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Full Discussion: Tar backup of debian server
Operating Systems Linux Debian Tar backup of debian server Post 302921132 by rbatte1 on Wednesday 15th of October 2014 06:05:22 AM
Old 10-15-2014
Quote:
Originally Posted by coolatt
The following is the command I use for backup:

Code:
tar -cvpf /BACKUP/backup-PROD.tar /        \
   --exclude=/proc --exclude=/lost+found   \
   --exclude=/mnt --exclude=/sys           \
   --exclude=/dev --exclude=/BACKUP        \
   --exclude=/media

The restore was done on a PC, I boot with a live CD, wipe everything on the /
, then UNTAR everything there.

For the PC to successfully boot:
1. MBR/GRUB must be properly configured
2. udev > persistent rules - must remove the MAC addresses
3. in /boot/grub directory necessary changes needs to be done if you are changing from a raid 1 to a non-raid configuration.

The restore was a good experience for me and worked without any issues
Dear coolatt,

Thanks for the update and the really useful procedure and list of updates that are required (I've split the line up so it shows clearly here) I'm not sure if it is officially supported or what complications you might hit with dissimilar hardware, but if it gives people a starting point to clone with then that's really useful. There are also commercial products available which can do this, but I have no ideas on the costs or your budget.
The two I know of are Adaptable System Recovery and Christie Clone Manager

As for citations, I have used ASR myself. It's good and a DR solution that you can bare-metal recover from (or clone). My company has use CCM elsewhere for transferring in servers from another company. It might need the live server available to clone elsewhere as opposed to the backup/restore that ASR gives you. I am less familiar with it.



I hope that these help, but in any case thanks for your input. Smilie


Robin
 

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vzdump(1)						       Proxmox Documentation							 vzdump(1)

NAME
vzdump - backup utility for virtual machine SYNOPSIS
vzdump OPTIONS [--all | <VMID>] --exclude VMID exclude VMID (assumes --all) --exclude-path REGEX exclude certain files/directories. You can use this option more than once to specify multiple exclude paths --stdexcludes exclude temporary files and logs --compress compress dump file (gzip) --storage STORAGE_ID store resulting files to STORAGE_ID (PVE only) --script execute hook script --dumpdir DIR store resulting files in DIR --maxfiles N maximal number of backup files per VM. --tmpdir DIR store temporary files in DIR. --suspend and --stop are using this directory to store a copy of the VM. --mailto EMAIL send notification mail to EMAIL. You can use this option more than once to specify multiple receivers --stop stop/start VM if running --suspend suspend/resume VM when running --snapshot use LVM snapshot when running --size MB LVM snapshot size (default 1024) --bwlimit KBPS limit I/O bandwidth; KBytes per second --lockwait MINUTES maximal time to wait for the global lock. vzdump uses a global lock file to make sure that only one instance is running (running several instance puts too much load on a server). Default is 180 (3 hours). --stopwait MINUTES maximal time to wait until a VM is stopped. DESCRIPTION
vzdump is an utility to make consistent snapshots of running virtual machines (VMs). It basically creates a tar archive of the VM private area, which also includes the VM configuration files. vzdump currently supports OpenVZ and QemuServer VMs. There are several ways to provide consistency: "stop" mode Stop the VM during backup. This results in a very long downtime. "suspend" mode For OpenVZ, this mode uses rsync to copy the VM to a temporary location (see option --tmpdir). Then the VM is suspended and a second rsync copies changed files. After that, the VM is started (resume) again. This results in a minimal downtime, but needs additional space to hold the VM copy. For QemuServer, this mode work like "stop" mode, but uses suspend/resume instead of stop/start. "snapshot" mode This mode uses LVM2 snapshots. There is no downtime, but snapshot mode needs LVM2 and some free space on the corresponding volume group to create the LVM snapshot. BACKUP FILE NAMES
Newer version of vzdump encodes the virtual machine type and the backup time into the filename, for example vzdump-openvz-105-2009_10_09-11_04_43.tar That way it is possible to store several backup into the same directory. The parameter "maxfiles" can be used to specify the maximal number of backups to keep. RESTORE
The resulting tar files can be restored with the following programs. vzrestore: OpenVZ restore utility qmrestore: QemuServer restore utility For details see the corresponding manual pages. CONFIGURATION
Global configuration is stored in /etc/vzdump.conf. tmpdir: DIR dumpdir: DIR storage: STORAGE_ID mode: snapshot|suspend|stop bwlimit: KBPS lockwait: MINUTES stopwait: MINUTES size: MB maxfiles: N script: FILENAME HOOK SCRIPT
You can specify a hook script with option "--script". This script is called at various phases of the backup process, with parameters accordingly set. You can find an example in the documentation directory ("hook-script.pl"). EXCLUSIONS (OpenVZ only) vzdump skips the following files wit option --stdexcludes /var/log/.+ /tmp/.+ /var/tmp/.+ /var/run/.+pid You can manually specify exclude paths, for example: > vzdump --exclude-path "/tmp/.+" --exclude-path "/var/tmp/.+" 777 (only excludes tmp directories) Configuration files are also stored inside the backup archive (/etc/vzdump), and will be correctly restored. LIMITATIONS
VZDump does not save ACLs. EXAMPLES
Simply dump VM 777 - no snapshot, just archive the VM private area and configuration files to the default dump directory (usually /vz/dump/). > vzdump 777 Use rsync and suspend/resume to create an snapshot (minimal downtime). > vzdump --suspend 777 Backup all VMs and send notification mails to root. > vzdump --suspend --all --mailto root Use LVM2 to create snapshots (no downtime). > vzdump --dumpdir /mnt/backup --snapshot 777 Backup all VMs excluding VM 101 and 102 > vzdump --suspend --exclude 101 --exclude 102 Restore an OpenVZ machine to VM 600 > vzrestore /mnt/backup/vzdump-openvz-777.tar 600 Restore an Qemu/KVM machine to VM 601 > qmrestore /mnt/backup/vzdump-qemu-888.tar 601 SEE ALSO
vzrestore(1) qmrestore(1) AUTHOR
Dietmar Maurer <dietmar@proxmox.com> Many thanks to Proxmox Server Solutions (www.proxmox.com) for sponsoring this work. COPYRIGHT AND DISCLAIMER
Copyright (C) 2007-2009 Proxmox Server Solutions GmbH Copyright: vzdump is under GNU GPL, the GNU General Public License. This program is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it under the terms of the GNU General Public License as published by the Free Software Foundation; version 2 dated June, 1991. This program is distributed in the hope that it will be useful, but WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. See the GNU General Public License for more details. You should have received a copy of the GNU General Public License along with this program; if not, write to the Free Software Foundation, Inc., 51 Franklin St, Fifth Floor, Boston, MA 02110-1301, USA. 1.2 2012-04-07 vzdump(1)
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