PlanB backs up your remote files to a local ZFS storage. Manage many hosts and host groups. Automate hourly, daily, weekly, monthly and yearly backups with snapshots.
The following data transfer methods are supported:
- ssh+rsync (built-in);
- ssh+rsync of Kubernetes volume mounts (through kubersync), like Rook managed Ceph;
- snapshots of ZFS (encrypted) datasets (through planb-zfssync);
- snapshots of ZFS volumes (through planb-zfssync);
- copies of (large) OpenStack Swift containers (through planb-swiftsync);
- custom transfer (through your own custom
transfer_exec
script).
What it looks like
At the moment, the interface is just a Django admin interface:
The files are stored on ZFS storage. It uses ZFS snapshots to keep earlier versions of files. See this example shell transscript:
# zfs list | grep mongo2 tank/BACKUP/experience-mongo2 9,34G 1,60T 855M /srv/backups/experience-mongo2 # ls -l /srv/backups/experience-mongo2/data/srv/mongodb total 646610 -rw------- 1 planb nogroup 67108864 jun 17 17:03 experience.0 -rw------- 1 planb nogroup 134217728 jun 9 16:01 experience.1 ...
Those are the "current" files in the workspace. But you can go back in time:
# zfs list -r -t all tank/BACKUP/experience-mongo2 | head -n4 NAME USED AVAIL REFER MOUNTPOINT tank/BACKUP/experience-mongo2 9,34G 1,60T 855M /srv/backups/experience-mongo2 tank/BACKUP/experience-mongo2@planb-20170603T1147Z 0 - 809M - tank/BACKUP/experience-mongo2@planb-20170603T1211Z 0 - 809M - # cd /srv/backups/experience-mongo2/.zfs/ # ls -1 planb-20170603T1147Z planb-20170603T1211Z planb-20170604T0001Z planb-20170605T0002Z ... # ls planb-20170603T1147Z/data/srv/mongodb -l total 581434 -rw------- 1 planb nogroup 67108864 jun 2 18:21 experience.0 -rw------- 1 planb nogroup 134217728 mei 29 14:38 experience.1 ...
Requirements / setup
PlanB can be installed as a standalone Django application, or it can be integrated in another Django project.
See requirements.txt or setup.py for up-to-date dependencies/requirements.
Basically, you'll need: ZFS storage, ssh and rsync, a webserver (nginx), python hosting (uwsgi), a database (mysql), a communication/cache bus (redis) and a few python packages.
For more detailed steps, see Setting it all up below.
TODO
- Encryption: right now, encryption keys are still a bit of a mess:
- stuff is stored in tank/_local; should use some kind of vault;
- when removing/renaming, those keys are not updated alongside;
- planb-zfssync.sh does not clean up snapshots created before send/recv failure (e.g. because remote did not support --raw)
- add key rotation example scripts?
- Docs: add documentation for sync from previous unencrypted filesets?
- Docs: add a bit of documentation on how to work with encrypted filesets
- Consider: move the hostgroup contents to separate filesets, so as to create a more readable fileset listing. tank/HOSTGROUP/FILESET instead of tank/HOSTGROUP-FILESET.
- RFE: Add post-backup.d directory somewhere where we can place post-backup-done scripts to manually do X or Y.
- RFE: Add planb group for better permission management.
- RFE: Also store user/group permissions on/after rsync (using xattr extended attributes?).
- BUG: Items added to /exclude list are not deleted from destination if they have already been backed up once. The rsync job would need some way to keep track of changes in include/exclude settings, and run a cleanup in case they are changed. (See metadata storage like planb-swiftsync.* files.)
- RFE: Standardize stdout/stderr output from Rsync/Exec success (and prepend "> " to output) to be more in line with failure.
- RFE: Add possibility to feed back snapshot size from the individual Transport instead of using dutree. Parsing the swiftsync listings is fast after all.
- FIX: Add uwsgi-uid==djangoq-uid check?
- Replace the exception mails for common errors (like failing rsync) to use mail_admins style mail.
- After using mail_admins style mail, we can start introducing mail digests instead: daily summary of backup successes and failures.
- Replace the "daily report" hack with a signal-receiver.
- Clarify why there's a /contrib/ and a /planb/contrib/ directory.
WARNING
The Django-Q task scheduler is highly configurable from the
/admin/
-view. With a little effort it will run user-supplied python
code directly. Any user with access to the schedulers will have
tremendous powers
Recommendation: don't give your users powers to edit the schedulers. Use the fine-grained permissions of the Django-admin systems to limit them to Hosts and HostGroups only.
Perhaps we should disable web-access to it altogether.
Setting it all up
If you follow the HOWTO below, you'll set up PlanB as a standalone project. Those familiar with Django will know how to integrate it into their own project.
The setup below assumes you'll be using the planb
user. You're free
to change that consistently of course.
