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Full Discussion: ufsdump to a remote server
Operating Systems Solaris ufsdump to a remote server Post 302299117 by choogendyk on Thursday 19th of March 2009 08:42:38 AM
Old 03-19-2009
Quote:
Originally Posted by incredible
You can use rsh or ssh. For example:
ssh remote_server ufsdump /path/to/fs
syntax and conceptualization of that is all wrong.

If you want to ssh to the remote server and then execute something there, then you need quotes around the "something." e.g.

ssh remote_server "ufsdump /path/to/fs"

But, the OP wants to run ufsdump and send that output to the remote_server to be stored there. Presumably, he wants to automate that. Also, ufsdump has other options that need to be dealt with. So, things get noticeably more complicated.

ufsdump needs to be run as root. You want automatic login with ssh certs, but you don't want to do that as root. So, set up a backup user, and setup ssh certs for the backup user (see OpenSSH Public Key Authentication for guidance.) Then run some variation of the following, adapted to your system and needs:

Code:

( /usr/lib/fs/ufs/ufsdump ${LEVEL}cnlTfuN 2h - ${RDEV} ${WHICHSNAP}; \
  STATCODE=$?; echo ${STATCODE} > ${CODEFILE} ) \
  | su - backup -c "ssh ${TAPESERVER} \"dd obs=64b of=${TAPDEV}\"";
STATCODE=`cat ${CODEFILE}`;

That generates the data stream from ufsdump, pipes it through ssh, and uses dd on the opposite end to put it to a tape drive. It happens to be embedded in a larger script, and is using an fssnap snapshot to do the dump. It also captures the return status of the ufsdump so that a script can take action based on the success or failure, or at least report it. That introduced a bit of complication, because that has to be paired with the ufsdump as a subprocess, and you can't pass environment variables back out from a subprocess -- thus, the code file to get the status code back out.

Anyway, I've already given the reference/link to the full script.
 

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BACKUPNINJA(1)							backupninja package						    BACKUPNINJA(1)

NAME
BACKUPNINJA - A lightweight, extensible meta-backup system "a silent flower blossom death strike to lost data." SYNOPSIS
backupninja [ -h ] [ -d ] [ -n ] [ -t ] [ -f filename ] [ --run filename ] DESCRIPTION
Backupninja allows you to coordinate system backups by dropping a few simple configuration files into /etc/backup.d/. Most programs you might use for making backups don't have their own configuration file format. Backupninja provides a centralized way to configure and coor- dinate many different backup utilities. FEATURES
- easy to read ini style configuration files. - you can drop in scripts to handle new types of backups. - backup actions can be scheduled. - you can choose when status report emails are mailed to you (always, on warning, on error, never). - console-based wizard (ninjahelper) makes it easy to create backup action configuration files. - passwords are never sent via the command line to helper programs. - in order to backup a db or sql database, you cannot simply copy database files. backupninja helps you safely export the data to a format which you can backup. - works with Linux-Vservers. Backup types include: - secure, remote, incremental filesytem backup (via rdiff-backup). incremental data is compressed. permissions are retained even with an unpriviledged backup user. - basic system and hardware information. - encrypted remote backups (via duplicity). - safe backup of MySQL, PostgreSQL, OpenLDAP, and subversion databases. - burn CD/DVDs or create ISOs. OPTIONS
-h, --help Show summary of options -d, --debug Run in debug mode, where all log messages are output to the current shell. -f, --conffile CONF_FILE Use CONF_FILE for the main configuration instead of /etc/backupninja.conf -t, --test Run in test mode, no actions are actually taken. -n, --now Perform actions now, instead of when they might be scheduled. --run ACTION_FILE Runs the action configuration ACTION_FILE and exits. CONFIGURATION
General settings are configured in /etc/backupninja.conf. In this file you can set the log level and change the default directory loca- tions. See backupninja.conf(5). To preform the actual backup actions, backupninja processes each action configuration file in /etc/backup.d according to the file's suffix. See backup.d(5). EXAMPLE USAGE
Backupninja can be used to implement whatever backup strategy you choose. It is intended, however, to be used like so: First, databases are safely copied or exported to /var/backups. Often, you cannot make a file backup of a database while it is in use, hence the need to use special tools to make a safe copy or export into /var/backups. Then, vital parts of the file system, including /var/backups, are nightly pushed to a remote, off-site, hard disk (using rdiff-backup). The local user is root, but the remote user is not privileged. Hopefully, the remote filesystem is encrypted. In order for this to work (ie for diff-backup to run unattended), you must create ssh keys on the source server and copy the public key to the remote user's authorized keys file. For example: root@srchost# ssh-keygen -t rsa -b 4096 root@srchost# ssh-copy-id -i /root/.ssh/id_dsa.pub backup@desthost Now, you should be able to ssh from user 'root' on srchost to user 'backup' on desthost without specifying a password. When prompted for a password by ssh-keygen, just leave it blank by hitting return. The "wizard" ninjahelper(1) will walk you through these steps. FILES
/usr/sbin/backupninja main script /etc/backupninja.conf main configuration file; general options /etc/cron.d/backupninja runs main script hourly /etc/logrotate.d/backupninja rotates backupninja.log /etc/backup.d directory for configuration files /usr/share/backupninja directory for handler scripts /usr/share/doc/backupninja/examples example action configuration files. SEE ALSO
ninjahelper(1), backupninja.conf(5), backup.d(5), AUTHOR
BACKUPNINJA was written by the riseup.net collective. riseup October 10, 2005 BACKUPNINJA(1)
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