infrastructure/op_guide/restic
2022-07-06 13:16:50 +02:00
..
README.md Use Tricot certificates instead of self-signed ones 2022-07-06 13:16:50 +02:00

Add the admin account as deuxfleurs to your ~/.mc/config file

You need to choose some names/identifiers:

export ENDPOINT="https://s3.garage.tld"
export SERVICE_NAME="example"


export BUCKET_NAME="backups-${SERVICE_NAME}"
export NEW_ACCESS_KEY_ID="key-${SERVICE_NAME}"
export NEW_SECRET_ACCESS_KEY=$(openssl rand -base64 32)
export POLICY_NAME="policy-$BUCKET_NAME"

Create a new bucket:

mc mb deuxfleurs/$BUCKET_NAME

Create a new user:

mc admin user add deuxfleurs $NEW_ACCESS_KEY_ID $NEW_SECRET_ACCESS_KEY

Add this new user to your ~/.mc/config.json, run this command before to generate the snippet to copy/paste:

cat > /dev/stdout <<EOF
"$NEW_ACCESS_KEY_ID": {
	"url": "https://$ENDPOINT",
	"accessKey": "$NEW_ACCESS_KEY_ID",
	"secretKey": "$NEW_SECRET_ACCESS_KEY",
	"api": "S3v4",
	"path": "auto"
},
EOF

Create a policy for this bucket and save it as json:

cat > /tmp/policy.json <<EOF
{
    "Version": "2012-10-17",
    "Statement": [
        {
            "Effect": "Allow",
            "Action": [
                "s3:ListBucket"
            ],
            "Resource": [
                "arn:aws:s3:::${BUCKET_NAME}"
            ]
        },
        {
            "Effect": "Allow",
            "Action": [
                "s3:*"
            ],
            "Resource": [
                "arn:aws:s3:::${BUCKET_NAME}/*"
            ]
        }
    ]
}
EOF

Register it:

mc admin policy add deuxfleurs $POLICY_NAME /tmp/policy.json

Set it to your user:

mc admin policy set deuxfleurs $POLICY_NAME user=${NEW_ACCESS_KEY_ID}

Now it should display only your new bucket when running:

mc ls $NEW_ACCESS_KEY_ID

Now we need to initialize the repository with restic.

export AWS_ACCESS_KEY_ID=$NEW_ACCESS_KEY_ID
export AWS_SECRET_ACCESS_KEY=$NEW_SECRET_ACCESS_KEY
export RESTIC_REPOSITORY="s3:$ENDPOINT/$BUCKET_NAME"
export RESTIC_PASSWORD=$(openssl rand -base64 32)

Save the password:

echo $RESTIC_PASSWORD
pass deuxfleurs/backups/$SERVICE_NAME/restic_password
# ctrl + c -> ctrl + v
cd ~/.password-store/deuxfleurs/
git pull ; git push
cd -

Then init the repo for restic from your machine:

restic init

I am using restic version restic 0.12.1 compiled with go1.16.9 on linux/amd64

See your snapshots with:

restic snapshots

Check also these useful commands:

restic ls
restic diff
restic help

Add the secrets to Consul, near your service secrets. The idea is that the backuping service is a component of the global running service. You must run in app/<name>/secrets/<subpath>:

echo "USER Backup AWS access key ID" > backup_aws_access_key_id
echo "USER Backup AWS secret access key" > backup_aws_secret_access_key
echo "USER Restic repository, eg. s3:https://s3.garage.tld" > backup_restic_repository
echo "USER Restic password to encrypt backups" > backup_restic_password

Then run secretmgr:

# Spawning a nix shell is an easy way to get all the dependencies you need
nix-shell

# Check that secretmgr works for you
python3 secretmgr.py check <name>

# Now interactively feed the secrets
python3 secretmgr.py gen <name>

Now we need a service that runs:

restic backup .

Find an existing .hcl declaration that uses restic in this repository or in the Deuxfleurs/nixcfg repository to use it as an example.

And also that garbage collect snapshots. I propose:

restic forget --prune --keep-within 1m1d --keep-within-weekly 3m --keep-within-monthly 1y

Also try to restore a snapshot:

restic restore <snapshot id> --target /tmp/$SERVICE_NAME