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mysql-backup

Back up mysql databases to... anywhere!

Overview

mysql-backup is a simple way to do MySQL database backups and restores when the database is running in a container.

It has the following features:

  • dump and restore
  • dump to local filesystem or to SMB server
  • select database user and password
  • connect to any container running on the same system
  • select how often to run a dump
  • select when to start the first dump, whether time of day or relative to container start time

Please see CONTRIBUTORS.md for a list of contributors.

Support

Support is available at the Slack channel https://slack.databack.io. We accept issues here and general support questions on Slack.

Backup

To run a backup, launch mysql-backup image as a container with the correct parameters. Everything is controlled by environment variables passed to the container.

For example:

docker run -d --restart=always -e DB_DUMP_FREQ=60 -e DB_DUMP_BEGIN=2330 -e DB_DUMP_TARGET=/db -e DB_SERVER=my-db-container -v /local/file/path:/db databack/mysql-backup

The above will run a dump every 60 minutes, beginning at the next 2330 local time, from the database accessible in the container my-db-container.

The following are the environment variables for a backup:

You should consider the use of --env-file=, docker secrets to keep your secrets out of your shell history

  • DB_SERVER: hostname to connect to database. Required.
  • DB_PORT: port to use to connect to database. Optional, defaults to 3306
  • DB_USER: username for the database
  • DB_PASS: password for the database
  • DB_NAMES: names of databases to dump; defaults to all databases in the database server
  • DB_DUMP_FREQ: How often to do a dump, in minutes. Defaults to 1440 minutes, or once per day.
  • DB_DUMP_BEGIN: What time to do the first dump. Defaults to immediate. Must be in one of two formats:
    • Absolute: HHMM, e.g. 2330 or 0415
    • Relative: +MM, i.e. how many minutes after starting the container, e.g. +0 (immediate), +10 (in 10 minutes), or +90 in an hour and a half
  • DB_DUMP_CRON: Set the dump schedule using standard crontab syntax, a single line.
  • RUN_ONCE: Run the backup once and exit if RUN_ONCE is set. Useful if you use an external scheduler (e.g. as part of an orchestration solution like Cattle or Docker Swarm or kubernetes cron jobs) and don't want the container to do the scheduling internally. If you use this option, all other scheduling options, like DB_DUMP_FREQ and DB_DUMP_BEGIN and DB_DUMP_CRON, become obsolete.
  • DB_DUMP_DEBUG: If set to true, print copious shell script messages to the container log. Otherwise only basic messages are printed.
  • DB_DUMP_TARGET: Where to put the dump file, should be a directory. Can have multiple targets separated by whitespace. Supports three formats:
    • Local: If the value of DB_DUMP_TARGET starts with a / character, will dump to a local path, which should be volume-mounted.
    • SMB: If the value of DB_DUMP_TARGET is a URL of the format smb://hostname/share/path/ then it will connect via SMB.
    • S3: If the value of DB_DUMP_TARGET is a URL of the format s3://bucketname/path then it will connect via awscli.
  • AWS_ACCESS_KEY_ID: AWS Key ID
  • AWS_SECRET_ACCESS_KEY: AWS Secret Access Key
  • AWS_DEFAULT_REGION: Region in which the bucket resides
  • AWS_ENDPOINT_URL: Specify an alternative endpoint for s3 interopable systems e.g. Digitalocean
  • SMB_USER: SMB username. May also be specified in DB_DUMP_TARGET with an smb:// url. If both specified, this variable overrides the value in the URL.
  • SMB_PASS: SMB password. May also be specified in DB_DUMP_TARGET with an smb:// url. If both specified, this variable overrides the value in the URL.
  • COMPRESSION: Compression to use. Supported are: gzip (default), bzip2
  • DB_DUMP_BY_SCHEMA: Whether to use separate files per schema in the compressed file (true), or a single dump file (false). Defaults to false.
  • DB_DUMP_KEEP_PERMISSIONS: Whether to keep permissions for a file target. By default, mysql-backup copies the backup compressed file to the target with cp -a. In certain filesystems with certain permissions, this may cause errors. You can disable the -a flag by setting DB_DUMP_KEEP_PERMISSIONS=false. Defaults to true.
  • MYSQLDUMP_OPTS: A string of options to pass to mysqldump, e.g. MYSQLDUMP_OPTS="--opt abc --param def --max_allowed_packet=123455678" will run mysqldump --opt abc --param def --max_allowed_packet=123455678

Scheduling

There are several options for scheduling how often a backup should run:

  • RUN_ONCE: run just once and exit.
  • DB_DUMP_FREQ and DB_DUMP_BEGIN: run every x minutes, and run the first one at a particular time.
  • DB_DUMP_CRON: run on a schedule.

