Run automatic restic backups via a Docker container.
- run scheduled backups
- backup to any (local or remote) target supported by restic
- support for tags, exclude definitions, and all other optional restic options
- automatic forgetting of old backups
- prune backups on a schedule
- remove a stale repository lock
- can be used as a (global) Docker swarm service in order to backup every cluster node
- multi-arch: the image
mazzolino/restic
runs onamd64
as well asarmv7
(for now)
Use the supplied example configs to set up a backup schedule.
The Compose files contain a backup and a prune service which can be scheduled independently of each other. Feel free to remove the prune service if you want to run the prune jobs manually.
Adjust the supplied docker-compose.yml as needed. Then run:
docker-compose up -d
Adjust the supplied docker-swarm.yml as needed. Then deploy it as a stack:
docker stack deploy -f docker-swarm.yml backup
This project uses semantic versioning. The docker images (under mazzolino/restic
) are tagged accordingly:
latest
- built from the latestmaster
commit1.6.0
- one tag for each patch release1.6
,1
- points to the latest patch release below that minor / major version (in this case1.6.0
)
It is recommended to pin to the latest patch version (e.g. 1.6.0
) and update the version manually (or using an automated process like Renovate).
Look at the CHANGELOG or Github releases to find the latest version.
Also, an image will be generated for each pull request. The tags are labeled pr-xxx
where xxx
is the id of the pull request.
In order to restore files on a host where the container is already running via Docker Compose, you can use exec
:
# Find the latest snapshot for the current host (note the ID)
docker-compose exec app restic snapshots -H <HOSTNAME>
# Restore the given file on the host
docker-compose exec app restic restore --include /path/to/file <ID>
When using Swarm mode, you need to manually SSH into the host and run docker exec -it ..
accordingly.
You can use the same config to run any restic command with the given configuration.
When using the Docker Compose setup:
docker-compose run --rm app <RESTIC ARGS>
E.g.
docker-compose run --rm app snapshots
When given the unlock
command, the repository check will be skipped (because it will fail on a locked repository either way).
Note: BACKUP_CRON
, PRUNE_CRON
and CHECK_CRON
are mutually exclusive.
BACKUP_CRON
- A cron expression for when to run the backup. E.g.0 30 3 * * *
in order to run every night at 3:30 am. See the go-cron documentation for details on the expression format (a customized go-cron is used which allows the definition of seconds as first parameter).PRUNE_CRON
- A cron expression for when to run the prune job. E.g.0 0 4 * * *
in order to run every night at 4:00 am. See the go-cron documentation for details on the expression format (a customized go-cron is used which allows the definition of seconds as first parameter).CHECK_CRON
- A cron expression for when to run the check job. E.g.0 15 5 * * *
in order to run every night at 5:15 am. See the go-cron documentation for details on the expression format (a customized go-cron is used which allows the definition of seconds as first parameter).RUN_ON_STARTUP
- Set to"true"
to execute a backup or prune job right on startup, in addition to the given cron expression. Disabled by defaultRESTIC_REPOSITORY
- Location of the restic repository. You can use any target supported by restic. Default/mnt/restic
RESTIC_BACKUP_SOURCES
- Source directory to backup. Make sure to mount this into the container as a volume (see the example configs). Default/data
RESTIC_PASSWORD
- Password for the restic repository. Will also be used to initialize the repository if it is not yet initializedRESTIC_BACKUP_ARGS
- If specifiedrestic backup
is run with the given arguments, e.g. for tags, exclude definitions, or verbose logging:--tag docker-volumes --exclude-file 'exclude.txt' --verbose
. Make sure not to use the=
form of assignment, but use spaces between parameter and value. See the restic backup documentation for available optionsRESTIC_BACKUP_TAGS
- Deprecated. Tags to set for each snapshot, separated by commas. This option will soon be removed. Please useRESTIC_BACKUP_ARGS
to define tags.RESTIC_FORGET_ARGS
- If specifiedrestic forget
is run with the given arguments after each backup or before every prune, e.g.--prune --keep-last 14 --keep-daily 1
. See the restic forget documentation for available optionsRESTIC_PRUNE_ARGS
- If specifiedrestic prune
is run with the given arguments, e.g. for B2 concurrent connection settings and verbose logging:-o b2.connections=10 --verbose
.RESTIC_CHECK_ARGS
- If specifiedrestic check
is run with the given arguments, e.g.--read-data-subset=10%
to check a randomly choosen subset (10%) of the repository pack files. Without option, only the structure of the repository is checked. The option--read-data-subset
will also check data, at the cost of transfering them from the repository.; e.g. for B2 concurrent connection settings and verbose logging:-o b2.connections=10 --verbose
.- (Additional variables as needed for the chosen backup target. E.g.
