_____ _ ______ _
/ __ \ | | | ___ \ | |
| / \/ ___ _ _ ___| |__ | |_/ / __ _ ___| | ___ _ _ __
| | / _ \| | | |/ __| '_ \| ___ \/ _` |/ __| |/ / | | | '_ \
| \__/\ (_) | |_| | (__| | | | |_/ / (_| | (__| <| |_| | |_) |
\____/\___/ \__,_|\___|_| |_\____/ \__,_|\___|_|\_\\__,_| .__/
| |
|_|
CouchBackup is a command-line utility that backs up a Cloudant or CouchDB database to a text file. It comes with a companion command-line utility that can restore the backed up data.
CouchBackup has some restrictions in the data it's able to backup:
couchbackup
does not do CouchDB replication as such, it simply streams through a database's_changes
feed, and usesPOST /db/_bulk_get
to fetch the documents, storing the documents it finds on disk.-
couchbackup
does not support backing up or restoring databases containing documents with attachments. The recommendation is to store attachments directly in an object store. The "attachments" option is provided as-is and is not supported. This option is for Apache CouchDB only and is experimental. DO NOT USE THIS OPTION WITH IBM Cloudant backups. Note
To install the latest released version use npm:
npm install -g @cloudant/couchbackup
- Node.js LTS version 18, 20, or 22.
- The minimum required CouchDB version is 2.0.0.
The latest builds of the main
branch are available on npm with the snapshot
tag. Use the snapshot
tag if you want to experiment with an unreleased fix or new function, but please note that snapshot versions are not supported.
Use either environment variables or command-line options to specify the URL of the CouchDB or Cloudant instance, and the database to work with.
To define the URL of the CouchDB instance set the COUCH_URL
environment variable:
export COUCH_URL=http://localhost:5984
or
export COUCH_URL=https://myusername:mypassword@myhost.cloudant.com
Or use the --url
command-line parameter.
When passing credentials in the user information subcomponent of the URL
they must be percent encoded.
Specifically, within either the username or password, the characters : / ? # [ ] @ %
MUST be precent-encoded, other characters MAY be percent-encoded.
For example, for the username user123
and password colon:at@321
:
https://user123:colon%3aat%40321@localhost:5984
Note take extra care to escape shell reserved characters when setting the environment variable or command-line parameter.
To define the name of the database to backup or restore, set the COUCH_DATABASE
environment variable:
export COUCH_DATABASE=animaldb
Or use the --db
command-line parameter
To backup a database to a text file, use the couchbackup
command, directing the output to a text file:
couchbackup > backup.txt
Another way of backing up is to set the COUCH_URL
environment variable only and supply the database name on the command-line:
couchbackup --db animaldb > animaldb.txt
You may also create a log file which records the progress of the backup with the --log
parameter, for example:
couchbackup --db animaldb --log animaldb.log > animaldb.txt
Use this log file to resume backups with --resume true
:
couchbackup --db animaldb --log animaldb.log --resume true >> animaldb.txt
The --resume true
option works for a backup that has finished spooling changes, but has not yet completed downloading all the necessary batches of documents. It is not an incremental backup solution.
You may also specify the name of the output file, rather than directing the backup data to stdout:
couchbackup --db animaldb --log animaldb.log --resume true --output animaldb.txt
When using --resume
use the same version of couchbackup
that started the backup.
Now restore the backup text file to a new, empty, existing database using the couchrestore
:
cat animaldb.txt | couchrestore
or specifying the database name on the command-line:
cat animaldb.txt | couchrestore --db animaldb2
Do not use an older version of couchbackup
to restore a backup created with a newer version.
Newer versions of couchbackup
can restore backups created by older versions within the same major version.
To compress the backup data before storing to disk pipe the contents through gzip
:
couchbackup --db animaldb | gzip > animaldb.txt.gz
and restore the file with:
cat animaldb.tar.gz | gunzip | couchdbrestore --db animaldb2
Similarly to compression it is possible to pipe the backup content through an
encryption or decryption utility. For example with openssl
:
couchbackup --db animaldb | openssl aes-128-cbc -pass pass:12345 > encrypted_animal.db
openssl aes-128-cbc -d -in encrypted_animal.db -pass pass:12345 | couchrestore --db animaldb2
Note that the content is not encrypted in the backup tool before piping to the encryption utility.
A backup file is a text file where each line is either a JSON object of backup metadata or a JSON array of backed up document revision objects, for example:
{"name":"@cloudant/couchbackup","version":"2.9.10","mode":"full"}
[{"_id": "1","a":1},{"_id": "2","a":2},...]
