Cloudron makes it easy to run web apps like WordPress, Nextcloud, GitLab on your server. Find out more or install now.


Skip to content
  • Categories
  • Recent
  • Tags
  • Popular
  • Bookmarks
  • Search
Skins
  • Light
  • Cerulean
  • Cosmo
  • Flatly
  • Journal
  • Litera
  • Lumen
  • Lux
  • Materia
  • Minty
  • Morph
  • Pulse
  • Sandstone
  • Simplex
  • Sketchy
  • Spacelab
  • United
  • Yeti
  • Zephyr
  • Dark
  • Cyborg
  • Darkly
  • Quartz
  • Slate
  • Solar
  • Superhero
  • Vapor

  • Default (No Skin)
  • No Skin
Collapse
Brand Logo

Cloudron Forum

Apps | Demo | Docs | Install
  1. Cloudron Forum
  2. Discuss
  3. Cloudron+ZFS?

Cloudron+ZFS?

Scheduled Pinned Locked Moved Discuss
zfsbtrfs
27 Posts 7 Posters 2.2k Views 7 Watching
  • Oldest to Newest
  • Newest to Oldest
  • Most Votes
Reply
  • Reply as topic
Log in to reply
This topic has been deleted. Only users with topic management privileges can see it.
  • infogulchI infogulch

    ZFS is a next-gen filesystem that uses a Copy-on-Write (CoW) storage strategy to provide very useful features such as instant volume snapshots that only consume space proportional to the changes since the previous snapshot, and similarly support "0-storage-consumption" clones of volumes. Naturally, snapshots are the primary vehicle for backups in a ZFS environment. I see one thread asking about ZFS back in 2019, but I didn't see a cogent argument for Cloudron+ZFS. I think ZFS volumes as Cloudron app data volumes would be a match made in heaven.

    Sorry for submitting a whole blog post 😅 there's a TL;DR at the end.

    ZFS Snapshots

    There are various [1] excellent [2] explanations for ZFS snapshots and volumes you can find online, but this one is mine: When a new block of data is written in a ZFS volume the new data and the state of the filesystem after the write does not overwrite the existing block and filesystem, but is instead written to an unused location. Subsequent reads and writes see the the old filesystem masked/shadowed by the new data. Eventually these shadowed blocks can be reclaimed and written to again, but until then they still contain the full state of the filesystem at the time before they were shadowed. If the operator desires to save a particular state (aka take a backup) that's easy: just keep a pointer to it and don't let the data it references be reclaimed -- ZFS calls this a "snapshot". Snapshots are incredibly cheap to create in both time and space, since all it does is tell the system not to reclaim the blocks referenced by it. You don't write to a snapshot -- they are read-only -- but you can create a "cloned" volume based on a particular snapshot. Again, the new clone is very cheap to create and doesn't consume any storage itself until something writes data to it, masking the snapshot with the new data. One might think this system is conceptually similar to the way Docker's overlay2 filesystem driver works -- perhaps if it were much more mature and operationalized.

    Cloudron + ZFS

    With this knowledge of how ZFS snapshots work, their applicability as an underlying implementation for Cloudron's model of app data volumes becomes clear: Each app gets its own ZFS volume for /data. Backups are just snapshots of the volume and become instant, causing no interruption or degradation to app or system functionality. Restores are a cloned volume based on an existing snapshot and no longer require any extra space to initially create. App upgrades can be attempted and reverted immediately if needed. Since backups are cheap and truly incremental, it becomes viable to create them very frequently, potentially as often as every 10 minutes. This could even work for storage volumes hosting e.g. PostgreSQL database.

    You may guess (correctly) that I think ZFS is friggin awesome and could be a good fit for Cloudron, but I admit that this very simplified presentation of the benefits leaves a lot of open questions and caveats unanswered as it applies to the Cloudron ecosystem. I explore some of these below.