Setting up a ZFS pool
You should really do your own research on this. If you're lucky, your operating system has native support for ZFS, and then this is relatively easy.
Please read README-zpool.rst for a quick introduction. When you're done, things should look somewhat like this:
# zpool status
pool: tank
state: ONLINE
scan: none requested
config:
NAME STATE
tank ONLINE
raidz2-0 ONLINE
scsi-SSEAGATE_ST10000NM0226_6351 ONLINE
scsi-SSEAGATE_ST10000NM0226_0226 ONLINE
scsi-SSEAGATE_ST10000NM0226_8412 ONLINE
scsi-SSEAGATE_ST10000NM0226_... ONLINE
...
raidz2-1 ONLINE
scsi-SSEAGATE_ST10000NM0226_0123 ONLINE
scsi-SSEAGATE_ST10000NM0226_... ONLINE
scsi-SSEAGATE_ST10000NM0226_... ONLINE
scsi-SSEAGATE_ST10000NM0226_... ONLINE
...
spares
scsi-SSEAGATE_ST10000NM0226_9866 AVAIL
scsi-SSEAGATE_ST10000NM0226_5992 AVAIL
Setting up the project
This section assumes you know a little about Python, pip and virtual envs. Details may vary a slight bit across distro versions.
Set up a virtualenv (optional):
mkdir -p /srv/virtualenvs echo 'WORKON_HOME=/srv/virtualenvs' >>~/.bashrc apt-get install python3-virtualenv python3-pip virtualenvwrapper # you may need to log in/out once after this # you may need /usr/share/bash-completion/completions/virtualenvwrapper # sources in your bashrc mkvirtualenv planb --python=$(which python3) --system-site-packages workon planb mkdir /etc/planb cd /etc/planb pwd >$VIRTUAL_ENV/.project # or the src dir, if you're going to edit a lot
Install PlanB prerequisites:
apt-get install redis-server # and: mysql-server or postgresql
Install PlanB dependencies through apt (optional):
apt-get install python3-redis python3-setproctitle # .. and: python3-mysqldb or python3-psycopg2
Install PlanB (including depedencies) from PyPI:
pip3 install planb
Install PlanB (including dependencies) from git:
pip3 install git+https://github.com/ossobv/planb.git@master#egg=planb
Set up a local planb
user:
adduser planb --disabled-password --home=/var/spool/planb \ --shell=/bin/bash --system sudo -H -u planb ssh-keygen -t ed25519 # use elliptic curve sudo -H -u planb ssh-keygen -t rsa -b 8192 # or use RSA if you're old
Note
You may want to back that ssh key up somewhere.
Set up the local environment:
cat >/etc/planb/envvars <<EOF USER=planb PYTHONPATH=/etc/planb DJANGO_SETTINGS_MODULE=settings EOF
Note
PlanB looks for an environment file in the locations: - env PLANB_ENVFILE - /etc/planb/envvars - ./envvars The first file that can be loaded will be used.
Set up the local configuration:
cp ${VIRTUAL_ENV:-/usr/local}/share/planb/example_settings.py \ /etc/planb/settings.py ${EDITOR:-vi} /etc/planb/settings.py
Replace all *FIXME* entries in the ``settings.py``
Note
For development you only need the settings module which can
be placed in the project root.
cp -n example_settings.py settings.py
You can use python setup.py develop
to install planb
in develop mode. This links the source directory to python
site-packages and is especially useful for production hacking.
Make sure the SQL database exists. How to do that is beyond the scope of this readme.
At this point, you should be able to run the planb
script.
Set up the database and a web-user:
planb migrate planb createsuperuser
Set up uwsgi planb.ini
:
[uwsgi] plugin = python3 workers = 4 chdir = / virtualenv = /srv/virtualenvs/planb wsgi-file = /srv/virtualenvs/planb/share/planb/wsgi.py uid = planb gid = www-data chmod-socket = 660 for-readline = /etc/planb/envvars env = %(_) endfor =
Set up static path, static files and log path:
# see the STATIC_ROOT entry in your settings.py install -o planb -d /srv/http/YOURHOSTNAME/static planb collectstatic install -o planb -d /var/log/planb
Set up nginx config:
server { listen 80; server_name YOURHOSTNAME; root /srv/http/YOURHOSTNAME; location / { uwsgi_pass unix:/run/uwsgi/app/planb/socket; include uwsgi_params; } location = /favicon.ico { return 404; } location /static/ { } }
Give PlanB sudo access to ZFS tools and fix paths:
cat >/etc/sudoers.d/planb <<EOF planb ALL=NOPASSWD: /sbin/zfs, /bin/chown EOF zfs create tank/BACKUP -o mountpoint=/srv/backups chown planb /srv/backups chmod 700 /srv/backups
(Note that setting up a different mount point is optional. See also README-zpool.rst for additional tips.
