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pibackup logo

codefactor bash version

pibackup.sh

pibackup.sh is a bash script that automatically dump a PI sdcard as a shrunk image to a [remote] directory, and handles rotation of several files. It is recommended to automate this script using systemd timers or cron, so the backups are done on a regular basis and without any interaction.

This is still WIP work, let me know if you have ideas about how to improve.

Table of content

  1. Background
  2. Usage
  3. Prerequisites
    1. Optional dependencies
  4. Installation
  5. Example
  6. Restoring
  7. Automation
    1. systemd timer
    2. cron job
  8. Contributing

Background

Once during a house move, I unplugged a Raspberry PI and somehow it killed the SD card. All my code was saved already, but I lost hours of my time spent on configuring and pimping my PI. I was so mad at myself for not doing backups that I started to look into automatic backup tools, but I didn't find anything that pleased me enough. So I bought an external drive and started this project. Hope it will be useful for more people than just myself!

Usage

Note: It will create a <output>/<target> directory, so you can use the same output directory for multiple nodes.

$ ./pibackup.sh -h
---
pibackup.sh 0.5
---

usage: pibackup.sh -o <output> [options]

Required parameters:
  -o, --output-dir [DIRECTORY]  Where backup will be saved and rotated.

Optional parameters:
  -h, --help                    Display this message.
  -n, --image-name [NAME]       Rename the backup file as '<TARGET>.img.x'.
                                  Default: self ($ uname -n)
  -r, --rotation-count [COUNT]  Quantity of files to be kept. Default: 8
  -t, --tmp-dir [DIRECTORY]     Temporary directory to use on the remote node. Default: /tmp
  -T, --target [HOSTNAME]       Name of the host to backup. Default: self ($ uname -n)
  -q, --quiet                   Silent mode.
  -z, --gzip                    Compress image using gzip.
  -Z, --xz                      Compress image using xz.

Prerequisites

  1. External disk space: At the moment, you cannot dump your sd card on itself; you need a proper storage. For instance, I have a disk drive plugged to my main Raspberry PI that other nodes will remotely interact with.

  2. Fast local network: If doing remote backup, you need to make sure your network is efficiently configured. I had speed issues at home, so I had to create a local network for my PIs, which greatly increased the backup upload speed.

  3. This project uses PiShrink from Drewsif. Make sure to install it before.

$ which pishrink.sh
/usr/local/bin/pishrink.sh

Optional dependencies

  1. If using cron you may need postfix to deliver local mails:
sudo apt install postfix

Installation

All you need to do is download pibackup.sh, make it executable and put it in your PATH.

wget https://raw.githubusercontent.com/Chocorean/pibackup/main/pibackup.sh
chmod +x pibackup.sh
sudo mv pibackup.sh /usr/local/bin

Example

For a local backup, this is simplest you can use:

user@pi $ pibackup.sh -o /backups -n awesome_pi
[pibackup.sh] Dumping sdcard ...
[ ... dd output ... ]
[pibackup.sh] Setting permissions ...
[pibackup.sh] Shrinking image ...
[ ... pishrink.sh output ... ]
[pibackup.sh] Rotating previous images ...
[pibackup.sh] Done ...
user@pi $ ls /backups/pi
awesome_pi.img.0

For a remote node, just specify its hostname or IP address.

user@pi$ pibackup.sh -o /backups -d another_pi
[pibackup.sh] Dumping sdcard ...
[ ... dd output ... ]
[pibackup.sh] Setting permissions ...
[pibackup.sh] Shrinking image ...
[ ... pishrink.sh output ... ]
[pibackup.sh] Rotating previous images ...
[pibackup.sh] Done ...
user@pi $ ls /backups/another_pi
another_pi.img.0

Restoring

Doing backups is a good thing, however you know to know how to restore them. Right now, I haven't looked at the newest feature which allows to boot from the network, but I might add a section about it later.

Use a computer with access to the storage drive. If you compress your images, you will need to decompress them first:

# -Z ; xz
cp /path/to/backup.xz.0 backup.xz
unxz backup.xz

# -z ; gzip
cp /path/to/backup.gz.0 backup.gz
gunzip backup.gz

Now you have a suitable image for flashing an SD card. Plug the SD card you want to overwrite and copy the image:

sudo dd if=backup.img of=/dev/mmcblk0 bs=4M conv=noerror,sync status=progress

Insert the SD card in your PI and you recovered all your data!

Automation

The recommended way to use pibackup.sh is to create a systemd timer-service duo, but a cron job will work fine. You also need to make sure your nodes have a proper SSH config which allows the main node to connect to them without asking for password (see ~/.ssh/authorized_keys file).

systemd timer

You will first need to create the timer and the associated service. Then, enable and start the timer:

# systemctl enable pibackup.timer
# systemctl start pibackup.timer

Check the docs for OnCalendar= syntax.

systemd timer example

/etc/systemd/system/pibackup.timer

[Unit]
Description=Run pibackup.sh every monday at 2am

[Timer]
Unit=pibackup.service
OnCalendar=Mon, 2:00

[Install]
WantedBy=timers.target

systemd service example

/etc/systemd/system/pibackup.service

[Unit]
Description=Run pibackup

[Service]
Type=oneshot
ExecStart=/usr/local/bin/pibackup.sh ...
User=pi

Thanks to Mcdostone for the suggestion.

cron job

I recommend to seperate cron logs from syslog logs for easier troubleshooting. If not the case already, edit /etc/rsyslog.conf and uncomment cron.* /var/log/cron.log. As stated in the Prerequisites section, you may also need to install postfix because cron sends mails if a job has an output.

Also, I had to set SHELL and PATH variables inside the crontab to make it work, but that might not be necessary for you.

Check the docs for crontab syntax.

crontab example

$ crontab -e

# default shell
SHELL=/bin/bash
# set PATH variable
PATH=/usr/local/sbin:/usr/local/bin:/usr/sbin:/usr/bin:/sbin:/bin:/snap/bin

# Do a backup once a week on Mondays at 2am
0 2 * * MON /usr/local/bin/pibackup.sh ...

Contributing

Quoting Drewsif:

If you find a bug please create an issue for it. If you would like a new feature added, you can create an issue for it but I can't promise that I will get to it.

Pull requests for new features and bug fixes are more than welcome!