    The ZFS project

    ZFS is typically a FreeBSD filesystem (see Wikipedia for a less truncated history), but ZFS-on-Linux (ZoL) project first made ZFS viable as a Linux filesystem in 2014 when it was first released as a package in Ubuntu 14.04. Late last year the project merged with the FreeBSD base, rebranded to OpenZFS in a combined code repository that supports many OSes, and (fwiw) released their first major versions going from v0.8.6 to 2.0.0 and then version 2.0.4 just last month.

    Caveats & open questions

    • Cloudron would surely not migrate everyone to ZFS by default (at least not this decade..) and the current simple backup strategy is too valuable in simple installations to ever just dispense with, which means ZFS would have to become a new option, with the maintenance and support burden that implies.
    • In some situations ZFS could save storage space compared to a "normal" filesystem, but it would definitely complicate the storage space calculations since snapshots consume space until they are released. The main issue is that this storage consumption is not directly "visible" where an unknowing user might look (e.g. as files on a mount point) which could cause some confusion. Note, OpenZFS recommends maintaining at least 10% free space.
    • A big feature of Cloudron backups is seamless remote backups, which are certainly possible -- elegant even -- for ZFS snapshots, but this would require some additional fleshing out before it could substitute in for the current fully featured backup and restore system.
    • It gives users additional footguns to shoot themselves with. For example: the ZFS deduplication feature sounds great, but it requires more resources that one might think and probably shouldn't be enabled before careful consideration.
    • There are surely other caveats. 🙂 Any others you can think of?

    ZFS technology for Linux systems appears to be converging in 2021, and I think Cloudron's app backup and restore model would lend beautifully to being supported directly by ZFS. What do you think? Anyone using ZFS on Cloudron or otherwise?

    TL;DR: yo I think ZFS is dope and could integrate nicely with Cloudron. hbu?

    L Offline
    L Offline
    LoudLemur
    wrote on last edited by
    #8

    @infogulch Ubuntu offers ZFS as an experimental option during installation on the Focal Fossa 20.04 LTS release. If you e.g. setup a Virtual Machine with ZFS, and try and install Cloudron, you receive the following error message:

    Error: Cloudron requires '/' to be ext4
    

    I suppose the same thing will happen if you chose btrfs for the file system.

    robiR girishG 2 Replies Last reply
    2
    • L LoudLemur

      @infogulch Ubuntu offers ZFS as an experimental option during installation on the Focal Fossa 20.04 LTS release. If you e.g. setup a Virtual Machine with ZFS, and try and install Cloudron, you receive the following error message:

      Error: Cloudron requires '/' to be ext4
      

      I suppose the same thing will happen if you chose btrfs for the file system.

      robiR Offline
      robiR Offline
      robi
      wrote on last edited by
      #9

      @LoudLemur removing this restriction would be useful.

      Conscious tech

      1 Reply Last reply
      2
      • L LoudLemur

        @infogulch Ubuntu offers ZFS as an experimental option during installation on the Focal Fossa 20.04 LTS release. If you e.g. setup a Virtual Machine with ZFS, and try and install Cloudron, you receive the following error message:

        Error: Cloudron requires '/' to be ext4
        

        I suppose the same thing will happen if you chose btrfs for the file system.

        girishG Do not disturb
        girishG Do not disturb
        girish
        Staff
        wrote on last edited by
        #10

        @LoudLemur We use the overlay2 device driver in Docker. In the past, this device driver did not support btrfs atleast. See https://git.cloudron.io/cloudron/box/-/issues/364 . You can remove the check in the cloudron-setup script and see what happens.

        1 Reply Last reply
        2
        • infogulchI Offline
          infogulchI Offline
          infogulch
          wrote on last edited by
          #11

          There is a zfs storage driver that I think is relevant here: https://docs.docker.com/storage/storagedriver/zfs-driver/

          1 Reply Last reply
          1
          • 32463 Offline
            32463 Offline
            3246
            wrote on last edited by
            #12

            Thanks for this interesting discussion. I am struggling with backup due to the volume (350/400GB) and wonder if having ZFS+snapshots would be better (faster, easier and more reliable) than Cloudron's way (tar or rsync)?