Cron Scheduling

If a cron-scheduled backup takes longer than the beginning of the next backup window, it will be skipped. For example, if your cron line is scheduled to backup every hour, as follows:

0 * * * *

And the backup that runs at 13:00 finishes at 14:05, the next backup will not be immediate, but rather at 15:00.

The cron algorithm is as follows: after each backup run, calculate the next time that the cron statement will be true and schedule the backup then.

Order of Priority

The scheduling options have an order of priority:

  1. RUN_ONCE runs once, immediately, and exits, ignoring everything else.
  2. DB_DUMP_CRON: runs according to the cron schedule, ignoring DB_DUMP_FREQ and DB_DUMP_BEGIN.
  3. DB_DUMP_FREQ and DB_DUMP_BEGIN: if nothing else is set.

Permissions

By default, the backup/restore process does not run as root (UID O). Whenever possible, you should run processes (not just in containers) as users other than root. In this case, it runs as username appuser with UID/GID 1005.

In most scenarios, this will not affect your backup process negatively. However, if you are usingn the "Local" dump target, i.e. your DB_DUMP_TARGET starts with / - and, most likely, is a volume mounted into the container - you can run into permissions issues. For example, if your mounted directory is owned by root on the host, then the backup process will be unable to write to it.

In this case, you have two options:

  • Run the container as root, docker run --user 0 ... or, in idocker-compose.yml, user: "0"
  • Ensure your mounted directory is writable as UID or GID 1005.

Database Container

In order to perform the actual dump, mysql-backup needs to connect to the database container. You must pass the database hostname - which can be another container or any database process accessible from the backup container - by passing the environment variable DB_SERVER with the hostname or IP address of the database. You may override the default port of 3306 by passing the environment variable DB_PORT.

docker run -d --restart=always -e DB_USER=user123 -e DB_PASS=pass123 -e DB_DUMP_FREQ=60 -e DB_DUMP_BEGIN=2330 -e DB_DUMP_TARGET=/db -e DB_SERVER=my-db-container -v /local/file/path:/db databack/mysql-backup

Dump Target

The dump target is where you want the backup files to be saved. The backup file always is a compressed file the following format:

db_backup_YYYYMMDDHHmm.<compression>

Where:

  • YYYY = year in 4 digits
  • MM = month number from 01-12
  • DD = date for 01-31
  • HH = hour from 00-23
  • mm = minute from 00-59
  • compression = appropriate file ending for selected compression, one of: gz (gzip, default); bz2 (bzip2)

The time used is UTC time at the moment the dump begins.

The dump target is the location where the dump should be placed, defaults to /backup in the container. Of course, having the backup in the container does not help very much, so we very strongly recommend you volume mount it outside somewhere. See the above example.

If you use a URL like smb://host/share/path, you can have it save to an SMB server. If you need loging credentials, use smb://user:pass@host/share/path.

Note that for smb, if the username includes a domain, e.g. your user is mydom\myuser, then you should use the samb convention of replacing the '' with a ';'. In other words smb://mydom;myuser:pass@host/share/path

If you use a URL like s3://bucket/path, you can have it save to an S3 bucket.

Note that for s3, you'll need to specify your AWS credentials and default AWS region via AWS_ACCESS_KEY_ID, AWS_SECRET_ACCESS_KEY and AWS_DEFAULT_REGION

Also note that if you are using an s3 interopable storage system like DigitalOcean you can use that as the target by setting AWS_ENDPOINT_URL to ${REGION_NAME}.digitaloceanspaces.com and setting DB_DUMP_TARGET to s3://bucketname/path.

Custom backup source file name

There may be use-cases where you need to modify the source path of the backup file before it gets uploaded to the dump target. An example is combining multiple compressed files into one and giving it a new name, i.e. db-other-files-combined.tar.gz. To do that, place an executable file called source.sh in the following path:

  /scripts.d/source.sh

Whatever your script returns to stdout will be used as the source name for the backup file.

The following exported environment variables will be available to the script above:

  • DUMPFILE: full path in the container to the output file
  • NOW: date of the backup, as included in DUMPFILE and given by date -u +"%Y%m%d%H%M%S"
  • DUMPDIR: path to the destination directory so for example you can copy a new tarball including some other files along with the sql dump.
  • DB_DUMP_DEBUG: To enable debug mode in post-backup scripts.

