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1[[chapter_vzdump]]
2ifdef::manvolnum[]
3vzdump(1)
4=========
5:pve-toplevel:
6
7NAME
8----
9
10vzdump - Backup Utility for VMs and Containers
11
12
13SYNOPSIS
14--------
15
16include::vzdump.1-synopsis.adoc[]
17
18
19DESCRIPTION
20-----------
21endif::manvolnum[]
22ifndef::manvolnum[]
23Backup and Restore
24==================
25:pve-toplevel:
26endif::manvolnum[]
27
28Backups are a requirement for any sensible IT deployment, and {pve}
29provides a fully integrated solution, using the capabilities of each
30storage and each guest system type. This allows the system
31administrator to fine tune via the `mode` option between consistency
32of the backups and downtime of the guest system.
33
34{pve} backups are always full backups - containing the VM/CT
35configuration and all data. Backups can be started via the GUI or via
36the `vzdump` command line tool.
37
38.Backup Storage
39
40Before a backup can run, a backup storage must be defined. Refer to
41the Storage documentation on how to add a storage. A backup storage
42must be a file level storage, as backups are stored as regular files.
43In most situations, using a NFS server is a good way to store backups.
44You can save those backups later to a tape drive, for off-site
45archiving.
46
47.Scheduled Backup
48
49Backup jobs can be scheduled so that they are executed automatically
50on specific days and times, for selectable nodes and guest systems.
51Configuration of scheduled backups is done at the Datacenter level in
52the GUI, which will generate a job entry in /etc/pve/jobs.cfg, which
53will in turn be parsed and executed by the `pvescheduler` daemon.
54These jobs use the xref:chapter_calendar_events[calendar events] for
55defining the schedule.
56
57Backup modes
58------------
59
60There are several ways to provide consistency (option `mode`),
61depending on the guest type.
62
63.Backup modes for VMs:
64
65`stop` mode::
66
67This mode provides the highest consistency of the backup, at the cost
68of a short downtime in the VM operation. It works by executing an
69orderly shutdown of the VM, and then runs a background Qemu process to
70backup the VM data. After the backup is started, the VM goes to full
71operation mode if it was previously running. Consistency is guaranteed
72by using the live backup feature.
73
74`suspend` mode::
75
76This mode is provided for compatibility reason, and suspends the VM
77before calling the `snapshot` mode. Since suspending the VM results in
78a longer downtime and does not necessarily improve the data
79consistency, the use of the `snapshot` mode is recommended instead.
80
81`snapshot` mode::
82
83This mode provides the lowest operation downtime, at the cost of a
84small inconsistency risk. It works by performing a {pve} live
85backup, in which data blocks are copied while the VM is running. If the
86guest agent is enabled (`agent: 1`) and running, it calls
87`guest-fsfreeze-freeze` and `guest-fsfreeze-thaw` to improve
88consistency.
89
90A technical overview of the {pve} live backup for QemuServer can
91be found online
92https://git.proxmox.com/?p=pve-qemu.git;a=blob_plain;f=backup.txt[here].
93
94NOTE: {pve} live backup provides snapshot-like semantics on any
95storage type. It does not require that the underlying storage supports
96snapshots. Also please note that since the backups are done via
97a background Qemu process, a stopped VM will appear as running for a
98short amount of time while the VM disks are being read by Qemu.
99However the VM itself is not booted, only its disk(s) are read.
100
101.Backup modes for Containers:
102
103`stop` mode::
104
105Stop the container for the duration of the backup. This potentially
106results in a very long downtime.
107
108`suspend` mode::
109
110This mode uses rsync to copy the container data to a temporary
111location (see option `--tmpdir`). Then the container is suspended and
112a second rsync copies changed files. After that, the container is
113started (resumed) again. This results in minimal downtime, but needs
114additional space to hold the container copy.
115+
116When the container is on a local file system and the target storage of
117the backup is an NFS/CIFS server, you should set `--tmpdir` to reside on a
118local file system too, as this will result in a many fold performance
119improvement. Use of a local `tmpdir` is also required if you want to
120backup a local container using ACLs in suspend mode if the backup
121storage is an NFS server.
122
123`snapshot` mode::
124
125This mode uses the snapshotting facilities of the underlying
126storage. First, the container will be suspended to ensure data consistency.
127A temporary snapshot of the container's volumes will be made and the
128snapshot content will be archived in a tar file. Finally, the temporary
129snapshot is deleted again.
130
131NOTE: `snapshot` mode requires that all backed up volumes are on a storage that
132supports snapshots. Using the `backup=no` mount point option individual volumes
133can be excluded from the backup (and thus this requirement).