            The new box is a Hetzner dedi with 2x 3TB and a 512GB NVMe. Instead of sRAID1 I am now pondering ZFS mirror with daily snapshots send to the Storagebox and perhaps part of the NVMe as a ZIL log.

            I am keen to hear any thoughts and experience you may have folks 😊

            👉 Find our more www.bebraver.online

            robiR necrevistonnezrN 2 Replies Last reply
            0
            • 32463 3246

              Thanks for this interesting discussion. I am struggling with backup due to the volume (350/400GB) and wonder if having ZFS+snapshots would be better (faster, easier and more reliable) than Cloudron's way (tar or rsync)?

              The new box is a Hetzner dedi with 2x 3TB and a 512GB NVMe. Instead of sRAID1 I am now pondering ZFS mirror with daily snapshots send to the Storagebox and perhaps part of the NVMe as a ZIL log.

              I am keen to hear any thoughts and experience you may have folks 😊

              robiR Offline
              robiR Offline
              robi
              wrote on last edited by
              #13

              @3246 that would auto dedupe at a file level, but the main issue is that backups would make it worse due to the tar and compression. Uncompressed you'd save way more space as most files would not change much.

              That's why newer tech storage appliances tend to dedupe at a multiple of 4k bytes to be able to dedupe even more regardless of file type or compression type.

              Otherwise one could play with storing rapidly or increasingly changing data differently than more static app data, which is exactly that Cloudron does, separating the two.

              Conscious tech

              1 Reply Last reply
              0
              • 32463 3246

                Thanks for this interesting discussion. I am struggling with backup due to the volume (350/400GB) and wonder if having ZFS+snapshots would be better (faster, easier and more reliable) than Cloudron's way (tar or rsync)?

                The new box is a Hetzner dedi with 2x 3TB and a 512GB NVMe. Instead of sRAID1 I am now pondering ZFS mirror with daily snapshots send to the Storagebox and perhaps part of the NVMe as a ZIL log.

                I am keen to hear any thoughts and experience you may have folks 😊

                necrevistonnezrN Offline
                necrevistonnezrN Offline
                necrevistonnezr
                wrote on last edited by
                #14

                @3246 I have a similar amount of data - pointing Cloudron‘s backup to a local drive via rsync and then pushing this snapshot via restic (and rclone) to Onedrive (via cron) works great. It’s encrypted, de-duped and mountable. Backup results are sent via email. If that’s interesting, i could share my setup.

                robiR 1 Reply Last reply
                4
                • necrevistonnezrN necrevistonnezr

                  @3246 I have a similar amount of data - pointing Cloudron‘s backup to a local drive via rsync and then pushing this snapshot via restic (and rclone) to Onedrive (via cron) works great. It’s encrypted, de-duped and mountable. Backup results are sent via email. If that’s interesting, i could share my setup.

                  robiR Offline
                  robiR Offline
                  robi
                  wrote on last edited by
                  #15

                  @necrevistonnezr Please do.

                  Conscious tech

                  necrevistonnezrN 1 Reply Last reply
                  0
                  • robiR robi

                    @necrevistonnezr Please do.

                    necrevistonnezrN Offline
                    necrevistonnezrN Offline
                    necrevistonnezr
                    wrote on last edited by necrevistonnezr
                    #16

                    @robi
                    I use

                    Tools

                    • rclone: https://rclone.org/docs/
                    • restic: https://restic.readthedocs.io/en/stable/030_preparing_a_new_repo.html#other-services-via-rclone
                    • ssmtp: https://wiki.archlinux.org/title/SSMTP

                    Installation

                    • Install tools above via apt
                    • afterwards update to latest version (repo versions are old): sudo restic self-update && sudo rclone selfupdate

                    Setup rclone

                    • Enter an interactive setup process via rclone config
                    • in my case I use Onedrive as it has 1TB of space coming with my Office 365 subscription
                    • for the rest of this summary, we assume you gave it the repository name "REPOSITORY"
                    • details at https://rclone.org/commands/rclone_config/

