F5 iApp for automated backups to the local device and to network locations.
Building on the significant work of Thomas Schockaert (and several other DevCentralites) I enhanced many aspects I needed for my own purposes, updated many things I noticed requested on the forums, and added additional documentation and clarification. As you may see in several of my comments on the original posts, I iterated through several 2.2.x versions and am now releasing v3.0.0. Below is the breakdown!
Also, I have done quite a bit of testing (mostly on v13.1.0.1 lately) and I doubt I've caught everything, especially with all of the changes. Please post any questions or issues in the comments.
Cheers!
Daniel Tavernier (tabernarious)
- https://github.com/tabernarious/f5-automated-backup-iapp
- https://devcentral.f5.com/codeshare/f5-iapp-automated-backup-1114
- https://devcentral.f5.com/articles/f5-automated-backups-the-right-way
- https://devcentral.f5.com/articles/f5-automated-backups-the-right-way
- https://devcentral.f5.com/codeshare/complete-f5-automated-backup-solution?lc=1
- https://devcentral.f5.com/codeshare/complete-f5-automated-backup-solution-2-957
- https://devcentral.f5.com/questions/automated-backup-solution
- https://devcentral.f5.com/codeshare?sid=285
- It allows you to choose between both UCS or SCF as backup-types. (whilst providing ample warnings about SCF not being a very good restore-option due to the incompleteness in some cases)
- It allows you to provide a passphrase for the UCS archives (the standard GUI also does this, so the iApp should too)
- It allows you to not include the private keys (same thing: standard GUI does it, so the iApp does it too)
- It allows you to set a Backup Schedule for every X minutes/hours/days/weeks/months or a custom selection of days in the week
- It allows you to set the exact time, minute of the hour, day of the week or day of the month when the backup should be performed (depending on the usefulness with regards to the schedule type)
- It allows you to transfer the backup files to external devices using 4 different protocols, next to providing local storage on the device itself
- SCP (username/private key without password)
- SFTP (username/private key without password)
- FTP (username/password)
- SMB (now using TMOS v12.x.x compatible 'mount -t cifs', with username/password)
- Local Storage (/var/local/ucs or /var/local/scf)
- It stores all passwords and private keys in a secure fashion: encrypted by the master key of the unit (f5mku), rendering it safe to store the backups, including the credentials off-box
- It has a configurable automatic pruning function for the Local Storage option, so the disk doesn't fill up (i.e. keep last X backup files)
- It allows you to configure the filename using the date/time wildcards from the tcl [clock] command, as well as providing a variable to include the hostname
- It requires only the WebGUI to establish the configuration you desire
- It allows you to disable the processes for automated backup, without you having to remove the Application Service or losing any previously entered settings
- For the external shellscripts it automatically generates, the credentials are stored in encrypted form (using the master key)
- It allows you to no longer be required to make modifications on the linux command line to get your automated backups running after an RMA or restore operation
- It cleans up after itself, which means there are no extraneous shellscripts or status files lingering around after the scripts execute
- Supports multiple instances! (Deploy multiple copies of the iApp to save backups to different places or perhaps to keep daily backups locally and send weekly backups to a network drive.)
- Fully ConfigSync compatible! (Encrypted values now in $script instead of local file.)
- Long passwords supported! (Using "-A" with openssl which reads/writes base64 encoded strings as a single line.)
- Added $script error checking for all remote backup types! (Using 'catch' to prevent tcl errors when $script aborts.)
- Backup files are cleaned up after any $script errors due to new error checking.
- Added logging! (Run logs sent to '/var/log/ltm' via logger command which is compatible with BIG-IP Remote Logging configuration (syslog). Run logs AND errors sent to '/var/tmp/scriptd.out'. Errors may include plain-text passwords which should not be in /var/log/ltm or syslog.)
- Added custom cipher option for SCP! (In case BIG-IP and the destination server are not cipher-compatible out of the box.)
- Added StrictHostKeyChecking=no option. (This is insecure and should only be used for testing--lots of warnings.)
- Combined SCP and SFTP because they are both using SCP to perform the remote copy. (Easier to maintain!)