KVM and Back Ups
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@dustinb3403 said in KVM and Back Ups:
@tim_g said in KVM and Back Ups:
@dustinb3403 said in KVM and Back Ups:
@tim_g I'm trying to figure out the system requirements to get this perl script to run, and then how to run it.
And maybe an easy way to update it for any systems I'd want to backup.
I only took a few 2-3 second glimpses along that script... and I seen a spot that turns the VM off. Does it actually do as you think? You looked at it more thann I did, so perhaps I seen that part out of context.
It has several different options, it can snap, turn off the vm and then power it back on etc.
Ah, good. That must have been the part I seen then. I'll look at it more another time when I have the time...
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For the requirements, I found out you need to install
perl-XML-Simple
Obviously this needs to be installed to the server.
So. . .
ssh root@SERVER-IP-Address sudo dnf install perl-XML-Simple
I now have some output to play with.
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@stacksofplates said in KVM and Back Ups:
https://mangolassi.it/topic/12537/kvm-snapshot-backup-script
The name is a little misleading, I had to read into it and pick it apart to get it.
So it looks like this creates a full backup of the VM. This seems to accomplish what is needed here @DustinB3403
The function of the script is to create a full backup of the VM and VM's disk, without having to shut down the VM. The way it's done is by creating a snapshot, to get the VM off of it's main virtual disk, allowing you to get a solid replica of it, then the script deletes the snapshot, merging the it back into the main VD.
Nice @stacksofplates !
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@dustinb3403 I've been using this script in production for somethin glike 1 year when I was using KVM as hypervisor.
this is the facto the only good solution for KVM. It also supports gluster volumes!
you do nopt need to bring the VM down IF you build your VM disk on some snapshottable stuff like LVM or qcow (not sure about the latter).I've written a small note for my usage at the time... need a bit to translate it in english. this is how I used it in brief
wget http://repo.firewall-services.com/misc/virt/virt-backup.pl chmod 755 virt-backup.pl yum install perl perl-XML-Simple perl-Sys-Virt mkdir -p /var/lib/libvirt/backup #(maybe you want this to be a share mounted from a remote NAS) /$PATH/$TO/virt-backup.pl --action=dump --vm=VM_NAME --compress=pbzip2
note that I installed bbzip from EPEL to speedup compression and make full use of all server cores: my backups were scheduled during not working hours with the server idling for the most.
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@DustinB3403 almost forgotten... I've this stub on github
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In my previous experiments which worked but have not used it in production. I would just freeze the VM, then rsync it, then thaw it. If your backing up to LAN down time will be very minimal and with rsync you can backup incrementally of you wish.
It is recommended to also stop services first then freeze then rsync then thaw then start services again. I liked it and its KISS principle.
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I found this. I may try it on my laptop later.
Live backup of QEMU/KVM/libVirt virtual machines via Duplicity
https://itefix.net/content/live-backup-qemu-kvm-libvirt-virtual-machines-duplicity -
Here's something as well... KVM live backup software, that's actually current:
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I have found that there are many easy ways to get a backup of your VM.
What I have not found is something that can look at those snapshots that are made and backup incremental differences.
I cannot offsite 1+ TB per day in image files.
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@tim_g said in KVM and Back Ups:
Here's something as well... KVM live backup software, that's actually current:
Wtf... the download is an EXE. I don't get it...
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@jaredbusch said in KVM and Back Ups:
I have found that there are many easy ways to get a backup of your VM.
What I have not found is something that can look at those snapshots that are made and backup incremental differences.
I cannot offsite 1+ TB per day in image files.
Yeah that would be great to find something like that. I'm looking. I remember someone finding something that's paid. But I forget what it was. I forgot to bookmark it.
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@tim_g said in KVM and Back Ups:
@jaredbusch said in KVM and Back Ups:
I have found that there are many easy ways to get a backup of your VM.
What I have not found is something that can look at those snapshots that are made and backup incremental differences.
I cannot offsite 1+ TB per day in image files.
Yeah that would be great to find something like that. I'm looking. I remember someone finding something that's paid. But I forget what it was. I forgot to bookmark it.
I pay for that functionality now with Hyper-V and Veeam. So I do not mind paying for it for KVM.
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Found it:
https://storware.eu/en/storware-vprotect/
It shows incrementals in the screenshots anyways.
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You could theoretically just use one of the scripts to do incremental. It’s all AOW/ROW so you just get a new disk each snapshot. Then at the end of the week or whatever block commit everything back into the main image and start over.
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@stacksofplates said in KVM and Back Ups:
You could theoretically just use one of the scripts to do incremental. It’s all AOW/ROW so you just get a new disk each snapshot. Then at the end of the week or whatever block commit everything back into the main image and start over.
Something like that is what I want. Replicating what I get from Veeam now.
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Another option: http://convirture.com/solutions_backup.php
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Okay, so after doing some research, I've found some excellent news regarding KVM and incremental backups. But it also comes with some bad news.
It looks like the ability and support to do incremental backups is fully integrated into QEMU (I think as of 2.5).
It uses what I keep seeing referred to as Bitmaps, or more specifically Dirty Bitmaps or Block Dirty Bitmaps.
The bad news, from the little research I've done so far, is that all this stuff is managed using JSON files, which would be done via the QMP (QEMU Machine Protocol). This basically tells me that the only way to do incremental backups with KVM, is if you are a software engineer and know how to build software that uses the QMP, or have the time to figure it all the hell out. It all seems relatively simple...
So, this means we're still stick using something that costs money... because I doubt anyone would build something like this open sourced when there's a lot of money to be made... unless Google or someone does it for internal use and decides to make it open source.
I spent some more time looking at things since writing everything above, and looks like you can get starting issuing QMP commands via telnet to start, and then by CLI after installing socat and rlwrap. Again, no idea what I'm looking here: https://wiki.qemu.org/Documentation/QMP, but perhaps this deserves some more looking into.
Maybe someone else can clear it up for me so I know what I'm looking at. I wish I had more time and programming skills... I'd definitely be into figuring this stuff out and putting it out there.
maybe SodiumSuite devs feel like being nice?
Anyways, here are my references:
https://kashyapc.fedorapeople.org/QEMU-Docs/_build/html/docs/bitmaps.html
https://wiki.qemu.org/Features/IncrementalBackup
https://www.linux-kvm.org/images/e/e6/Kvm-forum2017_backup.pdf
https://events.static.linuxfound.org/sites/events/files/slides/kvm2015_rh_light_44_vfinal.pdf
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@tim_g
One problem is the dirty bitmapping in the API is push only so anything expecting an interactive API won't work. This means the backup system can't query the API for dirty bitmaps, only create them.(At least it was this way the last time I looked at it)
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This is quite an old thread, but it discusses exactly what I am researching.
I use KVM (via Fedora) in my home lab, and currently, since I have no production workloads on it, I run file only backups via a couple scripts.
However, I'd like to explore the possibility of using KVM in a production scenario. Backups are obviously key here. Automated, live, nightly snapshots (entire VM) is what I am looking for.
What would be the best way to achieve this? Assuming I am running a single KVM server with local storage.
Is this still a good option: https://storware.eu/products/vprotect/
Is there something better?
Can something like ProxMox handle this? https://www.proxmox.com/en/proxmox-ve