                    Setup restic

                    • set up a backup repository restic -r rclone:REPOSITORY init
                    • for a subfolder on onedrive just use restic -r rclone:REPOSITORY:subfolder init
                    • save password that you gave the repository in file /home/USER/resticpw
                    • details at https://restic.readthedocs.io/en/latest/030_preparing_a_new_repo.html#other-services-via-rclone

                    Setup SSMTP

                    • for receiving backup results, otherwise not needed
                    • See https://wiki.archlinux.org/title/SSMTP

                    Cloudron Backup settings

                    • Provider: mountpoint
                    • Location: /media/CloudronBackup (<-- obviously adjust to your settings)
                    • this creates a snapshot at /media/CloudronBackup/snapshot for the current backup
                    • Storage Format: rsync
                    • Adjust schedule and retention to your liking

                    Backup, Prune and Check scripts

                    restic-cron-backup.sh

                    #!/bin/bash
                    d=$(date +%Y-%m-%d)
                    if pidof -o %PPID -x “$0”; then
                    echo “$(date “+%d.%m.%Y %T”) Exit, already running.”
                    exit 1
                    fi
                    restic -r rclone:REPOSITORY:subfolder backup /media/CloudronBackup/snapshot -p=/home/USER/resticpw
                    restic -r rclone:REPOSITORY:subfolder forget --keep-monthly 12 --keep-weekly 5 --keep-daily 14 -p=/home/USER/resticpw
                    restic -r rclone:REPOSITORY:subfolder check --read-data-subset=2% -p=/home/USER/resticpw
                    exit
                    

                    First line does the backup (incremental, encrypted), second line is the backup retention, third line checks a random 2 % of all data for errors

                    restic-cron-prune.sh

                    #!/bin/bash
                    d=$(date +%Y-%m-%d)
                    if pidof -o %PPID -x “$0”; then
                    echo “$(date “+%d.%m.%Y %T”) Exit, already running.”
                    exit 1
                    fi
                    restic -r rclone:REPOSITORY:subfolder prune -p=/home/USER/resticpw
                    exit
                    

                    removes unused data from the repository, I run this once a week

                    restic-cron-check.sh

                    #!/bin/bash
                    d=$(date +%Y-%m-%d)
                    if pidof -o %PPID -x “$0”; then
                    echo “$(date “+%d.%m.%Y %T”) Exit, already running.”
                    exit 1
                    fi
                    restic -r rclone:REPOSITORY:subfolder check --read-data -p=/home/USER/resticpw
                    exit
                    

                    checks all data for errors, I run this once a week

                    Crontab

                    30 2 * * * sh /home/USER/restic-cron-backup.sh | mailx -s "Restic Backup Results" server@mydomain.com
                    1 5 1 * * sh /home/USER/restic-cron-prune.sh | mailx -s "Restic Prune Results" server@mydomain.com
                    1 8 1 * * sh /home/USER/restic-cron-check.sh | mailx -s "Restic Full Check Results" server@mydomain.com
                    

                    Backup daily at 2:30, prune and check once a week. Receive results to specified mail

                    Mount backups

                    Just to be complete: You can mount restic backups locally like
                    restic -r rclone:REPOSITORY:subfolder mount /media/resticmount/ -p=/home/USER/resticpw && cd /media/resticmount
                    obviously adjust /media/resticmount/to your settings; allows you to browse and copy from full snapshots for each backup

                    robiR 32463 2 Replies Last reply
                    5
                    • necrevistonnezrN necrevistonnezr

                      @robi
                      I use

                      Tools

                      • rclone: https://rclone.org/docs/
                      • restic: https://restic.readthedocs.io/en/stable/030_preparing_a_new_repo.html#other-services-via-rclone
                      • ssmtp: https://wiki.archlinux.org/title/SSMTP

                      Installation

                      • Install tools above via apt
                      • afterwards update to latest version (repo versions are old): sudo restic self-update && sudo rclone selfupdate

                      Setup rclone

                      • Enter an interactive setup process via rclone config
                      • in my case I use Onedrive as it has 1TB of space coming with my Office 365 subscription
                      • for the rest of this summary, we assume you gave it the repository name "REPOSITORY"
                      • details at https://rclone.org/commands/rclone_config/