Set up qcluster
for scheduled tasks:
# (in the source, this file is in rc.d) cp ${VIRTUAL_ENV:-/usr/local}/share/planb/planb-queue.service \ /etc/systemd/system/ ${EDITOR:-vi} /etc/systemd/system/planb-queue.service systemctl daemon-reload && systemctl enable planb-queue && systemctl start planb-queue && systemctl status planb-queue
Set up the qcluster
for dutree tasks. If you do not use dutree
or if you want to run dutree on the default qcluster you can set
Q_DUTREE_QUEUE='PlanB'
in /etc/planb/settings.py
.:
cp ${VIRTUAL_ENV:-/usr/local}/share/planb/planb-queue-dutree.service \ /etc/systemd/system/ ${EDITOR:-vi} /etc/systemd/system/planb-queue-dutree.service systemctl daemon-reload && systemctl enable planb-queue-dutree && systemctl start planb-queue-dutree && systemctl status planb-queue-dutree
Install automatic jobs:
planb loaddata planb_jobs
Don't forget a logrotate config:
cat >/etc/logrotate.d/planb <<EOF /var/log/planb/*.log { weekly missingok rotate 52 compress delaycompress notifempty create 0644 planb www-data sharedscripts } EOF
Create aliases to quickly mount/unmount the current working directory
in your ~/.bashrc
:
alias zfs-quick-mount="zfs load-key -L \ "'"file:///tank/_local/zfskeys/${PWD#/}/_key.bin" "${PWD#/}" && zfs mount "${PWD#/}" && cd .' alias zfs-quick-umount='cd / && if zfs umount "${OLDPWD#/}" then zfs unload-key "${OLDPWD#/}"; cd "${OLDPWD}" else cd "${OLDPWD}"; false; fi'
Warning
WARNING: The example above uses local key files! This will be fixed/replaced in upcoming commits.
Configuring a remote host
Create a remotebackup
user on the remote host (or encbackup
for
backups encrypted at the source [1] [2], which is beyond the scope of
this document):
useradd -m remotebackup
Configure sudo access using visudo -f /etc/sudoers.d/remotebackup
:
# Backup user needs to be able to get the files remotebackup ALL=NOPASSWD: /usr/bin/rsync --server --sender * remotebackup ALL=NOPASSWD: /usr/bin/ionice -c2 -n7 /usr/bin/rsync --server --sender * remotebackup ALL=NOPASSWD: /usr/bin/ionice -c3 /usr/bin/rsync --server --sender * # Optional, for planb-zfsync.sh (only destroy snapshots with @ in the name) remotebackup ALL=NOPASSWD: /sbin/zfs destroy *@* remotebackup ALL=NOPASSWD: /sbin/zfs list * remotebackup ALL=NOPASSWD: /sbin/zfs send * remotebackup ALL=NOPASSWD: /sbin/zfs set * remotebackup ALL=NOPASSWD: /sbin/zfs snapshot *
Observe how the --server --sender
makes the rsync read-only.
Set up the ssh key like you'd normally do:
mkdir -p ~remotebackup/.ssh cat >>~remotebackup/.ssh/authorized_keys <<EOF ... ssh public key from /var/spool/planb/.ssh/id_rsa.pub goes here ... EOF chmod 640 ~remotebackup/.ssh/authorized_keys chown remotebackup -R ~remotebackup/.ssh
When you use this pattern, you can tick use_sudo
and set the remote
user to remotebackup
.
Adding post-backup notification
Do you want a notification when a backup succeeds? Or when it fails?
You can add something like this to your settings:
from datetime import datetime from subprocess import check_call from django.dispatch import receiver from planb.signals import backup_done @receiver(backup_done) def notify_zabbix(sender, fileset, success, **kwargs): if success: key = 'planb.get_latest[{}]'.format(fileset.unique_name) val = datetime.now().strftime('%s') cmd = ( 'zabbix_sender', '-c', '/etc/zabbix/zabbix_agentd.conf', '-k', key, '-o', val) check_call(cmd)
That combines nicely with a backup host discovery rule using blist
:
# Machine discovery (redirects stderr to mail). UserParameter=planb.discovery, \ ( planb blist --zabbix 3>&2 2>&1 1>&3 \ | mail -E -s 'ERROR: planb.discovery (zabbix)' root ) 2>&1
Doing daily jobs
A quick hack to get daily reports up and running, is by placing something
like this in /etc/planb/planb_custom.py
:
from planb.contrib.billing import BossoBillingPoster, daily_hostgroup_report def daily_billing_report(): """ This function is added into: Home >> Task Queue >> Scheduled task As: "Report to Billing" <planb_custom.daily_bosso_report> """ daily_hostgroup_report(BossoBillingPoster('http://my.url.here/'))
F.A.Q.
