Backup MariaDB or MySQL Databases to Linode Object Storage with Restic
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Introduction
It is vital to have backups of your databases to allow you to restore in the event of a server fault, a user error or —worst-case— a hacking or defacing of your website or applications.
To be successful, backups should be automatic, reliable, and secure. This guide explains how to configure Restic on your Linode to backup your MariaDB (or MySQL) databases onto Linode Object Storage, so they can be recovered even if your Linode is no longer accessible.
Restic is a backup utility written in Go. It is cross-platform and works on most Linux distributions with a kernel newer than 2.6.23. Each backup is stored as a snapshot in a repository. The repository can be stored on most cloud storage providers, or even in a separate directory on your Linode (not recommended.) This guide explains how to use Linode Object Storage to hold your backup repository.
sudo
unless otherwise noted. For more information on privileges, see our
Users and Groups guide.Before You Begin
If you have not already done so, create a Linode account and Compute Instance. See our Getting Started with Linode and Creating a Compute Instance guides.
Follow our Setting Up and Securing a Compute Instance guide to update your system. You may also wish to set the timezone, configure your hostname, create a limited user account, and harden SSH access.
Install MariaDB on your Linode by following the How to Install MariaDB guide that is appropriate for your Linode’s distribution.
Create an Object Storage bucket to hold your backup repository. Follow the Create a Bucket guide if you do not already have one.
Important Object Storage is similar to a subscription service. Once enabled, you will be billed at the flat rate regardless of whether or not there are active buckets on your account. You must Cancel Object Storage to stop billing for this service.Ensure your Linode has the
wget
andbzip2
utilities installed. Install them with the following commands:CentOS / Fedora
yum install wget bzip2
Ubuntu / Debian
apt install wget bzip
Install Restic
Download the latest version of Restic from the Github Releases page (version 0.15.2 at the time of writing):
wget https://github.com/restic/restic/releases/download/v0.15.2/restic_0.15.2_linux_amd64.bz2
Note Ensure you select the correct file for your system. The above command is correct for most Linux distributions on Linode.Extract the downloaded file:
bzip2 -d restic_0.15.2_linux_amd64.bz2
Move the extracted file to your system’s
$PATH
and make it executable for all users:sudo mv restic_0.15.2_linux_amd64 /usr/local/bin/restic sudo chmod ugo+x /usr/local/bin/restic
You can now run Restic using the command
restic
:restic version
You should see a similar output:
restic 0.15.2 compiled with go1.20.3 on linux/amd64
Create the Restic Repository
Configure Restic to use your Object Storage access key pair and to use the bucket you created in the Before You Begin section of this guide. Replace
your-key
,your-secret
, andus-east-1.linodeobjects.com/your-bucket-name
with your own values.AWS_ACCESS_KEY_ID=your-key AWS_SECRET_ACCESS_KEY=your-secret restic -r s3:us-east-1.linodeobjects.com/your-bucket-name init
Note The above command references the
us-east-1
cluster, which is located in the Newark, NJ cluster region. If your bucket is located in a different cluster region, replaceus-east-1
with the appropriate cluster name.For example, for the Frankfurt, DE cluster region the command is:
AWS_ACCESS_KEY_ID=your-key AWS_SECRET_ACCESS_KEY=your-secret restic -r s3:eu-central-1.linodeobjects.com/your-bucket-name init
Important Ensure the name of your bucket is correct. If the bucket does not exist, Restic creates a new bucket for you in the cluster region you designate.Following the prompt, set a password to encrypt your repository’s data. Enter your desired password twice, and you will see a similar output confirming that your repository has been created:
enter password for new repository: enter password again: created restic repository c3ffbd1ea6 at s3:us-east-1.linodeobjects.com/restic-backups-example Please note that knowledge of your password is required to access the repository. Losing your password means that your data is irrecoverably lost.
Important Store this password securely and somewhere other than your Linode. Your backups are inaccessible without the password.
Store the access key and secret
Your access key, secret key, and password are required every time Restic communicates with your repository. To make it easier to work with your repository, create a shell script containing your credentials.
To keep your credentials secure, using a text editor, create the example script in the root user’s home directory, and run all your Restic scripts as the root user. The example uses the Nano text editor.
sudo nano /root/restic_params
Copy and paste the example file’s content and replace
your-key
, andyour-secret
with your own Object Storage account’s access key credentials.- File: /root/restic_params
1 2
export AWS_ACCESS_KEY_ID=your-key export AWS_SECRET_ACCESS_KEY=your-secret
Note Whenever you want to use Restic, import this file using the command below or include it in your user’s login script:
source /root/restic_params
Create a password file to hold your Restic password:
sudo nano /root/restic_pw
Enter your Restic password and save the file.