Example run:

  NOW=20180930151304 DUMPFILE=/tmp/backups/db_backup_201809301513.gz DUMPDIR=/backup DB_DUMP_DEBUG=true /scripts.d/source.sh

Example custom source script:

  #!/bin/bash
  
  # Rename source file
  echo -n "db-plus-wordpress_${NOW}.gz"

Custom backup target file name

There may be use-cases where you need to modify the target upload path of the backup file before it gets uploaded. An example is uploading a backup to a date stamped object key path in S3, i.e. s3://bucket/2018/08/23/path. To do that, place an executable file called target.sh in the following path:

  /scripts.d/target.sh

Whatever your script returns to stdout will be used as the name for the backup file.

The following exported environment variables will be available to the script above:

  • DUMPFILE: full path in the container to the output file
  • NOW: date of the backup, as included in DUMPFILE and given by date -u +"%Y%m%d%H%M%S"
  • DUMPDIR: path to the destination directory so for example you can copy a new tarball including some other files along with the sql dump.
  • DB_DUMP_DEBUG: To enable debug mode in post-backup scripts.

Example run:

  NOW=20180930151304 DUMPFILE=/tmp/backups/db_backup_201809301513.gz DUMPDIR=/backup DB_DUMP_DEBUG=true /scripts.d/target.sh

Example custom target script:

  #!/bin/bash
  
  # Rename target file
  echo -n "db-plus-wordpress-uploaded_${NOW}.gz"

Backup pre and post processing

Any executable script with .sh extension in /scripts.d/pre-backup/ or /scripts.d/post-backup/ directories in the container will be executed before and after the backup dump process has finished respectively, but before uploading the backup file to its ultimate target. This is useful if you need to include some files along with the database dump, for example, to backup a WordPress install.

To use them you need to add a host volume that points to the post-backup scripts in the docker host. Start the container like this:

docker run -d --restart=always -e DB_USER=user123 -e DB_PASS=pass123 -e DB_DUMP_FREQ=60 \
  -e DB_DUMP_BEGIN=2330 -e DB_DUMP_TARGET=/db -e DB_SERVER=my-db-container:db \
  -v /path/to/pre-backup/scripts:/scripts.d/pre-backup \
  -v /path/to/post-backup/scripts:/scripts.d/post-backup \
  -v /local/file/path:/db \
  databack/mysql-backup

Or, if you prefer compose:

version: '2.1'
services:
  backup:
    image: databack/mysql-backup
    restart: always
    volumes:
     - /local/file/path:/db
     - /path/to/pre-backup/scripts:/scripts.d/pre-backup
     - /path/to/post-backup/scripts:/scripts.d/post-backup
    env:
     - DB_DUMP_TARGET=/db
     - DB_USER=user123
     - DB_PASS=pass123
     - DB_DUMP_FREQ=60
     - DB_DUMP_BEGIN=2330
     - DB_SERVER=mysql_db
  mysql_db:
    image: mysql
    ....

The scripts are executed in the entrypoint script, which means it has access to all exported environment variables. The following are available, but we are happy to export more as required (just open an issue or better yet, a pull request):

  • DUMPFILE: full path in the container to the output file
  • NOW: date of the backup, as included in DUMPFILE and given by date -u +"%Y%m%d%H%M%S"
  • DUMPDIR: path to the destination directory so for example you can copy a new tarball including some other files along with the sql dump.
  • DB_DUMP_DEBUG: To enable debug mode in post-backup scripts.

In addition, all of the environment variables set for the container will be available to the script.

For example, the following script will rename the backup file after the dump is done:

#!/bin/bash
# Rename backup file.
if [[ -n "$DB_DUMP_DEBUG" ]]; then
  set -x
fi

if [ -e ${DUMPFILE} ];
then
  now=$(date +"%Y-%m-%d-%H_%M")
  new_name=db_backup-${now}.gz
  old_name=$(basename ${DUMPFILE})
  echo "Renaming backup file from ${old_name} to ${new_name}"
  mv ${DUMPFILE} ${DUMPDIR}/${new_name}
else
  echo "ERROR: Backup file ${DUMPFILE} does not exist!"
fi

You can think of this as a sort of basic plugin system. Look at the source of the entrypoint script for other variables that can be used.

Restore

Dump Restore

If you wish to run a restore to an existing database, you can use mysql-backup to do a restore.

