Documentation

Restic Integration

As of version 0.9.0, Velero has support for backing up and restoring Kubernetes volumes using a free open-source backup tool called restic.

Velero has always allowed you to take snapshots of persistent volumes as part of your backups if you’re using one of the supported cloud providers’ block storage offerings (Amazon EBS Volumes, Azure Managed Disks, Google Persistent Disks). Starting with version 0.6.0, we provide a plugin model that enables anyone to implement additional object and block storage backends, outside the main Velero repository.

We integrated restic with Velero so that users have an out-of-the-box solution for backing up and restoring almost any type of Kubernetes volume*. This is a new capability for Velero, not a replacement for existing functionality. If you’re running on AWS, and taking EBS snapshots as part of your regular Velero backups, there’s no need to switch to using restic. However, if you’ve been waiting for a snapshot plugin for your storage platform, or if you’re using EFS, AzureFile, NFS, emptyDir, local, or any other volume type that doesn’t have a native snapshot concept, restic might be for you.

Restic is not tied to a specific storage platform, which means that this integration also paves the way for future work to enable cross-volume-type data migrations. Stay tuned as this evolves!

* hostPath volumes are not supported, but the new local volume type is supported.

Setup

Prerequisites

Instructions

  1. Ensure you’ve downloaded & extracted the latest release.

  2. In the Velero directory (i.e. where you extracted the release tarball), run the following to create new custom resource definitions:

    kubectl apply -f config/common/00-prereqs.yaml
    
  3. Run one of the following for your platform to create the daemonset:

    • AWS: kubectl apply -f config/aws/20-restic-daemonset.yaml
    • Azure: kubectl apply -f config/azure/20-restic-daemonset.yaml
    • GCP: kubectl apply -f config/gcp/20-restic-daemonset.yaml
    • Minio: kubectl apply -f config/minio/30-restic-daemonset.yaml

You’re now ready to use Velero with restic.

Back up

  1. Run the following for each pod that contains a volume to back up:

    kubectl -n YOUR_POD_NAMESPACE annotate pod/YOUR_POD_NAME backup.velero.io/backup-volumes=YOUR_VOLUME_NAME_1,YOUR_VOLUME_NAME_2,...
    

    where the volume names are the names of the volumes in the pod spec.

    For example, for the following pod:

    apiVersion: v1
    kind: Pod
    metadata:
      name: sample
      namespace: foo
    spec:
      containers:
      - image: k8s.gcr.io/test-webserver
        name: test-webserver
        volumeMounts:
        - name: pvc-volume
          mountPath: /volume-1
        - name: emptydir-volume
          mountPath: /volume-2
      volumes:
      - name: pvc-volume
        persistentVolumeClaim: 
          claimName: test-volume-claim
      - name: emptydir-volume
        emptyDir: {}
    

    You’d run:

    kubectl -n foo annotate pod/sample backup.velero.io/backup-volumes=pvc-volume,emptydir-volume
    

    This annotation can also be provided in a pod template spec if you use a controller to manage your pods.

  2. Take an Velero backup:

    velero backup create NAME OPTIONS...
    
  3. When the backup completes, view information about the backups:

    velero backup describe YOUR_BACKUP_NAME
    
    kubectl -n velero get podvolumebackups -l velero.io/backup-name=YOUR_BACKUP_NAME -o yaml
    

Restore

  1. Restore from your Velero backup:

    velero restore create --from-backup BACKUP_NAME OPTIONS...
    
  2. When the restore completes, view information about your pod volume restores:

    velero restore describe YOUR_RESTORE_NAME
    
    kubectl -n velero get podvolumerestores -l velero.io/restore-name=YOUR_RESTORE_NAME -o yaml
    

Limitations

  • hostPath volumes are not supported. Local persistent volumes are supported.
  • Those of you familiar with restic may know that it encrypts all of its data. We’ve decided to use a static, common encryption key for all restic repositories created by Velero. This means that anyone who has access to your bucket can decrypt your restic backup data. Make sure that you limit access to the restic bucket appropriately. We plan to implement full Velero backup encryption, including securing the restic encryption keys, in a future release.