- File: /root/restic_pw
1
YourPasswordGoesHere
Note You can pass your password filename to Restic using the
-p
flag:restic -p /root/restic_pw ...
Backup All Databases
your-bucket-name
and us-east-1.linodeobjects.com
with the name of your Object Storage bucket and its cluster hostname.The mysqldump utility is used to dump the contents of a database to a file stored on your Linode. This section’s example script, loops through all databases on your server and dumps each one to its own SQL file.
Create a file in your
/usr/local/bin
directory:sudo nano /usr/local/bin/backup_mariadb
Copy the following contents into the file:
- File: /usr/local/bin/backup_mariadb
1 2 3 4 5
#!/bin/bash PATH="/usr/local/bin:$PATH" source /root/restic_params mysql --defaults-extra-file=/root/mysql_cnf -N -e 'show databases' | while read dbname; do /usr/bin/mysqldump --defaults-extra-file=/root/mysql_cnf --complete-insert "$dbname" > "/var/backups/mariadb/$dbname".sql; done restic -r s3:us-east-1.linodeobjects.com/your-bucket-name -p /root/restic_pw backup /var/backups/mariadb
Make the script executable and create the folder to store the backup files (if it doesn’t already exist):
sudo chmod u+x /usr/local/bin/backup_mariadb sudo mkdir -p /var/backups/mariadb/
Line 3 of the script refers to a MySQL configuration file named
msql_cnf
, which is used to authenticate with your database. Create this file under your/root
directory and add the username and password for your database:sudo nano /root/mysql_cnf
Copy and past the contents of the example file and replace the values of
your-database-username
andyour-database-password
with your own.- File: /root/mysql_cnf
1 2 3
[client] user="your-database-username" password="your-database-password"
Run your first backup using the script you created:
sudo backup_mariadb
You should see a similar output:
mysqldump: Got error: 1044: "Access denied for user 'root'@'localhost' to database 'information_schema'" when using LOCK TABLES mysqldump: Got error: 1142: "SELECT, LOCK TABLES command denied to user 'root'@'localhost' for table 'accounts'" when using LOCK TABLES repository 1689c602 opened successfully, password is correct Files: 4 new, 0 changed, 0 unmodified Dirs: 2 new, 0 changed, 0 unmodified Added to the repo: 470.844 KiB processed 4 files, 469.825 KiB in 0:01 snapshot 81072f28 saved
Verify that your backups have been created. You should see one backup file per database:
ls -al /var/backups/mariadb
The output displays all backup files stored in the backups directory you created:
total 492 drwxr-xr-x 2 root root 4096 Jul 21 19:47 . drwxr-xr-x 3 root root 4096 Jul 21 19:46 .. -rw-r--r-- 1 root root 830 Jul 21 19:47 information_schema.sql -rw-r--r-- 1 root root 479441 Jul 21 19:47 mysql.sql -rw-r--r-- 1 root root 830 Jul 21 19:47 performance_schema.sql -rw-r--r-- 1 root root 1292 Jul 21 19:47 wordpress.sql
Executing the script also creates a snapshot in your Restic repository. Use Restic’s
snapshot
command to view it:sudo /bin/bash -c "source /root/restic_params; restic -r s3:us-east-1.linodeobjects.com/your-bucket-name -p /root/restic_pw snapshots"
Restic returns a similar output:
repository 1689c602 opened successfully, password is correct ID Time Host Tags Paths --------------------------------------------------------------------------- 81072f28 2020-07-21 19:47:19 li1356-54 /var/backups/mariadb --------------------------------------------------------------------------- 1 snapshots
Set Up Automated Database Backups
Linux has several ways of running a job on a defined schedule. This section outlines several common methods that you can use to configure the backup script to run periodically. Read through the methods and select one that suits your needs.
Cron
System Cron jobs exist as entries in the /etc/crontab
file. Open your systems crontab
file for editing with the following command:
sudo crontab -e
Add a line pointing to your backup script. This example runs the backup every hour, on the hour. See the Schedule tasks with Cron article for additional scheduling options.
0 * * * * /usr/local/bin/backup_mariadb > /tmp/mariadb-backup-log.txt 2>&1
Systemd
Systemd can run commands (known as units) on a periodic basis using timers. You can use systemd commands to monitor when the timers and commands last ran, and the output from running the commands.
To schedule a command, you need two configuration files: the service file which includes the commands to run and a timer file which defines when to run the service.