[{"_id": "501","a":501},{"_id": "502","a":502}]
The number of document revisions in a backup array varies. It typically has
buffer_size
elements, but may be more if there are also leaf revisions returned
from the server or fewer if it is the last batch.
A log file has a line:
- for every batch of document ids that
couchbackup
needs to fetch, for example::t batch56 [{"id":"a"},{"id":"b"}]
- for every batch that
couchbackup
has fetched and stored, for example::d batch56
- to indicate that the changes feed was fully consumed, for example:
:changes_complete
When you run couchbackup
with --mode shallow
couchbackup
performs a simpler backup.
It only backs up the winning revisions and ignores any conflicting revisions.
This is a faster, but less complete backup.
Note: The --log
, --resume
, and --parallelism
are invalid for --mode shallow
backups.
The easiest way to backup a CouchDB database is to copy the ".couch" file. This is fine on a single-node instance, but when running multi-node Cloudant or using CouchDB 2.0 or greater, the ".couch" file only has a single shard of data. This utility allows simple backups of CouchDB or Cloudant database using the HTTP API.
This tool can script the backup of your databases. Move the backup and log files to cheap Object Storage so that you have copies of your precious data.
-
COUCH_URL
- the URL of the CouchDB/Cloudant server, for example:http://127.0.0.1:5984
-
COUCH_DATABASE
- the name of the database to act upon, for example:mydb
(defaulttest
) -
COUCH_PARALLELISM
- the number of HTTP requests to perform in parallel when restoring a backup, for example:10
(Default5
) -
COUCH_BUFFER_SIZE
- the number of documents fetched and restored at once, for example:100
(default500
). -
COUCH_REQUEST_TIMEOUT
- the number of milliseconds to wait for a response to a HTTP request before retrying the request, for example:10000
(Default120000
) -
COUCH_LOG
- the file to store logging information during backup -
COUCH_RESUME
- iftrue
, resumes an earlier backup from its last known position (requires a log file) -
COUCH_OUTPUT
- the file name to store the backup data (defaults to stdout) -
COUCH_MODE
- ifshallow
, does only a superficial backup ignoring conflicts. Defaults tofull
- a full backup. -
COUCH_QUIET
- iftrue
, suppresses the individual batch messages to the console during CLI backup and restore -
CLOUDANT_IAM_API_KEY
- optional IAM API key to use to access the Cloudant database instead of user information credentials in the URL. The endpoint used to retrieve the token defaults tohttps://iam.cloud.ibm.com/identity/token
, but can be overridden if necessary using theCLOUDANT_IAM_TOKEN_URL
environment variable. -
COUCH_ATTACHMENTS
- EXPERIMENTAL & UNSUPPORTED (see Note) iftrue
will include attachments as part of the backup or restore process. -
DEBUG
- if set tocouchbackup
, all debug messages print onstderr
during a backup or restore process
Note: Environment variables are only used with the CLI. When
using programmatically use the opts
dictionary.
-
--url
- same asCOUCH_URL
environment variable -
--db
- same asCOUCH_DATABASE
-
--parallelism
- same asCOUCH_PARALLELISM
-
--buffer-size
- same asCOUCH_BUFFER_SIZE
-
--request-timeout
- same asCOUCH_REQUEST_TIMEOUT
-
--log
- same asCOUCH_LOG
-
--resume
- same asCOUCH_RESUME
-
--output
- same asCOUCH_OUTPUT
-
--mode
- same asCOUCH_MODE
-
--iam-api-key
- same asCLOUDANT_IAM_API_KEY
-
--quiet
- same asCOUCH_QUIET
-
--attachments
- EXPERIMENTAL & UNSUPPORTED (see Note) same asCOUCH_ATTACHMENTS
You can use couchbackup
programmatically. First install
couchbackup
into your project with npm install --save @cloudant/couchbackup
.
Then you can import the library into your code:
const couchbackup = require('@cloudant/couchbackup');
The library exports two main functions:
-
backup
- backup from a database to a writable stream. -
restore
- restore from a readable stream to an empty database.
See the examples folder for example scripts showing how to use the library.
The backup
function takes a source database URL, a stream to write to,
backup options and a callback for completion.
backup: function(srcUrl, targetStream, opts, callback) { /* ... */ }
The opts
dictionary can contain values which map to a subset of the
environment variables defined above. Those related to the source and
target locations are not required.
-
parallelism
: seeCOUCH_PARALLELISM
. -
bufferSize
: seeCOUCH_BUFFER_SIZE
. -
requestTimeout
: seeCOUCH_REQUEST_TIMEOUT
. -
log
: seeCOUCH_LOG
. -
resume
: seeCOUCH_RESUME
. -
mode
: seeCOUCH_MODE
. -
iamApiKey
: seeCLOUDANT_IAM_API_KEY
. -
iamTokenUrl
: optionally used withiamApiKey
to override the default URL for retrieving IAM tokens. -
attachments
: EXPERIMENTAL & UNSUPPORTED (see Note), seeCLOUDANT_ATTACHMENTS
.