- Can I use the software and customize it to my own needs?
- It is licensed under the GNU GPL version 3.0 or higher. See the LICENSE file for the full text. That means: probably yes, but you may be required to share any changes you make. But you were going to do that anyway, right?
- Mails for backup success are sent, but mails for failure are not.
- Check the
DEBUG
setting. At the moment, error-mails are sent through the logging subsystem and that is disabled when running in debug-mode. - Where are the ssh host fingerprints (
known_hosts
files) stored? -
They're in
~planb/.ssh/known_hosts.d/
. If you want tossh
manually, you can add this to~planb/.profile
:ssh() { for arg in "$@"; do case $arg in -*) ;; *) break ;; esac done if test -n "$arg"; then host=${arg##*@} echo "(adding: \ -o UserKnownHostsFile=$HOME/.ssh/known_hosts.d/$host)" >&2 /usr/bin/ssh -o HashKnownHosts=no \ -o UserKnownHostsFile=$HOME/.ssh/known_hosts.d/$host "$@" else /usr/bin/ssh "$@" fi }
- Can I use a jump host?
- You can add
-e 'ssh -J jumpuser@jumphost'
to the rsync transport flags. Observe that the known hosts file of target will contain the fingerprint of the jump host. - Are bandwidth limits in place?
- Yes, the default for the rsync transport is 10MB/s (megabyte). You
can lower or raise this by adding
--bwlimit=10M
to the transport flags. - I've increased the bwlimit, but it's still slow.
-
If you notice that you're limited by ssh encryption CPU speed, you can consider setting the preferred ciphers in
~planb/.ssh/config
:Host * # The default is: # # chacha20-poly1305@openssh.com, # aes128-ctr,aes192-ctr,aes256-ctr, # aes128-gcm@openssh.com,aes256-gcm@openssh.com # # The available ciphers may be obtained using "ssh -Q cipher". # (Adding a non-existent one will yield a "Bad SSH2 cipher spec".) # # The AES ciphers are commonly hardware/CPU accelerated. # Ciphers aes128-ctr,aes128-gcm@openssh.com,aes256-ctr,\ aes256-gcm@openssh.com,chacha20-poly1305@openssh.com,3des-cbc
- Removing a fileset does not wipe the filesystem from disk, what should I do?
-
This is done intentionally. You should periodically use
planb slist --stale
to check for stale filesystems.You can them remove them manually using
zfs destroy [-r] FILESYSTEM
. - Rsync complains about
failed to stat
ormkdir failed
. -
If rsync returns these messages:
rsync: recv_generator: failed to stat "...": Permission denied (13) rsync: recv_generator: mkdir "..." failed: Permission denied (13)
Then you may be looking at parent directories with crooked permissions, like 077. Fix the permissions on the remote end.
However, many of these problems have likely been fixed by the addition of the
--chmod=Du+rwx
rsync option. - Rsync complains about
Invalid or incomplete multibyte or wide character
. -
If rsync returns with code 23 and says this:
rsync: recv_generator: failed to stat "...\#351es-BCS 27-09-11.csv": Invalid or incomplete multibyte or wide character (84)
Then you might be backing up old hosts with legacy Latin-1 encoding on the filesystem. Adding
--iconv=utf8,latin1
to the rsync transport flags should fix it.You may need rsync version 3 or higher for that.
Right now we opt to not implement any of these workarounds:
- Patch rsync to cope with
EILSEQ
(84) "Illegal byte sequence". - Cope with error code 23 and pretend that everything went fine.
Instead, you should install a recent rsync and/or fix the filenames on your remote filesystem.
- Patch rsync to cope with
- The
mkvirtualenv
saidlocale.Error: unsupported locale setting
. - You need to install the right locales until
perl -e setlocale
is silent. How depends on your system and your config. Seelocale
and e.g.locale-gen en_US.UTF-8
. - The
uwsgi
log complains about "No module named site". -
If your uwsgi fails to start, and the log looks like this:
Python version: 2.7.12 (default, Nov 19 2016, 06:48:10) Set PythonHome to /srv/virtualenvs/planb ImportError: No module named site
Then your uWSGI is missing the Python 3 module. Go install
uwsgi-plugin-python3
.
Authors
PlanB was started in 2013 as "OSSO backup" by Alex Boonstra at OSSO B.V. Since then, it has been evolved into PlanB. When it was Open Sourced by Walter Doekes in 2017, the old commits were dropped to ensure that any private company information was not disclosed. Since then, Harm Geerts has also been busy on the project.
Footnotes
[1] | If you want your data encrypted before it gets sent to the PlanB server, check out the OSSO blog: on the fly encrypted backups using gocryptfs (2020) |
[2] | An older OSSO blog about on the fly encryption at the source: on the fly encrypted backups using encfs (2015) |