From: Marc MERLIN <marc@merlins.org>
To: Brendan Hide <brendan@swiftspirit.co.za>
Cc: linux-btrfs Mailing list <linux-btrfs@vger.kernel.org>
Subject: Re: Send/Receive howto and script for others to use (was Re: Is anyone using btrfs send/receive)
Date: Sat, 22 Mar 2014 14:11:59 -0700 [thread overview]
Message-ID: <20140322211159.GM28005@merlins.org> (raw)
In-Reply-To: <532DFA60.3030106@swiftspirit.co.za>
Please consider adding a blank line between quotes, it makes them just a bit
more readable :)
On Sat, Mar 22, 2014 at 11:02:24PM +0200, Brendan Hide wrote:
> >- it doesn't create writeable snapshots on the destination in case you want
> >to use the copy as a live filesystem
> One of the issues with doing writeable snapshots by default is that the
> backup is (ever so slightly) less safe from "fat-finger syndrome". If I
> want a writeable snapshot, I'll make it from the read-only snapshot,
> thereby reducing the chances of accidentally "tainting" or deleting data
> in the backup. I actually *did* accidentally delete my entire filesystem
> (hence the paranoid umounts). But, of course, my script *first* created
> read-only snapshots from which recovery took only a few minutes. ;)
The writeable snapshot I create is on top of the read only one used by btrfs
receive. So, I can play with it, but it won't upset/break anything for
the backup.
The historical snapshots I keep give me cheap backups to go back to do get a
file I may have deleted 3 days ago and want back now even though my btrfs
send/receive runs hourly.
> >Things I noticed:
> >- I don't use ionice, maybe I should. Did you find that it actually made a
> >difference with send/receive?
>
> This is just a habit I've developed over time in all my scripts. I
> figure that if I'm using the machine at the time and the snapshot has a
> large churn, I'd prefer the ionice. That said, the main test system is a
> desktop which is likely to have much less churn than a server. In the
> last two weeks the longest daily incremental backup took about 5 minutes
> to complete, while it typically takes about 30 seconds only.
I'll consider that if I see too much load without ionice, thanks.
> >- Your comments say shlock isn't safe and that's documented. I don't see
> >that in the man page
> >http://manpages.ubuntu.com/manpages/trusty/man1/shlock.1.html
> That man page looks newer than the one I last looked at - specifically
> the part saying "improved by Berend Reitsma to solve a race condition."
> The previous documentation on shlock indicated it was safe for hourly
> crons - but not in the case where a cron might be executed twice
> simultaneously. Shlock was recommended by a colleague until I realised
> this potential issue, thus my template doesn't use it. I should update
> the comment with some updated information.
It's not super important, it was more my curiosity.
If a simple lock program in C isn't atomic, what's the point of it?
I never looked at the source code, but maybe I should...
> >I'd love to have details on this if I shouldn't be using it
> >- Is set -o noclobber; echo $$ > $lockfile really atomic and safer than
> >shlock? If so, great, although I would then wonder why shlock even exists
> >:)
> The part that brings about an atomic lock is "noclobber", which sets it
> so that we are not allowed to "clobber"/"overwrite" an existing file.
> Thus, if the file exists, the command fails. If it successfully creates
> the new file, the command returns true.
I understand how it's supposed to work, I just wondered if it was really
atomic as it should be since there would be no reason for shlock to even
exist with that line of code you wrote.
> I'd consider changing this mostly for the fact that depending on INN is
> a very big dependency. There are other options as well, though I don't
> think they're as portable as noclobber.
I totally agree, bringing INN to get shlock sucks a bit. I have shlock
stashed in /usr/local/bin so that I don't have to :)
Thanks for the info
Marc
--
"A mouse is a device used to point at the xterm you want to type in" - A.S.R.
Microsoft is to operating systems ....
.... what McDonalds is to gourmet cooking
Home page: http://marc.merlins.org/
next prev parent reply other threads:[~2014-03-22 21:12 UTC|newest]
Thread overview: 34+ messages / expand[flat|nested] mbox.gz Atom feed top
2013-12-28 17:19 Is anyone using btrfs send/receive for backups instead of rsync? Marc MERLIN
2013-12-28 17:37 ` Hugo Mills
2013-12-28 18:01 ` Emil Karlson
2013-12-28 19:34 ` Richard Michael
2013-12-28 19:52 ` Emil Karlson
2013-12-28 20:34 ` Richard Michael
2013-12-28 23:11 ` Chris Murphy
2013-12-28 23:55 ` Emil Karlson
2013-12-29 0:08 ` Chris Murphy
2013-12-29 12:39 ` Duncan
2013-12-30 0:38 ` systemd-journal, nodatacow, was: " Chris Murphy
2013-12-30 8:07 ` Duncan
2013-12-30 16:00 ` Chris Mason
2013-12-28 18:07 ` Marc MERLIN
2013-12-28 18:20 ` Marc MERLIN
2013-12-30 16:05 ` Chris Mason
2013-12-30 16:17 ` Marc MERLIN
2013-12-30 16:26 ` Chris Mason
2013-12-30 17:10 ` Marc MERLIN
2013-12-30 17:48 ` Chris Murphy
2013-12-30 17:57 ` Marc MERLIN
2013-12-30 18:39 ` Chris Murphy
2014-01-03 20:15 ` Marc MERLIN
2014-01-03 20:35 ` Chris Mason
2014-01-07 10:49 ` Is anyone using btrfs send/receive howto? Marc MERLIN
2014-01-07 10:53 ` Hugo Mills
2014-01-08 8:02 ` Marc MERLIN
2014-03-21 17:29 ` Send/Receive howto and script for others to use (was Re: Is anyone using btrfs send/receive) Marc MERLIN
2014-03-22 19:44 ` Brendan Hide
2014-03-22 19:53 ` Brendan Hide
2014-03-22 20:00 ` Marc MERLIN
2014-03-22 21:02 ` Brendan Hide
2014-03-22 21:11 ` Marc MERLIN [this message]
2014-03-23 7:12 ` Brendan Hide
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