When the backup completes or fails the callback functions gets called with
the standard err, data
parameters.
The backup
function returns an event emitter. You can subscribe to:
-
changes
- when a batch of changes has been written to log stream. -
written
- when a batch of documents has been written to backup stream. -
finished
- emitted once when all documents are backed up.
Backup data to a stream:
couchbackup.backup(
'https://examples.cloudant.com/animaldb',
process.stdout,
{parallelism: 2},
function(err, data) {
if (err) {
console.error("Failed! " + err);
} else {
console.error("Success! " + data);
}
});
Or to a file:
couchbackup.backup(
'https://examples.cloudant.com/animaldb',
fs.createWriteStream(filename),
{parallelism: 2},
function(err, data) {
if (err) {
console.error("Failed! " + err);
} else {
console.error("Success! " + data);
}
});
The restore
function takes a readable stream containing the data emitted
by the backup
function and uploads that to a Cloudant database.
Note: A target database must be a new and empty database.
restore: function(srcStream, targetUrl, opts, callback) { /* ... */ }
The opts
dictionary can contain values which map to a subset of the
environment variables defined above. Those related to the source and
target locations are not required.
-
parallelism
: seeCOUCH_PARALLELISM
. -
bufferSize
: seeCOUCH_BUFFER_SIZE
. -
requestTimeout
: seeCOUCH_REQUEST_TIMEOUT
. -
iamApiKey
: seeCLOUDANT_IAM_API_KEY
. -
iamTokenUrl
: optionally used withiamApiKey
to override the default URL for retrieving IAM tokens. -
attachments
: EXPERIMENTAL & UNSUPPORTED (see Note), seeCLOUDANT_ATTACHMENTS
.
When the restore completes or fails the callback functions gets called with
the standard err, data
parameters.
The restore
function returns an event emitter. You can subscribe to:
-
restored
- when a batch of documents is restored. -
finished
- emitted once when all documents are restored.
The srcStream
for the restore is a backup file.
In the case of an incomplete backup the file could be corrupt and in that
case the restore emits a BackupFileJsonError
.
Restore data from a stream:
couchbackup.restore(
process.stdin,
'https://examples.cloudant.com/new-animaldb',
{parallelism: 2},
function(err, data) {
if (err) {
console.error("Failed! " + err);
} else {
console.error("Success! " + data);
}
});
Or from a file:
couchbackup.restore(
fs.createReadStream(filename),
'https://examples.cloudant.com/new-animaldb',
{parallelism: 2},
function(err, data) {
if (err) {
console.error("Failed! " + err);
} else {
console.error("Success! " + data);
}
});
The couchbackup
and couchrestore
processes are able to tolerate many errors even over an unreliable network.
Failed requests retry at least twice after a back-off delay.
However, certain errors can't tolerate failures:
- invalid configuration
- failed validation checks (for example: auth, database existence,
_bulk_get
endpoint avaialbility)
When using the library programmatically in the case of a fatal error
the callback function gets called with null, error
arguments.
On fatal errors, couchbackup
and couchrestore
exit with non-zero exit codes. This section
details them.
-
1
: unknown CLI option or generic error. -
2
: invalid CLI option. -
10
: backup source or restore target database does not exist. -
11
: unauthorized credentials for the database. -
12
: invalid permissions for the database. -
40
: database returned a fatal HTTP error.
-
20
:--resume
without a log file. -
21
: the resume log file does not exist. -
22
: incomplete changes in log file. -
23
: the log file already exists, but--resume
was not used. -
30
: error spooling changes from the database. -
50
: source database does not support/_bulk_get
endpoint.
-
13
: restore target database is not new and empty. -
60
:attachments
option used for backup, but wasn't used for restore. -
61
:attachments
option used for restore, but wasn't used for backup.
TLDR; If you backup a database that has attachments without using the attachments
option couchbackup
can't restore it.
As documented above couchbackup
does not support backing up or restoring databases containing documents with attachments.
The recommendation is to store attachments directly in an object store with a link in the JSON document instead of using the native attachment API.
The attachments
option is provided as-is and is not supported. This option is for Apache CouchDB only and is experimental. Do not use this option with IBM Cloudant backups.
Backing up a database that includes documents with attachments appears to complete successfully. However, the attachment content is not downloaded and the backup file contains attachment metadata. So attempts to restore the backup result in errors because the attachment metadata references attachments that are not present in the restored database.