Backup of a running container with vzdump
Vzdump is a utility to make consistent snapshots of running OpenVZ containers (and KVM virtual machines if you are using Proxmox VE). It basically creates a tar archive of the container's private area, which also includes the CT configuration files.
There are several ways to provide consistency:
- Stop the CT during backup (very long downtime)
- Use rsync and suspend/resume (minimal downtime)
- Use LVM2 (no downtime)
Vzdump stores the backup on the disk in a single file. This file should go to a tape backup for archiving.
Download
Download vzdump rpm or deb packages from http://download.openvz.org/contrib/utils/vzdump/ or for newest version, check http://www.proxmox.com/cms_proxmox/en/technology/oss-software/openvz/
For rpm based systems:
wget http://www.proxmox.com/cms_proxmox/cms/upload/vzdump/vzdump-1.1-2.noarch.rpm
For Debian based systems:
wget http://www.proxmox.com/cms_proxmox/cms/upload/vzdump/vzdump_1.1-2_all.deb
Installation
For rpm based systems:
rpm -i vzdump-1.1-2.noarch.rpm
For Debian based systems:
dpkg -i vzdump_1.1-2_all.deb
Synopsis
see also:
man vzdump
vzdump OPTIONS [--all | <VMID>]
--exclude VPSID exclude VPSID (assumes --all) --exclude-path REGEX exclude certain files/directories. You can use this option more than once to specify multiple exclude paths --stdexcludes exclude temorary files and logs --compress compress dump file (gzip) --dumpdir DIR store resulting files in DIR --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 VPS if running --suspend suspend/resume VPS 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 sereral instance puts too much load on a server). Default is 180 (3 hours). --stopwait MINUTES maximal time to wait until a VM is stopped. --restore FILENAME restore FILENAME
Examples
Use a running container, for example install this: Proxmox Mail Gateway in container.
Backup
Simply dump CT 777 — no snapshot, just archive the container private area and configuration files to the default dump directory (usually /vz/dump/
).
vzdump 777
Use rsync and suspend/resume to create a snapshot (minimal downtime).
vzdump --suspend 777
Backup all containers and send notification mails to root.
vzdump --suspend --all --mailto root
Use LVM2 to create snapshots (no downtime).
vzdump --dumpdir /space/backup --snapshot 777
Note that using LVM2 and vzdump to create snapshots requires 512Mb of free space in your VG as described here.
Restore
Restore the above backup to CT 600:
vzdump --restore /space/backup/vzdump-777.tar 600
Bugs
(not fixed in 1.1-2) The rsync command used by vzdump to create the backup in suspend mode does not support the "--exclude-path" option. So rsync backup the whole VE directory including the paths to ignore, thus making a very big backup.
Workaround: A workaround has been proposed on OpenVZ forum: http://forum.openvz.org/index.php?t=msg&goto=36924&
User: tatawaki Messages: 3 Registered: December 2008 Junior Member From: *sbm.shawcable.net Line 694: my $rsyncopts = "--stats --numeric-ids --bwlimit=${opt_bwlimit}"; # changes to my $rsyncopts = "--stats --numeric-ids --bwlimit=${opt_bwlimit}"; $rsyncopts = $rsyncopts." --exclude-from=/home/backups/exclude_vzdump.txt"; the txt file contains <VEID>/home/: 1094/home/ 510/opt/ ...
(fixed in 1.1-1) vzdump will fail under Debian Etch in version 1.0-2 if it is invoked with parameter "--snapshot" and if the logical volume name contains a hyphen.
Workaround: One possible workaround is to rename the logical volume in question thus it doesn't contain any hyphen. A bug report was sent to proxmox on 02 June 2008. Other distributions or versions may be affected, too.