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<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?>
<!DOCTYPE doc SYSTEM "doc.dtd">
<doc title="{[project]}" subtitle="Reliable {[postgres]} Backup &amp; Restore" toc="n">
<description>{[project]} provides fast, reliable backup and restore for {[postgres]} and seamlessly scales to terabyte scale databases by implementing stream compression and parallel processing.</description>
<variable-list>
<!-- Variables used by the rest of the script -->
<variable key="github-url-root">https://github.com</variable>
<variable key="github-url-base">{[github-url-root]}/pgbackrest/pgbackrest</variable>
<variable key="github-url-master">{[github-url-base]}/blob/master</variable>
<variable key="github-url-issues">{[github-url-base]}/issues</variable>
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<variable key="github-url-release">{[github-url-base]}/archive/release</variable>
<variable key="github-url-license">{[github-url-master]}/LICENSE</variable>
<variable key="github-url-wiki">{[github-url-base]}/wiki</variable>
<variable key="github-url-wiki-backlog">{[github-url-wiki]}#backlog</variable>
<variable key="backrest-url-base">http://www.pgbackrest.org</variable>
<variable key="backrest-page-user-guide">user-guide</variable>
<variable key="backrest-page-configuration">configuration</variable>
<variable key="backrest-page-command">command</variable>
<variable key="backrest-page-release">release</variable>
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<variable key="crunchy-url-base">http://www.crunchydata.com</variable>
<variable key="crunchy-url-cbm">{[crunchy-url-base]}/crunchy-backup-manager</variable>
<variable key="resonate-url-base">http://www.resonate.com</variable>
</variable-list>
<section id="introduction">
<title>Introduction</title>
<!-- These first two paragraphs are pulled in other parts of the documentation as a concise introduction and summary of features. -->
<p><backrest/> aims to be a simple, reliable backup and restore system that can seamlessly scale up to the largest databases and workloads.</p>
<p>Instead of relying on traditional backup tools like tar and rsync, <backrest/> implements all backup features internally and uses a custom protocol for communicating with remote systems. Removing reliance on tar and rsync allows for better solutions to database-specific backup challenges. The custom remote protocol allows for more flexibility and limits the types of connections that are required to perform a backup which increases security.</p>
<p><backrest/> <link url="{[github-url-base]}/releases/tag/release/{[version-stable]}">v{[version-stable]}</link> is the current stable release. Release notes are on the <link page="{[backrest-page-release]}">Releases</link> page.</p>
</section>
<section id="features">
<title>Features</title>
<section id="parallel-backup-restore">
<title>Parallel Backup &amp; Restore</title>
<p>Compression is usually the bottleneck during backup operations but, even with now ubiquitous multi-core servers, most database backup solutions are still single-process. <backrest/> solves the compression bottleneck with parallel processing.</p>
<p>Utilizing multiple cores for compression makes it possible to achieve 1TB/hr raw throughput even on a 1Gb/s link. More cores and a larger pipe lead to even higher throughput.</p>
</section>
<section id="local-or-remote">
<title>Local or Remote Operation</title>
<p>A custom protocol allows <backrest/> to backup, restore, and archive locally or remotely via SSH with minimal configuration. An interface to query <postgres/> is also provided via the protocol layer so that remote access to <postgres/> is never required, which enhances security.</p>
</section>
<section id="backup-types">
<title>Full, Incremental, &amp; Differential Backups</title>
<p>Full, differential, and incremental backups are supported. <backrest/> is not susceptible to the time resolution issues of rsync, making differential and incremental backups completely safe.</p>
</section>
<section id="backup-rotation">
<title>Backup Rotation &amp; Archive Expiration</title>
<p>Retention polices can be set for full and differential backups to create coverage for any timeframe. WAL archive can be maintained for all backups or strictly for the most recent backups. In the latter case WAL required to make older backups consistent will be maintained in the archive.</p>
</section>
<section id="backup-intregrity">
<title>Backup Integrity</title>
<p>Checksums are calculated for every file in the backup and rechecked during a restore. After a backup finishes copying files, it waits until every WAL segment required to make the backup consistent reaches the repository.</p>