                      Setup restic

                      • set up a backup repository restic -r rclone:REPOSITORY init
                      • for a subfolder on onedrive just use restic -r rclone:REPOSITORY:subfolder init
                      • save password that you gave the repository in file /home/USER/resticpw
                      • details at https://restic.readthedocs.io/en/latest/030_preparing_a_new_repo.html#other-services-via-rclone

                      Setup SSMTP

                      • for receiving backup results, otherwise not needed
                      • See https://wiki.archlinux.org/title/SSMTP

                      Cloudron Backup settings

                      • Provider: mountpoint
                      • Location: /media/CloudronBackup (<-- obviously adjust to your settings)
                      • this creates a snapshot at /media/CloudronBackup/snapshot for the current backup
                      • Storage Format: rsync
                      • Adjust schedule and retention to your liking

                      Backup, Prune and Check scripts

                      restic-cron-backup.sh

                      #!/bin/bash
                      d=$(date +%Y-%m-%d)
                      if pidof -o %PPID -x “$0”; then
                      echo “$(date “+%d.%m.%Y %T”) Exit, already running.”
                      exit 1
                      fi
                      restic -r rclone:REPOSITORY:subfolder backup /media/CloudronBackup/snapshot -p=/home/USER/resticpw
                      restic -r rclone:REPOSITORY:subfolder forget --keep-monthly 12 --keep-weekly 5 --keep-daily 14 -p=/home/USER/resticpw
                      restic -r rclone:REPOSITORY:subfolder check --read-data-subset=2% -p=/home/USER/resticpw
                      exit
                      

                      First line does the backup (incremental, encrypted), second line is the backup retention, third line checks a random 2 % of all data for errors

                      restic-cron-prune.sh

                      #!/bin/bash
                      d=$(date +%Y-%m-%d)
                      if pidof -o %PPID -x “$0”; then
                      echo “$(date “+%d.%m.%Y %T”) Exit, already running.”
                      exit 1
                      fi
                      restic -r rclone:REPOSITORY:subfolder prune -p=/home/USER/resticpw
                      exit
                      

                      removes unused data from the repository, I run this once a week

                      restic-cron-check.sh

                      #!/bin/bash
                      d=$(date +%Y-%m-%d)
                      if pidof -o %PPID -x “$0”; then
                      echo “$(date “+%d.%m.%Y %T”) Exit, already running.”
                      exit 1
                      fi
                      restic -r rclone:REPOSITORY:subfolder check --read-data -p=/home/USER/resticpw
                      exit
                      

                      checks all data for errors, I run this once a week

                      Crontab

                      30 2 * * * sh /home/USER/restic-cron-backup.sh | mailx -s "Restic Backup Results" server@mydomain.com
                      1 5 1 * * sh /home/USER/restic-cron-prune.sh | mailx -s "Restic Prune Results" server@mydomain.com
                      1 8 1 * * sh /home/USER/restic-cron-check.sh | mailx -s "Restic Full Check Results" server@mydomain.com
                      

                      Backup daily at 2:30, prune and check once a week. Receive results to specified mail

                      Mount backups

                      Just to be complete: You can mount restic backups locally like
                      restic -r rclone:REPOSITORY:subfolder mount /media/resticmount/ -p=/home/USER/resticpw && cd /media/resticmount
                      obviously adjust /media/resticmount/to your settings; allows you to browse and copy from full snapshots for each backup

                      robiR Offline
                      robiR Offline
                      robi
                      wrote on last edited by
                      #17

                      @necrevistonnezr beautiful 😄

                      Funny how you have to prune cuz it forgets. 💭

                      Conscious tech

                      necrevistonnezrN 1 Reply Last reply
                      0
                      • robiR robi

                        @necrevistonnezr beautiful 😄

                        Funny how you have to prune cuz it forgets. 💭

                        necrevistonnezrN Offline
                        necrevistonnezrN Offline
                        necrevistonnezr
                        wrote on last edited by
                        #18