You need only the following environment variables:

You should consider the use of --env-file= to keep your secrets out of your shell history

  • DB_SERVER: hostname to connect to database. Required.
  • DB_PORT: port to use to connect to database. Optional, defaults to 3306
  • DB_USER: username for the database
  • DB_PASS: password for the database
  • DB_RESTORE_TARGET: path to the actual restore file, which should be a compressed dump file. The target can be an absolute path, which should be volume mounted, an smb or S3 URL, similar to the target.
  • DB_DUMP_DEBUG: if true, dump copious outputs to the container logs while restoring.
  • To use the S3 driver AWS_ACCESS_KEY_ID, AWS_SECRET_ACCESS_KEY and AWS_DEFAULT_REGION will need to be defined.

Examples:

  1. Restore from a local file: docker run -e DB_SERVER=gotodb.example.com -e DB_USER=user123 -e DB_PASS=pass123 -e DB_RESTORE_TARGET=/backup/db_backup_201509271627.gz -v /local/path:/backup databack/mysql-backup
  2. Restore from an SMB file: docker run -e DB_SERVER=gotodb.example.com -e DB_USER=user123 -e DB_PASS=pass123 -e DB_RESTORE_TARGET=smb://smbserver/share1/backup/db_backup_201509271627.gz databack/mysql-backup
  3. Restore from an S3 file: docker run -e DB_SERVER=gotodb.example.com -e AWS_ACCESS_KEY_ID=awskeyid -e AWS_SECRET_ACCESS_KEY=secret -e AWS_DEFAULT_REGION=eu-central-1 -e DB_USER=user123 -e DB_PASS=pass123 -e DB_RESTORE_TARGET=s3://bucket/path/db_backup_201509271627.gz databack/mysql-backup

Restore when using docker-compose

docker-compose automagically creates a network when started. docker run simply attaches to the bridge network. If you are trying to communicate with a mysql container started by docker-compose, you'll need to specify the network in your command arguments. You can use docker network ls to see what network is being used, or you can declare a network in your docker-compose.yml.

Example:

docker run -e DB_SERVER=gotodb.example.com -e DB_USER=user123 -e DB_PASS=pass123 -e DB_RESTORE_TARGET=/backup/db_backup_201509271627.gz -v /local/path:/backup --network="skynet" databack/mysql-backup

Using docker (or rancher) secrets

Environment variables used in this image can be passed in files as well. This is useful when you are using docker (or rancher) secrets for storing sensitive information.

As you can set environment variable with -e ENVIRONMENT_VARIABLE=value, you can also use -e ENVIRONMENT_VARIABLE_FILE=/path/to/file. Contents of that file will be assigned to the environment variable.

Example:

docker run -d \
  -e DB_HOST_FILE=/run/secrets/DB_HOST \
  -e DB_USER_FILE=/run/secrets/DB_USER \
  -e DB_PASS_FILE=/run/secrets/DB_PASS \
  -v /local/file/path:/db \
  databack/mysql-backup

Restore pre and post processing

As with backups pre and post processing, you can do the same with restore operations. Any executable script with .sh extension in /scripts.d/pre-restore/ or /scripts.d/post-restore/ directories in the container will be executed before the restore process starts and after it finishes respectively. This is useful if you need to restore a backup file that includes some files along with the database dump.

For example, to restore a WordPress install, you would uncompress a tarball containing the db backup and a second tarball with the contents of a WordPress install on pre-restore. Then on post-restore, uncompress the WordPress files on the container's web server root directory.

For an example take a look at the post-backup examples, all variables defined for post-backup scripts are available for pre-processing too. Also don't forget to add the same host volumes for pre-restore and post-restore directories as described for post-backup processing.

Automated Build

This github repo is the source for the mysql-backup image. The actual image is stored on the docker hub at databack/mysql-backup, and is triggered with each commit to the source by automated build via Webhooks.

There are 2 builds: 1 for version based on the git tag, and another for the particular version number.

Tests

The tests all run in docker containers, to avoid the need to install anything other than make and docker, and even can run over remote docker connections, avoiding any local bind-mounts. To run all tests:

make test

To run with debugging

make test DEBUG=debug

The above will generate copious outputs, so you might want to redirect stdout and stderr to a file.

This runs each of the several testing targets, each of which is a script in test/test_*.sh, which sets up tests, builds containers, runs the tests, and collects the output.

License

Released under the MIT License. Copyright Avi Deitcher https://github.com/deitch