134
135// see PVE::VZDump::LXC::prepare()
136NOTE: By default additional mount points besides the Root Disk mount point are
137not included in backups. For volume mount points you can set the *Backup* option
138to include the mount point in the backup. Device and bind mounts are never
139backed up as their content is managed outside the {pve} storage library.
140
141Backup File Names
142-----------------
143
144Newer versions of vzdump encode the guest type and the
145backup time into the filename, for example
146
147 vzdump-lxc-105-2009_10_09-11_04_43.tar
148
149That way it is possible to store several backup in the same directory. You can
150limit the number of backups that are kept with various retention options, see
151the xref:vzdump_retention[Backup Retention] section below.
152
153Backup File Compression
154-----------------------
155
156The backup file can be compressed with one of the following algorithms: `lzo`
157footnote:[Lempel–Ziv–Oberhumer a lossless data compression algorithm
158https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lempel-Ziv-Oberhumer], `gzip` footnote:[gzip -
159based on the DEFLATE algorithm https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gzip] or `zstd`
160footnote:[Zstandard a lossless data compression algorithm
161https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Zstandard].
162
163Currently, Zstandard (zstd) is the fastest of these three algorithms.
164Multi-threading is another advantage of zstd over lzo and gzip. Lzo and gzip
165are more widely used and often installed by default.
166
167You can install pigz footnote:[pigz - parallel implementation of gzip
168https://zlib.net/pigz/] as a drop-in replacement for gzip to provide better
169performance due to multi-threading. For pigz & zstd, the amount of
170threads/cores can be adjusted. See the
171xref:vzdump_configuration[configuration options] below.
172
173The extension of the backup file name can usually be used to determine which
174compression algorithm has been used to create the backup.
175
176|===
177|.zst | Zstandard (zstd) compression
178|.gz or .tgz | gzip compression
179|.lzo | lzo compression
180|===
181
182If the backup file name doesn't end with one of the above file extensions, then
183it was not compressed by vzdump.
184
185Backup Encryption
186-----------------
187
188For Proxmox Backup Server storages, you can optionally set up client-side
189encryption of backups, see xref:storage_pbs_encryption[the corresponding section.]
190
191[[vzdump_retention]]
192Backup Retention
193----------------
194
195With the `prune-backups` option you can specify which backups you want to keep
196in a flexible manner. The following retention options are available:
197
198`keep-all <boolean>` ::
199Keep all backups. If this is `true`, no other options can be set.
200
201`keep-last <N>` ::
202Keep the last `<N>` backups.
203
204`keep-hourly <N>` ::
205Keep backups for the last `<N>` hours. If there is more than one
206backup for a single hour, only the latest is kept.
207
208`keep-daily <N>` ::
209Keep backups for the last `<N>` days. If there is more than one
210backup for a single day, only the latest is kept.
211
212`keep-weekly <N>` ::
213Keep backups for the last `<N>` weeks. If there is more than one
214backup for a single week, only the latest is kept.
215
216NOTE: Weeks start on Monday and end on Sunday. The software uses the
217`ISO week date`-system and handles weeks at the end of the year correctly.
218
219`keep-monthly <N>` ::
220Keep backups for the last `<N>` months. If there is more than one
221backup for a single month, only the latest is kept.
222
223`keep-yearly <N>` ::
224Keep backups for the last `<N>` years. If there is more than one
225backup for a single year, only the latest is kept.
226
227The retention options are processed in the order given above. Each option
228only covers backups within its time period. The next option does not take care
229of already covered backups. It will only consider older backups.
230
231Specify the retention options you want to use as a
232comma-separated list, for example:
233
234 # vzdump 777 --prune-backups keep-last=3,keep-daily=13,keep-yearly=9
235
236While you can pass `prune-backups` directly to `vzdump`, it is often more
237sensible to configure the setting on the storage level, which can be done via
238the web interface.
239
240NOTE: The old `maxfiles` option is deprecated and should be replaced either by
241`keep-last` or, in case `maxfiles` was `0` for unlimited retention, by
242`keep-all`.
243
244
245Prune Simulator
246~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
247
248You can use the https://pbs.proxmox.com/docs/prune-simulator[prune simulator
249of the Proxmox Backup Server documentation] to explore the effect of different
250retention options with various backup schedules.
251
252Retention Settings Example
253~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
254
255The backup frequency and retention of old backups may depend on how often data
256changes, and how important an older state may be, in a specific work load.
257When backups act as a company's document archive, there may also be legal
258requirements for how long backups must be kept.
259
260For this example, we assume that you are doing daily backups, have a retention
261period of 10 years, and the period between backups stored gradually grows.