Create the service configuration file and copy and paste the contents of the example:
sudo nano /etc/systemd/system/backup-mariadb.service
- File: /etc/systemd/system/backup-mariadb.service
1 2 3 4 5
[Unit] Description=Backup MariaDB databases [Service] ExecStart=/usr/local/bin/backup_mariadb Environment=USER=root HOME=/root
Create the timer configuration file and copy and paste the contents of the example. The OnCalendar
line instructs Systemd when to execute the service file’s commands. In the example, the service file’s commands are run on-the-hour, every hour.
sudo nano /etc/systemd/system/backup-mariadb.timer
- File: /etc/systemd/system/backup-mariadb.timer
1 2 3 4 5 6
[Unit] Description=Backup MariaDB databases [Timer] OnCalendar=*-*-* *:00:00 [Install] WantedBy=timers.target
When you are satisfied with your timer’s configurations, enable the timer:
sudo systemctl enable --now backup-mariadb.timer
You can monitor all your system’s timers with the following command:
sudo systemctl list-timers
You should see a similar output:
NEXT LEFT LAST PASSED UNIT ACTIVATES
Mon 2020-07-20 16:00:00 BST 35min left Mon 2020-07-20 15:00:03 BST 24min ago backup-mariadb.timer backup-mariadb.service
The NEXT
and LEFT
column tells you the exact time and how long until the timer executes the service file next. The LAST
and PASSED
columns display information on when the timer last executed the service file.
Finishing Up
Log into your Linode Cloud Manager account and view the Object Storage bucket you created to store your Restic backups. You should see a set of files like the ones displayed in the screenshot below. These files collectively make up the Restic repository; you will not see your individual database backup files.
To explore the backups and files held within the Restic repository, you must issue the restic
command from the machine that you installed Restic on when following the steps in the Before You Begin section.
Create an Alias
It can get tedious typing out the arguments to the Restic command. To make life easier for maintenance and daily management, create an alias for the command with the arguments you need.
In your root
user’s .profile
file, add the lines in the example. For example, on an Ubuntu system this file is located in /root/.profile
. To learn more about creating reusable aliases, see the
How to Add the Linux alias Command in the .bashrc File guide.
source /root/restic_params
alias myrestic='restic -r s3:us-east-1.linodeobjects.com/your-bucket-name -p /root/restic_pw'
After logging out of your system and back in again, you can run restic using your aliased command:
myrestic snapshots
Restore a Backup
Backups are not useful if you cannot restore them. It’s a good idea to test out your backups once in a while. To restore the latest usable backup from Restic, run the restore latest
command:
restic -r s3:us-east-1.linodeobjects.com/your-bucket-name -p /root/restic_pw restore latest -t /root
The -t
option tells Restic where to restore your backup. Restic restores your backup’s files and recreates the full directory structure that existed at the time the backup was taken.
For example, consider the backup file /var/backups/mariadb/wordpress.sql
. Restoring a backup containing this file to a target of /home/myuser
results in the file being restored as:
/home/myuser/var/backups/mariadb/wordpress.sql
To restore a backup from a particular point-in-time, issue the example command to find the snapshot ID for the specific backup.
sudo /bin/bash -c "source /root/restic_params; restic -r s3:us-east-1.linodeobjects.com/your-bucket-name -p /root/restic_pw snapshots"
The output resembles the example, where the first column displays the snapshot ID:
repository 1689c602 opened successfully, password is correct
ID Time Host Tags Paths
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
81072f28 2020-07-21 19:47:19 li1356-54 /var/backups/mariadb
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
1 snapshots
Pass the selected ID to the restore command instead of latest
. Replace 81072f28
in the example with your own snapshot ID:
sudo /bin/bash -c "source /root/restic_params; restic -r s3:us-east-1.linodeobjects.com/your-bucket-name -p /root/restic_pw restore 81072f28 -t /root"
The above commands restore all databases taken in the backup. If you only want a selected backup, pass the filename using the -i
option, along with either latest
or the snapshot ID:
sudo /bin/bash -c "source /root/restic_params; restic -r s3:us-east-1.linodeobjects.com/your-bucket-name -p /root/restic_pw restore 81072f28 -i wordpress.sql -t /root"
Maintain your Repository
Your backup repository’s size can grow very quickly, especially if you backup a large database every hour.
Restic can automatically clean-up your backup snapshots according to a flexible policy using snapshot policies.
Consider automatically running a policy using the forget
command on a frequent basis (e.g. daily) to keep your backup repository’s size down. Refer to the snapshot policies article for more details.
Don’t forget to pass the --prune
option to the forget
command or the space won’t actually be freed from your repository.
Pruning a repository can take significant time and stops new backups from taking place while it is being run, so it is best to run it often and non-interactively.
More Information
You may wish to consult the following resources for additional information on this topic. While these are provided in the hope that they will be useful, please note that we cannot vouch for the accuracy or timeliness of externally hosted materials.
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