Difference between revisions of "Time Machine for Ubuntu"
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WARNING: There is absolutely no guarantee, that this script is working, moreover, there is no guarantee, that it will not harm your computer! |
WARNING: There is absolutely no guarantee, that this script is working, moreover, there is no guarantee, that it will not harm your computer! |
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Things to be done: |
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1) Age old files |
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2) Sync new files |
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=== Aging old files === |
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The snapshots will be kept in directories named snap.0 (newest), snap.1, snap.2, etc. |
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Aging old files means making hard links of old files (duplicating them). |
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Aging is accomplished with the following script: |
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<pre> |
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#!/bin/bash |
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unset PATH # suggestion from H. Milz: avoid accidental use of $PATH |
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SNAPSHOT_RW=/path/to/your/backup/directory |
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# change these paths to your needs, when desired |
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ECHO=/bin/echo |
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RM=/bin/rm |
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MV=/bin/mv |
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CP=/bin/cp |
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TOUCH=/usr/bin/touch |
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CPIO=/bin/cpio |
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RSYNC=/usr/bin/rsync |
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# how many snapshots will be kept |
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SNAP_COUNT=56 |
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if [ -d $SNAPSHOT_RW ]; then |
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# rotating the snapshots |
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# step 1: delete the oldest snapshot, if it exists: |
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if [ -d $SNAPSHOT_RW/snap.$SNAP_COUNT ]; then |
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$ECHO Clearing oldest snapshot... |
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$RM -rf $SNAPSHOT_RW/snap.$SNAP_COUNT |
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fi |
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# step 2: shift the middle snapshots(s) back by one, if they exist |
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ip=$SNAP_COUNT; |
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i=$(($ip-1)); |
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while [ $i -ge 1 ] |
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do |
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if [ -d $SNAPSHOT_RW/snap.$i ]; then |
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$ECHO "Aging snap.$i..." |
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$MV $SNAPSHOT_RW/snap.$i $SNAPSHOT_RW/snap.$ip |
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fi |
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i=$(($i-1)) |
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ip=$(($ip-1)) |
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done |
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# step 3: make a hard-link-only (except for dirs) copy of the latest snapshot, # if that exists |
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if [ -d $SNAPSHOT_RW/snap.0 ] ; then |
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$ECHO Aging snap.0... |
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cd $SNAPSHOT_RW/snap.0 && /usr/bin/find . -print | $CPIO -dplm $SNAPSHOT_RW/snap.1 |
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fi |
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else |
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$ECHO $SNAPSHOT_RW not present. Dying. |
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fi |
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</pre> |
Revision as of 11:48, 26 June 2009
Here I described scripts I created to make backups on Ubuntu, similar to those used by Time Machine on Mac OSX.
The template for this script is taken from Mac Geekery.
WARNING: There is absolutely no guarantee, that this script is working, moreover, there is no guarantee, that it will not harm your computer!
Things to be done: 1) Age old files 2) Sync new files
Aging old files
The snapshots will be kept in directories named snap.0 (newest), snap.1, snap.2, etc. Aging old files means making hard links of old files (duplicating them). Aging is accomplished with the following script:
#!/bin/bash unset PATH # suggestion from H. Milz: avoid accidental use of $PATH SNAPSHOT_RW=/path/to/your/backup/directory # change these paths to your needs, when desired ECHO=/bin/echo RM=/bin/rm MV=/bin/mv CP=/bin/cp TOUCH=/usr/bin/touch CPIO=/bin/cpio RSYNC=/usr/bin/rsync # how many snapshots will be kept SNAP_COUNT=56 if [ -d $SNAPSHOT_RW ]; then # rotating the snapshots # step 1: delete the oldest snapshot, if it exists: if [ -d $SNAPSHOT_RW/snap.$SNAP_COUNT ]; then $ECHO Clearing oldest snapshot... $RM -rf $SNAPSHOT_RW/snap.$SNAP_COUNT fi # step 2: shift the middle snapshots(s) back by one, if they exist ip=$SNAP_COUNT; i=$(($ip-1)); while [ $i -ge 1 ] do if [ -d $SNAPSHOT_RW/snap.$i ]; then $ECHO "Aging snap.$i..." $MV $SNAPSHOT_RW/snap.$i $SNAPSHOT_RW/snap.$ip fi i=$(($i-1)) ip=$(($ip-1)) done # step 3: make a hard-link-only (except for dirs) copy of the latest snapshot, # if that exists if [ -d $SNAPSHOT_RW/snap.0 ] ; then $ECHO Aging snap.0... cd $SNAPSHOT_RW/snap.0 && /usr/bin/find . -print | $CPIO -dplm $SNAPSHOT_RW/snap.1 fi else $ECHO $SNAPSHOT_RW not present. Dying. fi