there is *always*
 
- a good amount of free space on the filesystem that has your backup repository
 
- (and also on ~/.cache). A few GB should suffice for most hard-drive sized
 
- repositories. See also :ref:`cache-memory-usage`.
 
- Borg doesn't use space reserved for root on repository disks (even when run as root),
 
- on file systems which do not support this mechanism (e.g. XFS) we recommend to
 
- reserve some space in Borg itself just to be safe by adjusting the
 
- ``additional_free_space`` setting in the ``[repository]`` section of a repositories
 
- ``config`` file. A good starting point is ``2G``.
 
- If |project_name| runs out of disk space, it tries to free as much space as it
 
- can while aborting the current operation safely, which allows to free more space
 
- by deleting/pruning archives. This mechanism is not bullet-proof in some
 
- circumstances [1]_.
 
- If you *really* run out of disk space, it can be hard or impossible to free space,
 
- because |project_name| needs free space to operate - even to delete backup
 
- archives.
 
- You can use some monitoring process or just include the free space information
 
- in your backup log files (you check them regularly anyway, right?).
 
- Also helpful:
 
- - create a big file as a "space reserve", that you can delete to free space
 
- - if you use LVM: use a LV + a filesystem that you can resize later and have
 
-   some unallocated PEs you can add to the LV.
 
- - consider using quotas
 
- - use `prune` regularly
 
- .. [1] This failsafe can fail in these circumstances:
 
-     - The underlying file system doesn't support statvfs(2), or returns incorrect
 
-       data, or the repository doesn't reside on a single file system
 
-     - Other tasks fill the disk simultaneously
 
-     - Hard quotas (which may not be reflected in statvfs(2))
 
- Automating backups
 
- ------------------
 
- The following example script is meant to be run daily by the ``root`` user on
 
- different local machines. It backs up a machine's important files (but not the
 
- complete operating system) to a repository ``~/backup/main``  on a remote server.
 
- Some files which aren't necessarily needed in this backup are excluded. See
 
- :ref:`borg_patterns` on how to add more exclude options.
 
- After the backup this script also uses the :ref:`borg_prune` subcommand to keep
 
- only a certain number of old archives and deletes the others in order to preserve
 
- disk space.
 
- Before running, make sure that the repository is initialized as documented in
 
- :ref:`remote_repos` and that the script has the correct permissions to be executable
 
- by the root user, but not executable or readable by anyone else, i.e. root:root 0700.
 
- You can use this script as a starting point and modify it where it's necessary to fit
 
- your setup.
 
- Do not forget to test your created backups to make sure everything you need is being
 
- backed up and that the ``prune`` command is keeping and deleting the correct backups.
 
- ::
 
-     #!/bin/sh
 
-     # Setting this, so the repo does not need to be given on the commandline:
 
-     export BORG_REPO=ssh://username@example.com:2022/~/backup/main
 
-     # Setting this, so you won't be asked for your repository passphrase:
 
-     export BORG_PASSPHRASE='XYZl0ngandsecurepa_55_phrasea&&123'
 
-     # or this to ask an external program to supply the passphrase:
 
-     export BORG_PASSCOMMAND='pass show backup'
 
-     # some helpers and error handling:
 
-     info() { printf "\n%s %s\n\n" "$( date )" "$*" >&2; }
 
-     trap 'echo $( date ) Backup interrupted >&2; exit 2' INT TERM
 
-     info "Starting backup"
 
-     # Backup the most important directories into an archive named after
 
-     # the machine this script is currently running on:
 
-     borg create                         \
 
-         --verbose                       \
 
-         --filter AME                    \
 
-         --list                          \
 
-         --stats                         \
 
-         --show-rc                       \
 
-         --compression lz4               \
 
-         --exclude-caches                \
 
-         --exclude '/home/*/.cache/*'    \
 
-         --exclude '/var/cache/*'        \
 
-         --exclude '/var/tmp/*'          \
 
-                                         \
 
-         ::'{hostname}-{now}'            \
 
-         /etc                            \
 
-         /home                           \
 
-         /root                           \
 
-         /var                            \
 
-     backup_exit=$?
 
-     info "Pruning repository"
 
-     # Use the `prune` subcommand to maintain 7 daily, 4 weekly and 6 monthly
 
-     # archives of THIS machine. The '{hostname}-' prefix is very important to
 
-     # limit prune's operation to this machine's archives and not apply to
 
-     # other machines' archives also:
 
-     borg prune                          \
 
-         --list                          \
 
-         --prefix '{hostname}-'          \
 
-         --show-rc                       \
 
-         --keep-daily    7               \
 
-         --keep-weekly   4               \
 
-         --keep-monthly  6               \
 
-     prune_exit=$?
 
-     # use highest exit code as global exit code
 
-     global_exit=$(( backup_exit > prune_exit ? backup_exit : prune_exit ))
 
-     if [ ${global_exit} -eq 1 ];
 
-     then
 
-         info "Backup and/or Prune finished with a warning"
 
-     fi
 
-     if [ ${global_exit} -gt 1 ];
 
-     then
 
-         info "Backup and/or Prune finished with an error"
 
-     fi
 
-     exit ${global_exit}
 
- Pitfalls with shell variables and environment variables
 
- -------------------------------------------------------
 
- This applies to all environment variables you want borg to see, not just
 
- ``BORG_PASSPHRASE``. The short explanation is: always ``export`` your variable,
 
- and use single quotes if you're unsure of the details of your shell's expansion
 
- behavior. E.g.::
 
-     export BORG_PASSPHRASE='complicated & long'
 
- This is because ``export`` exposes variables to subprocesses, which borg may be
 
- one of. More on ``export`` can be found in the "ENVIRONMENT" section of the
 
- bash(1) man page.
 