262
263`keep-last=3` - even if only daily backups are taken, an admin may want to
264 create an extra one just before or after a big upgrade. Setting keep-last
265 ensures this.
266
267`keep-hourly` is not set - for daily backups this is not relevant. You cover
268 extra manual backups already, with keep-last.
269
270`keep-daily=13` - together with keep-last, which covers at least one
271 day, this ensures that you have at least two weeks of backups.
272
273`keep-weekly=8` - ensures that you have at least two full months of
274 weekly backups.
275
276`keep-monthly=11` - together with the previous keep settings, this
277 ensures that you have at least a year of monthly backups.
278
279`keep-yearly=9` - this is for the long term archive. As you covered the
280 current year with the previous options, you would set this to nine for the
281 remaining ones, giving you a total of at least 10 years of coverage.
282
283We recommend that you use a higher retention period than is minimally required
284by your environment; you can always reduce it if you find it is unnecessarily
285high, but you cannot recreate backups once they have been removed.
286
287[[vzdump_protection]]
288Backup Protection
289-----------------
290
291You can mark a backup as `protected` to prevent its removal. Attempting to
292remove a protected backup via {pve}'s UI, CLI or API will fail. However, this
293is enforced by {pve} and not the file-system, that means that a manual removal
294of a backup file itself is still possible for anyone with write access to the
295underlying backup storage.
296
297NOTE: Protected backups are ignored by pruning and do not count towards the
298retention settings.
299
300For filesystem-based storages, the protection is implemented via a sentinel file
301`<backup-name>.protected`. For Proxmox Backup Server, it is handled on the
302server side (available since Proxmox Backup Server version 2.1).
303
304[[vzdump_restore]]
305Restore
306-------
307
308A backup archive can be restored through the {pve} web GUI or through the
309following CLI tools:
310
311
312`pct restore`:: Container restore utility
313
314`qmrestore`:: Virtual Machine restore utility
315
316For details see the corresponding manual pages.
317
318Bandwidth Limit
319~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
320
321Restoring one or more big backups may need a lot of resources, especially
322storage bandwidth for both reading from the backup storage and writing to
323the target storage. This can negatively affect other virtual guests as access
324to storage can get congested.
325
326To avoid this you can set bandwidth limits for a backup job. {pve}
327implements two kinds of limits for restoring and archive:
328
329* per-restore limit: denotes the maximal amount of bandwidth for
330 reading from a backup archive
331
332* per-storage write limit: denotes the maximal amount of bandwidth used for
333 writing to a specific storage
334
335The read limit indirectly affects the write limit, as we cannot write more
336than we read. A smaller per-job limit will overwrite a bigger per-storage
337limit. A bigger per-job limit will only overwrite the per-storage limit if
338you have `Data.Allocate' permissions on the affected storage.
339
340You can use the `--bwlimit <integer>` option from the restore CLI commands
341to set up a restore job specific bandwidth limit. Kibit/s is used as unit
342for the limit, this means passing `10240' will limit the read speed of the
343backup to 10 MiB/s, ensuring that the rest of the possible storage bandwidth
344is available for the already running virtual guests, and thus the backup
345does not impact their operations.
346
347NOTE: You can use `0` for the `bwlimit` parameter to disable all limits for
348a specific restore job. This can be helpful if you need to restore a very
349important virtual guest as fast as possible. (Needs `Data.Allocate'
350permissions on storage)
351
352Most times your storage's generally available bandwidth stays the same over
353time, thus we implemented the possibility to set a default bandwidth limit
354per configured storage, this can be done with:
355
356----
357# pvesm set STORAGEID --bwlimit restore=KIBs
358----
359
360Live-Restore
361~~~~~~~~~~~~
362
363Restoring a large backup can take a long time, in which a guest is still
364unavailable. For VM backups stored on a Proxmox Backup Server, this wait
365time can be mitigated using the live-restore option.
366
367Enabling live-restore via either the checkbox in the GUI or the `--live-restore`
368argument of `qmrestore` causes the VM to start as soon as the restore
369begins. Data is copied in the background, prioritizing chunks that the VM is
370actively accessing.
371
372Note that this comes with two caveats:
373
374* During live-restore, the VM will operate with limited disk read speeds, as
375 data has to be loaded from the backup server (once loaded, it is immediately
376 available on the destination storage however, so accessing data twice only
377 incurs the penalty the first time). Write speeds are largely unaffected.
378* If the live-restore fails for any reason, the VM will be left in an
379 undefined state - that is, not all data might have been copied from the
380 backup, and it is _most likely_ not possible to keep any data that was written
381 during the failed restore operation.