                        @robi said in Cloudron+ZFS?:

                        Funny how you have to prune cuz it forgets. 💭

                        😁 😵

                        1 Reply Last reply
                        0
                        • necrevistonnezrN necrevistonnezr

                          @robi
                          I use

                          Tools

                          • rclone: https://rclone.org/docs/
                          • restic: https://restic.readthedocs.io/en/stable/030_preparing_a_new_repo.html#other-services-via-rclone
                          • ssmtp: https://wiki.archlinux.org/title/SSMTP

                          Installation

                          • Install tools above via apt
                          • afterwards update to latest version (repo versions are old): sudo restic self-update && sudo rclone selfupdate

                          Setup rclone

                          • Enter an interactive setup process via rclone config
                          • in my case I use Onedrive as it has 1TB of space coming with my Office 365 subscription
                          • for the rest of this summary, we assume you gave it the repository name "REPOSITORY"
                          • details at https://rclone.org/commands/rclone_config/

                          Setup restic

                          • set up a backup repository restic -r rclone:REPOSITORY init
                          • for a subfolder on onedrive just use restic -r rclone:REPOSITORY:subfolder init
                          • save password that you gave the repository in file /home/USER/resticpw
                          • details at https://restic.readthedocs.io/en/latest/030_preparing_a_new_repo.html#other-services-via-rclone

                          Setup SSMTP

                          • for receiving backup results, otherwise not needed
                          • See https://wiki.archlinux.org/title/SSMTP

                          Cloudron Backup settings

                          • Provider: mountpoint
                          • Location: /media/CloudronBackup (<-- obviously adjust to your settings)
                          • this creates a snapshot at /media/CloudronBackup/snapshot for the current backup
                          • Storage Format: rsync
                          • Adjust schedule and retention to your liking

                          Backup, Prune and Check scripts

                          restic-cron-backup.sh

                          #!/bin/bash
                          d=$(date +%Y-%m-%d)
                          if pidof -o %PPID -x “$0”; then
                          echo “$(date “+%d.%m.%Y %T”) Exit, already running.”
                          exit 1
                          fi
                          restic -r rclone:REPOSITORY:subfolder backup /media/CloudronBackup/snapshot -p=/home/USER/resticpw
                          restic -r rclone:REPOSITORY:subfolder forget --keep-monthly 12 --keep-weekly 5 --keep-daily 14 -p=/home/USER/resticpw
                          restic -r rclone:REPOSITORY:subfolder check --read-data-subset=2% -p=/home/USER/resticpw
                          exit
                          

                          First line does the backup (incremental, encrypted), second line is the backup retention, third line checks a random 2 % of all data for errors

                          restic-cron-prune.sh

                          #!/bin/bash
                          d=$(date +%Y-%m-%d)
                          if pidof -o %PPID -x “$0”; then
                          echo “$(date “+%d.%m.%Y %T”) Exit, already running.”
                          exit 1
                          fi
                          restic -r rclone:REPOSITORY:subfolder prune -p=/home/USER/resticpw
                          exit
                          

                          removes unused data from the repository, I run this once a week

                          restic-cron-check.sh

                          #!/bin/bash
                          d=$(date +%Y-%m-%d)
                          if pidof -o %PPID -x “$0”; then
                          echo “$(date “+%d.%m.%Y %T”) Exit, already running.”
                          exit 1
                          fi
                          restic -r rclone:REPOSITORY:subfolder check --read-data -p=/home/USER/resticpw
                          exit
                          

                          checks all data for errors, I run this once a week

                          Crontab

                          30 2 * * * sh /home/USER/restic-cron-backup.sh | mailx -s "Restic Backup Results" server@mydomain.com
                          1 5 1 * * sh /home/USER/restic-cron-prune.sh | mailx -s "Restic Prune Results" server@mydomain.com
                          1 8 1 * * sh /home/USER/restic-cron-check.sh | mailx -s "Restic Full Check Results" server@mydomain.com
                          

                          Backup daily at 2:30, prune and check once a week. Receive results to specified mail

