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An efficient backup tool inspired by Git, saving your bandwidth and providing global deduplication at file level.

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https://raw.github.com/NaPs/Marty/master/.marty.png

Marty

An efficient backup tool inspired by Git, saving your bandwidth and providing global deduplication at file level.

Legal

Marty is released under MIT license, copyright 2016 Antoine Millet.

Contribute

You can send your pull-request for Marty through Github:

https://github.com/NaPs/Marty

I also accept well formatted git patches sent by email.

Feel free to contact me for any question/suggestion/patch: <[email protected]>.

Tutorial

This tutorial is a quick introduction guide to Marty. We will install it, make a few backups and restore a backup.

Installation

Marty depends on:

  • confiture
  • paramiko
  • arrow
  • msgpack-python
  • humanize

Marty can be installed via setuptools with the following command:

python setup.py install

Configuration

By default Marty will look for its configuration at:

/etc/marty.conf

But you can also put your configuration anywhere else and pass it in the command line:

marty -c /path/to/configuration.conf command

We will start with a simple configuration as example:

storage {
    type = 'filesystem'
    location = '/tmp/marty'
}

scheduler {
}

remotes {
    remote 'photos' {
        method = 'local'
        root = '/tmp/photos'
    }
}

The storage section tells Marty to store backups in the /tmp/marty folder of the local filesystem.

The scheduler section won't be covered in this tutorial.

The remotes section specifies what is to be backed up. Here we have only one item which is a local directory. We could also add a remote SSH directory with the 'ssh' method.

Work with backups

First we can list all available backups:

$ marty list
 NAME START DATE DURATION

Flags: P have parent, E - have errors, O orphan backup

Unsurprisingly, none is available. Let's make one:

$ marty backup photos
Duration: 0:00:00.035775
Root: 4febe17fd4ae2ff867263fcc4c6f1c625fd67ec9

$ marty list
 NAME                       START DATE          DURATION
 photos/2016-06-14_13-00-22 14/06/2016 13:00:22 0:00:00.035775
 photos/latest              14/06/2016 13:00:22 0:00:00.035775

We have now 2 backups, one is named by the creation time and date. The other is an automatic reference to the latest created backup for the given remote.

We can also specify our own names:

$ marty backup photos wonderful_day
Duration: 0:00:00.017411
Root: a2b17b0770d40f61cf5aa6c6f6bb7235ded777e5

$ marty list
 NAME                       START DATE          DURATION
 photos/2016-06-14_13-00-22 14/06/2016 13:00:22 0:00:00.035775
 photos/latest              14/06/2016 13:02:32 0:00:00.017411
 photos/wonderful_day       14/06/2016 13:02:32 0:00:00.017411

Flags: P have parent, E - have errors, O orphan backup

Let's look at what is inside one of the backups:

$ marty show-tree photos/latest
NAME                  TYPE REF                                      ATTRIBUTES
chat1.jpg             blob 0e51cbfaa58ec7dd483bb20067f42aa07557d846 filetype:regular mode:420 uid:1000 gid:1000 atime:1465902022 mtime:1465901781 ctime:1465901802 size:37454
chat2.jpg             blob d9002fc8a485f8879819a4b53ca8691bff6d9a19 filetype:regular mode:420 uid:1000 gid:1000 atime:1465902022 mtime:1465901781 ctime:1465901805 size:98886
poney_aquatique_1.jpg blob 5fb45355be5c176b1d0a72e75581e907bd3b7355 filetype:regular mode:420 uid:1000 gid:1000 atime:1465902022 mtime:1465901781 ctime:1465901862 size:117070
poney_aquatique_2.jpg blob aaea807913df7fec4b55670f5a98e6a147214dc3 filetype:regular mode:420 uid:1000 gid:1000 atime:1465902022 mtime:1465901781 ctime:1465901858 size:94474
poney_aquatique_3.jpg blob c5278b8f36faa0acdae191348f38b9f4d0e0368a filetype:regular mode:420 uid:1000 gid:1000 atime:1465902022 mtime:1465901781 ctime:1465901867 size:6749184

We can now restore a backup on an arbitrary folder:

$ marty export photos/latest /tmp/restore/

$ ls /tmp/restore
chat1.jpg  chat2.jpg  poney_aquatique_1.jpg  poney_aquatique_2.jpg  poney_aquatique_3.jpg

Or we can create a tarball with a given backup:

$ marty export -f tarbz2 photos/latest backup.tar.bz2

$ tar jtvf backup.tar.bz2
-rw-r--r-- 1000/1000     37454 2016-06-14 12:56 /chat1.jpg
-rw-r--r-- 1000/1000     98886 2016-06-14 12:56 /chat2.jpg
-rw-r--r-- 1000/1000        37 2016-06-14 13:12 /notes.txt
-rw-r--r-- 1000/1000    117070 2016-06-14 12:56 /poney_aquatique_1.jpg
-rw-r--r-- 1000/1000     94474 2016-06-14 12:56 /poney_aquatique_2.jpg
-rw-r--r-- 1000/1000   6749184 2016-06-14 12:56 /poney_aquatique_3.jpg

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An efficient backup tool inspired by Git, saving your bandwidth and providing global deduplication at file level.

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