<p>Backups in the repository are stored in the same format as a standard <postgres/> cluster (including tablespaces). If compression is disabled and hard links are enabled it is possible to snapshot a backup in the repository and bring up a <postgres/> cluster directly on the snapshot. This is advantageous for terabyte-scale databases that are time consuming to restore in the traditional way.</p>
<p>All operations utilize file and directory level fsync to ensure durability.</p>
</section>
v1.18: Stanza Upgrade, Refactoring, and Locking Improvements Bug Fixes: * Fixed an issue where read-only operations that used local worker processes (i.e. restore) were creating write locks that could interfere with parallel archive-push. (Reported by Jens Wilke.) Features: * Added the stanza-upgrade command to provide a mechanism for upgrading a stanza after upgrading to a new major version of PostgreSQL. (Contributed by Cynthia Shang.) * Added validation of pgbackrest.conf to display warnings if options are not valid or are not in the correct section. (Contributed by Cynthia Shang.) Refactoring: * Simplify locking scheme. Now, only the master process will hold write locks (for archive-push and backup commands) and not all local and remote worker processes as before. * Refactor Ini.pm to facilitate testing. * Do not set timestamps of files in the backup directories to match timestamps in the cluster directory. This was originally done to enable backup resume, but that process is now implemented with checksums. * Improved error message when the restore command detects the presence of postmaster.pid. (Suggested by Yogesh Sharma.) * Renumber return codes between 25 and 125 to avoid PostgreSQL interpreting some as fatal signal exceptions. (Suggested by Yogesh Sharma.) * The backup and restore commands no longer copy via temp files. In both cases the files are checksummed on resume so there's no danger of partial copies. * Allow functions to accept optional parameters as a hash. * Refactor File->list() and fileList() to accept optional parameters. * Refactor backupLabel() and add unit tests. * Silence some perl critic warnings. (Contributed by Cynthia Shang.)
2017-04-13 01:17:39 +02:00
<section id="page-checksum">
<title>Page Checksums</title>
<p><postgres/> has supported page-level checksums since 9.3. If page checksums are enabled <backrest/> will validate the checksums for every file that is copied during a backup. All page checksums are validated during a full backup and checksums in files that have changed are validated during differential and incremental backups.</p>
<p>Validation failures do not stop the backup process, but warnings with details of exactly which pages have failed validation are output to the console and file log.</p>
<p>This feature allows page-level corruption to be detected early, before backups that contain valid copies of the data have expired.</p>
</section>
<section id="backup-resume">
<title>Backup Resume</title>
<p>An aborted backup can be resumed from the point where it was stopped. Files that were already copied are compared with the checksums in the manifest to ensure integrity. Since this operation can take place entirely on the backup server, it reduces load on the database server and saves time since checksum calculation is faster than compressing and retransmitting data.</p>
</section>
<section id="stream-compression-checksums">
<title>Streaming Compression &amp; Checksums</title>
<p>Compression and checksum calculations are performed in stream while files are being copied to the repository, whether the repository is located locally or remotely.</p>
<p>If the repository is on a backup server, compression is performed on the database server and files are transmitted in a compressed format and simply stored on the backup server. When compression is disabled a lower level of compression is utilized to make efficient use of available bandwidth while keeping CPU cost to a minimum.</p>
</section>
<section id="delta-restore">
<title>Delta Restore</title>
<p>The manifest contains checksums for every file in the backup so that during a restore it is possible to use these checksums to speed processing enormously. On a delta restore any files not present in the backup are first removed and then checksums are taken for the remaining files. Files that match the backup are left in place and the rest of the files are restored as usual. Parallel processing can lead to a dramatic reduction in restore times.</p>
</section>
<section id="parallel-archiving">
<title>Parallel WAL Archiving</title>
<p>Dedicated commands are included for both pushing WAL to the archive and retrieving WAL from the archive.</p>