                          Mount backups

                          Just to be complete: You can mount restic backups locally like
                          restic -r rclone:REPOSITORY:subfolder mount /media/resticmount/ -p=/home/USER/resticpw && cd /media/resticmount
                          obviously adjust /media/resticmount/to your settings; allows you to browse and copy from full snapshots for each backup

                          32463 Offline
                          32463 Offline
                          3246
                          wrote on last edited by
                          #19

                          @necrevistonnezr amazing! Thank you for sharing 🙂

                          I am pondering a similar approach and currently back up to a secondary internal drive via rsync without encryption, although the backup drive is using LUKS.

                          I wonder if using rclone crypt instead of encrypting the files via restic would gain any advantages (e.g. maximum file / folder names, depth, speed)?

                          Cloudron > rsync to local drive > rclone/crypt via restic > remote

                          👉 Find our more www.bebraver.online

                          32463 1 Reply Last reply
                          1
                          • 32463 3246

                            @necrevistonnezr amazing! Thank you for sharing 🙂

                            I am pondering a similar approach and currently back up to a secondary internal drive via rsync without encryption, although the backup drive is using LUKS.

                            I wonder if using rclone crypt instead of encrypting the files via restic would gain any advantages (e.g. maximum file / folder names, depth, speed)?

                            Cloudron > rsync to local drive > rclone/crypt via restic > remote

                            32463 Offline
                            32463 Offline
                            3246
                            wrote on last edited by
                            #20

                            Just reading up on restic and encryption, etc and may just skip the rclone part as I am looking to either go to Wasabi or Hetzner Storagebox.

                            However, I kinda like the crypt part and am looking for any comparisons between rclone/crypt with restic and restic w/ encryption in terms of time it takes to backup and any drawbacks.

                            👉 Find our more www.bebraver.online

                            necrevistonnezrN 1 Reply Last reply
                            0
                            • 32463 3246

                              Just reading up on restic and encryption, etc and may just skip the rclone part as I am looking to either go to Wasabi or Hetzner Storagebox.

                              However, I kinda like the crypt part and am looking for any comparisons between rclone/crypt with restic and restic w/ encryption in terms of time it takes to backup and any drawbacks.

                              necrevistonnezrN Offline
                              necrevistonnezrN Offline
                              necrevistonnezr
                              wrote on last edited by
                              #21

                              @3246 said in Cloudron+ZFS?:

                              Just reading up on restic and encryption, etc and may just skip the rclone part as I am looking to either go to Wasabi or Hetzner Storagebox.

                              However, I kinda like the crypt part and am looking for any comparisons between rclone/crypt with restic and restic w/ encryption in terms of time it takes to backup and any drawbacks.

                              Just to be clear: The encryption (as well as deduplication, the repository, data integrity checks, etc.) is completely handled by restic. rclone is just the "transporter tool" that copies data to providers that the restic does not handle (restic out-of-the-box currently handles SFTP, REST-Server, Minio, Wasabi, etc. see https://restic.readthedocs.io/en/stable/030_preparing_a_new_repo.html).

                              32463 1 Reply Last reply
                              1
                              • necrevistonnezrN necrevistonnezr

                                @3246 said in Cloudron+ZFS?:

                                Just reading up on restic and encryption, etc and may just skip the rclone part as I am looking to either go to Wasabi or Hetzner Storagebox.

                                However, I kinda like the crypt part and am looking for any comparisons between rclone/crypt with restic and restic w/ encryption in terms of time it takes to backup and any drawbacks.

                                Just to be clear: The encryption (as well as deduplication, the repository, data integrity checks, etc.) is completely handled by restic. rclone is just the "transporter tool" that copies data to providers that the restic does not handle (restic out-of-the-box currently handles SFTP, REST-Server, Minio, Wasabi, etc. see https://restic.readthedocs.io/en/stable/030_preparing_a_new_repo.html).

                                32463 Offline
                                32463 Offline
                                3246
                                wrote on last edited by
                                #22

                                @necrevistonnezr thank you. Is the encryption always part of restic or optional? It looks like it's baked-in the way repos are build, right?