- Beware of how ``sudo`` interacts with environment variables. For example, you
 
- may be surprised that the following ``export`` has no effect on your command::
 
-    export BORG_PASSPHRASE='complicated & long'
 
-    sudo ./yourborgwrapper.sh  # still prompts for password
 
- For more information, refer to the sudo(8) man page and ``env_keep`` in
 
- the sudoers(5) man page.
 
- .. Tip::
 
-     To debug what your borg process is actually seeing, find its PID
 
-     (``ps aux|grep borg``) and then look into ``/proc/<PID>/environ``.
 
- .. backup_compression:
 
- Backup compression
 
- ------------------
 
- The default is lz4 (very fast, but low compression ratio), but other methods are
 
- supported for different situations.
 
- If you have a fast repo storage and you want minimum CPU usage, no compression::
 
-     $ borg create --compression none /path/to/repo::arch ~
 
- If you have a less fast repo storage and you want a bit more compression (N=0..9,
 
- 0 means no compression, 9 means high compression): ::
 
-     $ borg create --compression zlib,N /path/to/repo::arch ~
 
- If you have a very slow repo storage and you want high compression (N=0..9, 0 means
 
- low compression, 9 means high compression): ::
 
-     $ borg create --compression lzma,N /path/to/repo::arch ~
 
- You'll need to experiment a bit to find the best compression for your use case.
 
- Keep an eye on CPU load and throughput.
 
- .. _encrypted_repos:
 
- Repository encryption
 
- ---------------------
 
- Repository encryption can be enabled or disabled at repository creation time
 
- (the default is enabled, with `repokey` method)::
 
-     $ borg init --encryption=none|repokey|keyfile PATH
 
- When repository encryption is enabled all data is encrypted using 256-bit AES_
 
- encryption and the integrity and authenticity is verified using `HMAC-SHA256`_.
 
- All data is encrypted on the client before being written to the repository. This
 
- means that an attacker who manages to compromise the host containing an
 
- encrypted archive will not be able to access any of the data, even while the backup
 
- is being made.
 
- |project_name| supports different methods to store the AES and HMAC keys.
 
- ``repokey`` mode
 
-     The key is stored inside the repository (in its "config" file).
 
-     Use this mode if you trust in your good passphrase giving you enough
 
-     protection. The repository server never sees the plaintext key.
 
- ``keyfile`` mode
 
-     The key is stored on your local disk (in ``~/.config/borg/keys/``).
 
-     Use this mode if you want "passphrase and having-the-key" security.
 
- In both modes, the key is stored in encrypted form and can be only decrypted
 
- by providing the correct passphrase.
 
- For automated backups the passphrase can be specified using the
 
- `BORG_PASSPHRASE` environment variable.
 
- .. note:: Be careful about how you set that environment, see
 
-           :ref:`this note about password environments <password_env>`
 
-           for more information.
 
- .. warning:: The repository data is totally inaccessible without the key
 
-     and the key passphrase.
 
-     Make a backup copy of the key file (``keyfile`` mode) or repo config
 
-     file (``repokey`` mode) and keep it at a safe place, so you still have
 
-     the key in case it gets corrupted or lost. Also keep your passphrase
 
-     at a safe place.
 
-     You can make backups using :ref:`borg_key_export` subcommand.
 
-     If you want to print a backup of your key to paper use the ``--paper``
 
-     option of this command and print the result, or this print `template`_
 
-     if you need a version with QR-Code.
 
-     A backup inside of the backup that is encrypted with that key/passphrase
 
-     won't help you with that, of course.
 
- .. _template: paperkey.html
 
- .. _remote_repos:
 
- Remote repositories
 
- -------------------
 
- |project_name| can initialize and access repositories on remote hosts if the
 
- host is accessible using SSH.  This is fastest and easiest when |project_name|
 
- is installed on the remote host, in which case the following syntax is used::
 
-   $ borg init user@hostname:/path/to/repo
 
- Note: please see the usage chapter for a full documentation of repo URLs.
 
- Remote operations over SSH can be automated with SSH keys. You can restrict the
 
- use of the SSH keypair by prepending a forced command to the SSH public key in
 
- the remote server's `authorized_keys` file. This example will start |project_name|
 
- in server mode and limit it to a specific filesystem path::
 
-   command="borg serve --restrict-to-path /path/to/repo",restrict ssh-rsa AAAAB3[...]
 
- If it is not possible to install |project_name| on the remote host,
 
- it is still possible to use the remote host to store a repository by
 
- mounting the remote filesystem, for example, using sshfs::
 
-   $ sshfs user@hostname:/path/to /path/to
 
-   $ borg init /path/to/repo
 
-   $ fusermount -u /path/to
 
- You can also use other remote filesystems in a similar way. Just be careful,
 
- not all filesystems out there are really stable and working good enough to
 
- be acceptable for backup usage.
 
 
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