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Velero supports executing commands in containers in pods during a backup.
When performing a backup, you can specify one or more commands to execute in a container in a pod when that pod is being backed up. The commands can be configured to run before any custom action processing (“pre” hooks), or after all custom actions have been completed and any additional items specified by custom action have been backed up (“post” hooks). Note that hooks are not executed within a shell on the containers.
There are two ways to specify hooks: annotations on the pod itself, and in the Backup spec.
You can use the following annotations on a pod to make Velero execute a hook when backing up the pod:
pre.hook.backup.velero.io/container
pre.hook.backup.velero.io/command
/bin/sh
, that is supported by the container at the beginning of your command. If you need multiple arguments, specify the command as a JSON array, such as ["/usr/bin/uname", "-a"]
. See
examples of using pre hook commands. Optional.pre.hook.backup.velero.io/on-error
Fail
. Valid values are Fail and Continue. Optional.pre.hook.backup.velero.io/timeout
post.hook.backup.velero.io/container
post.hook.backup.velero.io/command
/bin/sh
, that is supported by the container at the beginning of your command. If you need multiple arguments, specify the command as a JSON array, such as ["/usr/bin/uname", "-a"]
. See
examples of using pre hook commands. Optional.post.hook.backup.velero.io/on-error
Fail
. Valid values are Fail and Continue. Optional.post.hook.backup.velero.io/timeout
Please see the documentation on the Backup API Type for how to specify hooks in the Backup spec.
This examples walks you through using both pre and post hooks for freezing a file system. Freezing the file system is useful to ensure that all pending disk I/O operations have completed prior to taking a snapshot.
The Velero example/nginx-app/with-pv.yaml serves as an example of adding the pre and post hook annotations directly to your declarative deployment. Below is an example of what updating an object in place might look like.
kubectl annotate pod -n nginx-example -l app=nginx \
pre.hook.backup.velero.io/command='["/sbin/fsfreeze", "--freeze", "/var/log/nginx"]' \
pre.hook.backup.velero.io/container=fsfreeze \
post.hook.backup.velero.io/command='["/sbin/fsfreeze", "--unfreeze", "/var/log/nginx"]' \
post.hook.backup.velero.io/container=fsfreeze
Now test the pre and post hooks by creating a backup. You can use the Velero logs to verify that the pre and post hooks are running and exiting without error.
velero backup create nginx-hook-test
velero backup get nginx-hook-test
velero backup logs nginx-hook-test | grep hookCommand
To use multiple commands, wrap your target command in a shell and separate them with ;
, &&
, or other shell conditional constructs.
pre.hook.backup.velero.io/command='["/bin/bash", "-c", "echo hello > hello.txt && echo goodbye > goodbye.txt"]'
You are able to use environment variables from your pods in your pre and post hook commands by including a shell command before using the environment variable. For example, MYSQL_ROOT_PASSWORD
is an environment variable defined in pod called mysql
. To use MYSQL_ROOT_PASSWORD
in your pre-hook, you’d include a shell, like /bin/sh
, before calling your environment variable:
pre:
- exec:
container: mysql
command:
- /bin/sh
- -c
- mysql --password=$MYSQL_ROOT_PASSWORD -e "FLUSH TABLES WITH READ LOCK"
onError: Fail
Note that the container must support the shell command you use.
Velero records the execution results of hooks, allowing users to obtain this information by running the following command:
$ velero backup describe <backup name>
The displayed results include the number of hooks that were attempted to be executed and the number of hooks that failed execution. Any detailed failure reasons will be present in Errors
section if applicable.
HooksAttempted: 1
HooksFailed: 0
To help you get started, see the documentation.