                                👉 Find our more www.bebraver.online

                                necrevistonnezrN 1 Reply Last reply
                                0
                                • 32463 3246

                                  @necrevistonnezr thank you. Is the encryption always part of restic or optional? It looks like it's baked-in the way repos are build, right?

                                  necrevistonnezrN Offline
                                  necrevistonnezrN Offline
                                  necrevistonnezr
                                  wrote on last edited by
                                  #23

                                  @3246 Yes. There is discussions about it (see https://github.com/restic/restic/issues/1018) but that's actually on of the features of restic: It's encryption done right.
                                  And being able to mount the repositories and directly access them is just fantastic.

                                  32463 1 Reply Last reply
                                  1
                                  • necrevistonnezrN necrevistonnezr

                                    @3246 Yes. There is discussions about it (see https://github.com/restic/restic/issues/1018) but that's actually on of the features of restic: It's encryption done right.
                                    And being able to mount the repositories and directly access them is just fantastic.

                                    32463 Offline
                                    32463 Offline
                                    3246
                                    wrote on last edited by
                                    #24

                                    @necrevistonnezr very interesting. Thank you for sharing that link too. I'll give it a try without the rclone step soon 🙂

                                    👉 Find our more www.bebraver.online

                                    1 Reply Last reply
                                    0
                                    • 32463 Offline
                                      32463 Offline
                                      3246
                                      wrote on last edited by 3246
                                      #25

                                      I cribbed off the scripts kindly provided by @necrevistonnezr and am using restic straight to a Hetzner Storagebox.

                                      The first upload is running:

                                      [23:53] 0.59%  427 files 4.571 GiB, total 1344856 files 772.976 GiB, 0 errors ETA 66:59:14
                                      

                                      Not quite sure where the 772GB are coming from as the directory is much smaller?

                                      390G    /mnt/local_backups/rsync/2022-05-03-130134-941
                                      1.4G    /mnt/local_backups/rsync/snapshot
                                      

                                      👉 Find our more www.bebraver.online

                                      necrevistonnezrN 1 Reply Last reply
                                      0
                                      • jdaviescoatesJ Offline
                                        jdaviescoatesJ Offline
                                        jdaviescoates
                                        wrote on last edited by
                                        #26

                                        All these posts about backing up locally and then to somewhere else are really useful, but a bit hidden away in this thread about something pretty tenuously related.

                                        Methinks @staff should move some of them into a new thread of their own 🙂

                                        I use Cloudron with Gandi & Hetzner

                                        1 Reply Last reply
                                        3
                                        • 32463 3246

                                          I cribbed off the scripts kindly provided by @necrevistonnezr and am using restic straight to a Hetzner Storagebox.

                                          The first upload is running:

                                          [23:53] 0.59%  427 files 4.571 GiB, total 1344856 files 772.976 GiB, 0 errors ETA 66:59:14
                                          

                                          Not quite sure where the 772GB are coming from as the directory is much smaller?

                                          390G    /mnt/local_backups/rsync/2022-05-03-130134-941
                                          1.4G    /mnt/local_backups/rsync/snapshot
                                          
                                          necrevistonnezrN Offline
                                          necrevistonnezrN Offline
                                          necrevistonnezr
                                          wrote on last edited by
                                          #27

                                          @3246 Are you backing up /snapshot/ or the parent directory?
                                          /snapshot/ is sufficient for a daily backup as it holds the current status of all files - versioning etc. is done by restic.
                                          Also, how did you calculate these dirsizes?

                                          1 Reply Last reply
                                          0
                                          Reply
                                          • Reply as topic
                                          Log in to reply
                                          • Oldest to Newest
                                          • Newest to Oldest
                                          • Most Votes


                                          • Login

                                          • Don't have an account? Register

                                          • Login or register to search.
                                          • First post
                                            Last post
                                          0
                                          • Categories
                                          • Recent
                                          • Tags
                                          • Popular
                                          • Bookmarks
                                          • Search