<p>The push command automatically detects WAL segments that are pushed multiple times and de-duplicates when the segment is identical, otherwise an error is raised. The push and get commands both ensure that the database and repository match by comparing <postgres/> versions and system identifiers. This precludes the possibility of misconfiguring the WAL archive location.</p>
<p>Asynchronous archiving allows transfer to be offloaded to another process which compresses WAL segments in parallel for maximum throughput. This can be a critical feature for databases with extremely high write volume.</p>
</section>
<section id="tablespace-link-support">
<title>Tablespace &amp; Link Support</title>
<p>Tablespaces are fully supported and on restore tablespaces can be remapped to any location. It is also possible to remap all tablespaces to one location with a single command which is useful for development restores.</p>
<p>File and directory links are supported for any file or directory in the <postgres/> cluster. When restoring it is possible to restore all links to their original locations, remap some or all links, or restore some or all links as normal files or directories within the cluster directory.</p>
</section>
<section id="postgres-compatibility">
<title>Compatibility with <postgres/> >= 8.3</title>
<p><backrest/> includes support for versions down to 8.3, since older versions of PostgreSQL are still regularly utilized.</p>
</section>
</section>
<section id="getting-started">
<title>Getting Started</title>
<p><backrest/> strives to be easy to configure and operate:</p>
<list>
<list-item><link page="{[backrest-page-user-guide]}">User guide</link> for {[user-guide-subtitle]} / <postgres/> {[pg-version]}.</list-item>
<list-item><link page="{[backrest-page-command]}">Command reference</link> for command-line operations.</list-item>
<list-item><link page="{[backrest-page-configuration]}">Configuration reference</link> for creating <backrest/> configurations.</list-item>
</list>
</section>
<section id="contributions">
<title>Contributions</title>
<p>Contributions to <backrest/> are always welcome!
Code fixes or new features can be submitted via pull requests. Ideas for new features and improvements to existing functionality or documentation can be <link url="{[github-url-issues]}">submitted as issues</link>. You may want to check the <link url="{[github-url-wiki-backlog]}">Feature Backlog</link> to see if your suggestion has already been submitted.
Bug reports should be <link url="{[github-url-issues]}">submitted as issues</link>. Please provide as much information as possible to aid in determining the cause of the problem.
You will always receive credit in the <link page="{[backrest-page-release]}">release notes</link> for your contributions.</p>
</section>
<section id="support">
<title>Support</title>
<p><backrest/> is completely free and open source under the <link url="{[github-url-license]}">MIT</link> license. You may use it for personal or commercial purposes without any restrictions whatsoever. Bug reports are taken very seriously and will be addressed as quickly as possible.
Creating a robust disaster recovery policy with proper replication and backup strategies can be a very complex and daunting task. You may find that you need help during the architecture phase and ongoing support to ensure that your enterprise continues running smoothly.
<link url="{[crunchy-url-base]}">Crunchy Data</link> provides packaged versions of <backrest/> for major operating systems and expert full life-cycle commercial support for <backrest/> and all things <postgres/>. <link url="{[crunchy-url-base]}">Crunchy Data</link> is committed to providing open source solutions with no vendor lock-in, ensuring that cross-compatibility with the community version of <backrest/> is always strictly maintained.
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Please visit <link url="{[crunchy-url-base]}">Crunchy Data</link> for more information.</p>
</section>
<section id="recognition">
<title>Recognition</title>
<p>Primary recognition goes to Stephen Frost for all his valuable advice and criticism during the development of <backrest/>.
<link url="{[crunchy-url-base]}">Crunchy Data</link> has contributed significant time and resources to <backrest/> and continues to actively support development. <link url="{[resonate-url-base]}">Resonate</link> also contributed to the development of <backrest/> and allowed early (but well tested) versions to be installed as their primary <postgres/> backup solution.</p>
<p><link url="https://thenounproject.com/search/?q=lounge+chair&amp;i=129971">Armchair</link> graphic by <link url="https://thenounproject.com/sandorsz">Sandor Szabo</link>.</p>
</section>
</doc>