Table of Contents
The automated backup system contained in the Symbiosis system protects against accidental deletion or corruption of file. These backups are designed to run once per day and archive the contents of a number of important system directories.
Having backups stored locally is not sufficient to provide real protection from accidents though, as they might be removed or deleted. Therefore your local backups should be archived to a remote machine.
For Bytemark customers the backup script is configured to attempt to do this, using the remote backup space provided by Bytemark, as documented upon the Bytemark support site.
Your system will maintain full backups of the following locations:
/etc/
/home/
/root/
/srv/
/usr/local/
/var/mail/
/var/lib/
/var/backups/mysql/
Additionally every MySQL database you have upon your system will also be exported and backed up.
The backup system uses the backup2l program, which is configured to
backup the files in the above locations into the directory
/var/backups/localhost/
. For more information about
backup2l, please refer to its
manual page.
As mentioned above, the backup script will attempt to ensure that your local backups are uploaded to a remote server, to protect against data loss if your system fails catastrophically.
For Bytemark customers this location should be determined automatically.
If this process fails, or you are not a Bytemark customer, you can
specify the correct location in /etc/symbiosis/dns.d/backup.name
.
This should be a fully-specified rsync path.
Every day, when runs it generates output saying what has been backed up, and if there were any errors during the backup process. This email will get sent to the root account of the local hostname.
It’s important to realize that the automated backups, especially their transfer to the remote backup space, is done on a best effort basis. You should carefully check the backup2l report for errors and from time to time practise recovering files at random from the remote server, to ensure that there are recoverable backups.