システムバックアップ

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2022年2月14日 (月) 18:02時点におけるKgx (トーク | 投稿記録)による版 (一部翻訳)
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例えば /etc, /home, /root, /var, サーバーの場合は /srv に保存されているシステムとユーザーのデータを定期的にバックアップすることが重要です。

Btrfs のスナップショットを利用する

こちらを参照 Btrfs#スナップショット, システムバックアップ#スナップショットと/bootパーティション, それと Snapper

LVM のスナップショットを利用する

こちらを参照 LVM#スナップショット, LVM によるルートファイルシステムのスナップショット作成, それと システムバックアップ#スナップショットと/bootパーティション

rsync を利用する

こちらを参照 rsync によるフルシステムバックアップ

tar を利用する

こちらを参照 Tar によるフルシステムバックアップ

SquashFS を利用する

See SquashFS によるフルシステムバックアップ

Bootable backup

Having a bootable backup can be useful in case the filesystem becomes corrupt or if an update breaks the system. The backup can also be used as a test bed for updates, with the testing repo enabled, etc. If you transferred the system to a different partition or drive and you want to boot it, the process is as simple as updating the backup's /etc/fstab and your bootloader's configuration file.

This section assumes that you backed up the system to another drive or partition, that your current bootloader is working fine, and that you want to boot from the backup as well.

Update the fstab

Without rebooting, edit the backup's fstab by commenting out or removing any existing entries. Add one entry for the partition containing the backup like the example here:

/dev/sdaX    /             ext4      defaults                 0   1

Remember to use the proper device name and filesystem type.

Update the bootloader's configuration file

For Syslinux, all you need to do is duplicate the current entry, except pointing to a different drive or partition.

ヒント: Instead of editing syslinux.cfg, you can also temporarily edit the menu during boot. When the menu shows up, press the Tab key and change the relevant entries. Partitions are counted from one, drives are counted from zero.

For GRUB, it is recommended that you automatically re-generate the main configuration file. If you want to freshly install all GRUB files to somewhere other than /boot, such as /mnt/newroot/boot, use the --boot-directory flag.

Also verify the new menu entry in /boot/grub/grub.cfg. Make sure the UUID is matching the new partition, otherwise it could still boot the old system. Find the UUID of a partition with lsblk:

$ lsblk -no NAME,UUID /dev/sdXY

where /dev/sdXY is the desired partition (e.g. /dev/sdb3). To list the UUIDs of partitions GRUB thinks it can boot, use grep:

# grep UUID= /boot/grub/grub.cfg

First boot

Reboot the computer and select the right entry in the bootloader. This will load the system for the first time. All peripherals should be detected and the empty folders in / will be populated.

Now you can re-edit /etc/fstab to add the previously removed partitions and mount points.

Snapshots and /boot partition

If your file system supports snapshots (e.g., LVM or Btrfs), these will most likely exclude the /boot partition or ESP.

You can copy the boot partition automatically on a kernel update to your root partition with a pacman hook (make sure the hook file is owned by root):

/etc/pacman.d/hooks/50-bootbackup.hook
[Trigger]
Operation = Upgrade
Operation = Install
Operation = Remove
Type = Path
Target = usr/lib/modules/*/vmlinuz

[Action]
Depends = rsync
Description = Backing up /boot...
When = PostTransaction
Exec = /usr/bin/rsync -a --delete /boot /.bootbackup