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backup_recovery

Backup and Recovery

Introduction

The content of this document is adjusted to Samba 4.x.

This is a tutorial about backup and restore of samba in hope that it will be usefull. But it comes WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY!

General


WARNING, if you run more than one DC: Never restore a DC from backup, if at least one other DC is still running! You'll corrupt the directory as the replication meta data get out of sync!

Simply join the new machine as a DC again. Everything will be sycronized from the other running DC(s) - except SysVol replication, what isn't implemented yet. But a workaround is implemented.

How LDB and TDB files can be backuped/restored


If plan to modify the 'samba_backup' script or create an own solution, you'll find here some usefull information:

  • You must never copy a running database!
  • .ldb and *.tdb files can be backuped online with 'tdbbackup'
  • Files created by tdbbackup, are full abd normal TDB files. tdbbackup does the extraction safely.
  • Backups of *.ldb files can be just renamed (remove the *.bak) to their old name to restore.

About the backup_samba script


Samba provides a very basic backup shell script for it's databases (source4/scripting/bin/samba_backup in the source tarball). This requires that your whole samba installation is on one place (like /usr/local/samba/). If you have used configure options to store pieces of samba in different locations, you can adjust the script or use it as a base to write your own script.

Because this script is very basic at the moment, there are some things to know, if you plan to use it unchanged:

  • The script doesn't backup extended ACLs. This results in that you'll lose the permissions e. g. on the SysVol share. If you have a tar version that supports the - -xattrs option (see the tar manpage), you should add this option to all 'tar' commands inside the script. This enables tar to keep extended ACLs in the archive. In recent version of Debian an Ubuntu tar support the - -xattrs option.

Backup


The backup script of samba isn't installed, when you run 'make install'. It's recommented that you copy it from the sources directory (source4/scripting/bin/samba_backup) to your system, like /usr/sbin, and set secure permissions:

 # cp ..../source4/scripting/bin/samba_backup /usr/sbin
 # chown root:root /usr/sbin/samba_backup
 # chmod 750 /usr/sbin/samba_backup

Adust the following variables inside the script to your needs:

 FROMWHERE=/usr/local/samba
 WHERE=/usr/local/backups
 DAYS=90

Create the destination folder, you have configured in the $WHERE variable and set permissions:

 # mkdir /usr/local/backups
 # chmod 750 /usr/local/backups

Start the backup script for a first test:

 # samba_backup

If the script exits without an error, you should find three files in the destination folder:

  • etc.{Timestamp}.tar.bz2
  • samba4_private.{Timestamp}.tar.bz2
  • sysvol.{Timestamp}.tar.bz2

If your test backup succeeded, you should add a cron-job for daily backup:

 # crontab -e

Add the following line to backup daily at 2:00 AM:

 0 2 * * *       /usr/sbin/samba_backup

Restore


The following restore guide assumes, that you backuped your databases with the 'samba_backup' script. If you have your own script, adjust the steps.

Very important notes:

  • Never do a restore and a version change at once! Always restore on a system that uses the same Samba version than the one you created the backup on!
  • Restore on a system with the same IP and Hostname. Otherwise you'll run into Kerberos and DNS issues.
  • Recommended: Restore on the same OS than where you created the backup.

The most important in a restore situation is to bring your system back running. Do changes later, if everything is up and tested. Never together with a restore!

If your whole system is broken, you have first to setup the whole machine like described in “Samba4 as Active Directory Domain Controller” or Samba4 as Member Server (File Server).

Remove the folders, that we will restore (Samba must not be running!):

 # rm -rf /usr/local/samba/etc
 # rm -rf /usr/local/samba/private
 # rm -rf /usr/local/samba/var/locks/sysvol

Now unpack your latest working backup files to their old location:

 # cd /usr/local/backups
 # tar -jxf etc.{Timestamp}.tar.bz2 -C /usr/local/samba/
 # tar -jxf samba4_private.{Timestamp}.tar.bz2 -C /usr/local/samba/
 # tar -jxf sysvol.{Timestamp}.tar.bz2 -C /usr/local/samba/

Rename *.ldb.bak files in the 'private' directory back to *.ldb. With GNU find and Bash this can be done at once by:

 # find /usr/local/samba/private/ -type f -name '*.ldb.bak' -print0 | while read -d $'\0' f ; do mv "$f" "${f%.bak}" ; done

If your backup doesn't contains extended ACLs (see section About the backup_samba script, you have to run:

 # samba-tool ntacl sysvolreset

If you use Bind as DNS backend, you have to fix the hardlinks for the DNS databases:

 # samba_upgradedns --dns-backend=BIND9_DLZ

If DDNS updates not working check that the file '/etc/krb5.conf' is readable by bind.

Now you can start samba and test if your restore was successfull.

Hint: It is of course possible to restore single databases out of your backups, if you know which one is broken. But make sure, that some databases may be linked to others. So be carefully that you don't get an inconsistent system!

backup_recovery.txt · Last modified: 2020/04/10 17:38 (external edit)