Troubleshooting

Run the following checks:

Are your Velero server and daemonset pods running?

kubectl get pods -n velero

Does your restic repository exist, and is it ready?

velero restic repo get

velero restic repo get REPO_NAME -o yaml

Are there any errors in your Velero backup/restore?

velero backup describe BACKUP_NAME
velero backup logs BACKUP_NAME

velero restore describe RESTORE_NAME
velero restore logs RESTORE_NAME

What is the status of your pod volume backups/restores?

kubectl -n velero get podvolumebackups -l velero.io/backup-name=BACKUP_NAME -o yaml

kubectl -n velero get podvolumerestores -l velero.io/restore-name=RESTORE_NAME -o yaml

Is there any useful information in the Velero server or daemon pod logs?

kubectl -n velero logs deploy/velero
kubectl -n velero logs DAEMON_POD_NAME

NOTE: You can increase the verbosity of the pod logs by adding --log-level=debug as an argument to the container command in the deployment/daemonset pod template spec.

How backup and restore work with restic

We introduced three custom resource definitions and associated controllers:

  • ResticRepository - represents/manages the lifecycle of Velero’s restic repositories. Velero creates a restic repository per namespace when the first restic backup for a namespace is requested. The controller for this custom resource executes restic repository lifecycle commands – restic init, restic check, and restic prune.

    You can see information about your Velero restic repositories by running velero restic repo get.

  • PodVolumeBackup - represents a restic backup of a volume in a pod. The main Velero backup process creates one or more of these when it finds an annotated pod. Each node in the cluster runs a controller for this resource (in a daemonset) that handles the PodVolumeBackups for pods on that node. The controller executes restic backup commands to backup pod volume data.

  • PodVolumeRestore - represents a restic restore of a pod volume. The main Velero restore process creates one or more of these when it encounters a pod that has associated restic backups. Each node in the cluster runs a controller for this resource (in the same daemonset as above) that handles the PodVolumeRestores for pods on that node. The controller executes restic restore commands to restore pod volume data.

Backup

  1. The main Velero backup process checks each pod that it’s backing up for the annotation specifying a restic backup should be taken (backup.velero.io/backup-volumes)
  2. When found, Velero first ensures a restic repository exists for the pod’s namespace, by:
    • checking if a ResticRepository custom resource already exists
    • if not, creating a new one, and waiting for the ResticRepository controller to init/check it
  3. Velero then creates a PodVolumeBackup custom resource per volume listed in the pod annotation
  4. The main Velero process now waits for the PodVolumeBackup resources to complete or fail
  5. Meanwhile, each PodVolumeBackup is handled by the controller on the appropriate node, which:
    • has a hostPath volume mount of /var/lib/kubelet/pods to access the pod volume data
    • finds the pod volume’s subdirectory within the above volume
    • runs restic backup
    • updates the status of the custom resource to Completed or Failed
  6. As each PodVolumeBackup finishes, the main Velero process captures its restic snapshot ID and adds it as an annotation to the copy of the pod JSON that’s stored in the Velero backup. This will be used for restores, as seen in the next section.

Restore

  1. The main Velero restore process checks each pod that it’s restoring for annotations specifying a restic backup exists for a volume in the pod (snapshot.velero.io/<volume-name>)
  2. When found, Velero first ensures a restic repository exists for the pod’s namespace, by:
    • checking if a ResticRepository custom resource already exists
    • if not, creating a new one, and waiting for the ResticRepository controller to init/check it (note that in this case, the actual repository should already exist in object storage, so the Velero controller will simply check it for integrity)
  3. Velero adds an init container to the pod, whose job is to wait for all restic restores for the pod to complete (more on this shortly)
  4. Velero creates the pod, with the added init container, by submitting it to the Kubernetes API
  5. Velero creates a PodVolumeRestore custom resource for each volume to be restored in the pod
  6. The main Velero process now waits for each PodVolumeRestore resource to complete or fail
  7. Meanwhile, each PodVolumeRestore is handled by the controller on the appropriate node, which:
    • has a hostPath volume mount of /var/lib/kubelet/pods to access the pod volume data
    • waits for the pod to be running the init container
    • finds the pod volume’s subdirectory within the above volume
    • runs restic restore
    • on success, writes a file into the pod volume, in a .velero subdirectory, whose name is the UID of the Velero restore that this pod volume restore is for
    • updates the status of the custom resource to Completed or Failed
  8. The init container that was added to the pod is running a process that waits until it finds a file within each restored volume, under .velero, whose name is the UID of the Velero restore being run
  9. Once all such files are found, the init container’s process terminates successfully and the pod moves on to running other init containers/the main containers.
Getting Started

To help you get started, see the documentation.