B2_ACCOUNT_ID
andB2_ACCOUNT_KEY
for Backblaze B2. See official restic documentation about supported environment variables.) TZ
- Optional. Set your timezone for the correct cron execution time.
In order to use the rclone
repository type, you need to prepare an rclone.conf
file and mount it inside the container at /run/secrets/rclone.conf
.
So when in swarm mode, you can just use rclone.conf
as a Docker secret.
Example for Docker Compose:
services:
backup:
# ...
volumes:
- ./rclone.conf:/run/secrets/rclone.conf:ro
Example for Docker swarm mode:
services:
backup:
# ...
secrets:
- rclone.conf
secrets:
rclone.conf:
file: ./rclone.conf
If you are using rclone backends which make use of oauth refresh tokens (B2, OneDrive, Google) the rclone.conf
needs to be writable inside the container. That means you need to directly mount a directory (r/w) which contains the config file to the final config directory inside the container.
Example for Docker Compose:
services:
backup:
# ...
volumes:
- ./rclone:/root/.config/rclone
Where ./rclone
should be a local directory which contains your rclone.conf
.
In order to use the sftp
repository type, you need to prepare a .ssh
directory with your private ssh key(s), known_hosts
(and an optional config
file) and mount it inside the container at /run/secrets/.ssh
.
Example for Docker Compose:
services:
backup:
# ...
volumes:
- ./.ssh:/run/secrets/.ssh:ro
If you want to mount your backup repository inside the container using restic mount
, you need to give the container SYS_ADMIN privilege and allow the fuse device.
Example for Docker Compose:
services:
backup:
# ...
cap_add:
- SYS_ADMIN
devices:
- /dev/fuse
Also the fuse kernel module should be loaded (modprobe fuse
).
It's possible to optionally execute commands (like database dumps, or stopping a running container to avoid inconsistent backup data) before the actual backup starts. If you want to execute docker
commands on the host, mount the Docker socket to the container. To do that add the following volume to the compose or swarm configuration:
- /var/run/docker.sock:/var/run/docker.sock
You can add one or multiple commands by specifying the following environment variable:
PRE_COMMANDS: |-
docker exec nextcloud-postgres pg_dumpall -U nextcloud -f /data/nextcloud.sql
docker exec other-postgres pg_dumpall -U other -f /data/other.sql
docker stop my_container
The commands specified in PRE_COMMANDS
are executed one by one.
It's possible to optionally execute commands (like restarting a temporarily stopped container, send a mail...) once the actual backup has finished. Like for pre-backup commands, if you want to execute docker
commands on the host, mount the Docker socket to the container.
You can add one or multiple commands by specifying the following environment variables:
POST_COMMANDS_SUCCESS: |-
/my/scripts/mail-success.sh
POST_COMMANDS_FAILURE: |-
/my/scripts/mail-failure.sh
POST_COMMANDS_INCOMPLETE: |-
/my/scripts/mail-incomplete.sh
POST_COMMANDS_EXIT: |-
docker start my_container
The commands specified are executed one by one.
POST_COMMANDS_SUCCESS
commands will be executed after a fully successful backup run (i.e. all files could be read).POST_COMMANDS_FAILURE
commands will be executed after a failed backup run.POST_COMMANDS_INCOMPLETE
commands will be executed if the backup is incomplete (i.e. one or more files could not be read).POST_COMMANDS_EXIT
will always be executed, after both successful or failed backup runs.
By default, when any file could not be backed up, the commands from POST_COMMANDS_FAILURE
will be executed. When SUCCESS_ON_INCOMPLETE_BACKUP
is set to "true"
, the commands from POST_COMMANDS_INCOMPLETE
will be executed instead. Unless those are not configured – then the commands from POST_COMMANDS_SUCCESS
will be executed.
The Resticker docker image does not contain any tools for sending notifications, apart from curl
. You should thus connect a second container for that purpose. For example, this is how mail notifications can be sent using apprise-microservice:
services:
app:
image: mazzolino/restic:1.1
environment:
# ...
POST_COMMANDS_FAILURE: |-
curl -X POST --data "{\"title\": \"Backup failed\", \"body\": \"\"}" http://notify:5000
networks:
- notification
notify:
image: mazzolino/apprise-microservice:0.1
environment:
NOTIFICATION_URLS: mailto://...
networks:
- notification
networks:
notification:
Use the supplied Makefile in order to build your own image:
make image IMAGE=myuser/restic
You can also push images and build on a different architecture:
make image IMAGE=myuser/restic ARCH=arm
For more targets, see the Makefile.
There are automated tests for the scripts running in the container. You need to install shellspec to run them.
The test suite can be executed by running the following in the resticker source directory:
shellspec
This will build the image, create a container and run the tests inside the container.
restic-backup-docker was used as a starting point. Thanks!