382
383This mode of operation is especially useful for large VMs, where only a small
384amount of data is required for initial operation, e.g. web servers - once the OS
385and necessary services have been started, the VM is operational, while the
386background task continues copying seldom used data.
387
388Single File Restore
389~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
390
391The 'File Restore' button in the 'Backups' tab of the storage GUI can be used to
392open a file browser directly on the data contained in a backup. This feature
393is only available for backups on a Proxmox Backup Server.
394
395For containers, the first layer of the file tree shows all included 'pxar'
396archives, which can be opened and browsed freely. For VMs, the first layer shows
397contained drive images, which can be opened to reveal a list of supported
398storage technologies found on the drive. In the most basic case, this will be an
399entry called 'part', representing a partition table, which contains entries for
400each partition found on the drive. Note that for VMs, not all data might be
401accessible (unsupported guest file systems, storage technologies, etc...).
402
403Files and directories can be downloaded using the 'Download' button, the latter
404being compressed into a zip archive on the fly.
405
406To enable secure access to VM images, which might contain untrusted data, a
407temporary VM (not visible as a guest) is started. This does not mean that data
408downloaded from such an archive is inherently safe, but it avoids exposing the
409hypervisor system to danger. The VM will stop itself after a timeout. This
410entire process happens transparently from a user's point of view.
411
412[[vzdump_configuration]]
413Configuration
414-------------
415
416Global configuration is stored in `/etc/vzdump.conf`. The file uses a
417simple colon separated key/value format. Each line has the following
418format:
419
420 OPTION: value
421
422Blank lines in the file are ignored, and lines starting with a `#`
423character are treated as comments and are also ignored. Values from
424this file are used as default, and can be overwritten on the command
425line.
426
427We currently support the following options:
428
429include::vzdump.conf.5-opts.adoc[]
430
431
432.Example `vzdump.conf` Configuration
433----
434tmpdir: /mnt/fast_local_disk
435storage: my_backup_storage
436mode: snapshot
437bwlimit: 10000
438----
439
440Hook Scripts
441------------
442
443You can specify a hook script with option `--script`. This script is
444called at various phases of the backup process, with parameters
445accordingly set. You can find an example in the documentation
446directory (`vzdump-hook-script.pl`).
447
448File Exclusions
449---------------
450
451NOTE: this option is only available for container backups.
452
453`vzdump` skips the following files by default (disable with the option
454`--stdexcludes 0`)
455
456 /tmp/?*
457 /var/tmp/?*
458 /var/run/?*pid
459
460You can also manually specify (additional) exclude paths, for example:
461
462 # vzdump 777 --exclude-path /tmp/ --exclude-path '/var/foo*'
463
464excludes the directory `/tmp/` and any file or directory named `/var/foo`,
465`/var/foobar`, and so on.
466
467Paths that do not start with a `/` are not anchored to the container's root,
468but will match relative to any subdirectory. For example:
469
470 # vzdump 777 --exclude-path bar
471
472excludes any file or directory named `/bar`, `/var/bar`, `/var/foo/bar`, and
473so on, but not `/bar2`.
474
475Configuration files are also stored inside the backup archive
476(in `./etc/vzdump/`) and will be correctly restored.
477
478Examples
479--------
480
481Simply dump guest 777 - no snapshot, just archive the guest private area and
482configuration files to the default dump directory (usually
483`/var/lib/vz/dump/`).
484
485 # vzdump 777
486
487Use rsync and suspend/resume to create a snapshot (minimal downtime).
488
489 # vzdump 777 --mode suspend
490
491Backup all guest systems and send notification mails to root and admin.
492
493 # vzdump --all --mode suspend --mailto root --mailto admin
494
495Use snapshot mode (no downtime) and non-default dump directory.
496
497 # vzdump 777 --dumpdir /mnt/backup --mode snapshot
498
499Backup more than one guest (selectively)
500
501 # vzdump 101 102 103 --mailto root
502
503Backup all guests excluding 101 and 102
504
505 # vzdump --mode suspend --exclude 101,102
506
507Restore a container to a new CT 600
508
509 # pct restore 600 /mnt/backup/vzdump-lxc-777.tar
510
511Restore a QemuServer VM to VM 601
512
513 # qmrestore /mnt/backup/vzdump-qemu-888.vma 601
514
515Clone an existing container 101 to a new container 300 with a 4GB root
516file system, using pipes
517
518 # vzdump 101 --stdout | pct restore --rootfs 4 300 -
519
520
521ifdef::manvolnum[]
522include::pve-copyright.adoc[]
523endif::manvolnum[]
524