mirror of https://github.com/zulip/zulip.git
docs: Merge "Backups" with export-and-import.
- Merges the "Backups" section from production/maintain-secure-upgrade.md with existing "Backups" section in production/export-and-import.md. - Cleans up and makes content more clear/explicit. - Adds short missing section on how to use wal-e configuration. - Removes a lot of previously duplicate text explaining the difference between the tools. - Various textual tweaks by tabbott. Fixes #13184 and resolves #293.
This commit is contained in:
parent
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@ -1,49 +1,270 @@
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# Export and import
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# Backups, export and import
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Zulip has high quality export and import tools that can be used to move data
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from one Zulip server to another, do backups or compliance work, or migrate
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from your own servers to the hosted Zulip Cloud service.
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Zulip has high quality export and import tools that can be used to
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move data from one Zulip server to another, do backups, compliance
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work, or migrate from your own servers to the hosted Zulip Cloud
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service (or back):
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When using these tools, it's important to ensure that the Zulip server
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you're exporting from and the one you're exporting to are running the
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same version of Zulip, since we do change and extend the format from
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time to time.
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* The [Backup](#backups) tool is designed for exact restoration of a
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Zulip server's state, for disaster recovery, testing with production
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data, or hardware migration. This tool has a few limitations:
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* Backups must be restored on a server running the same Zulip
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version (most precisely, one where `manage.py showmigrations` has
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the same output).
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* Backups must be restored on a server running the same `postgres`
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version.
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* Migrating organizations between self-hosting and Zulip Cloud
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(generally requires renumbering all the
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users/messages/etc.).
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We highly recommend this tool in situations where it is applicable,
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because it is highly optimized and highly stable, since the hard wor
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k is done by the built-in backup feature of `postgres`. We also
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document [backup details](#backup-details) for users managing
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backups manually.
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* The logical [Data export](#data-export) tool is designed for
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migrating data between Zulip Cloud and other Zulip servers, as well
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as various auditing purposes. The logical export tool produces a
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`.tar.gz` archive with most of the Zulip database data encoded in
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JSON files–a format shared by our [data
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import]((#import-into-a-new-zulip-server) ) tools for third-party
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services like
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[Slack](https://zulipchat.com/help/import-from-slack).
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Like the backup tool, logical data exports must be imported on a
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Zulip server running the same version. However, these exports
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imported on Zulip servers running a different `postgres` version or
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hosting a different set of Zulip organizations. We recommend this
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tool in cases where the backup tool isn't applicable, including
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situations where an easily machine-parsable export format is desired.
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* Zulip also has an [HTML archive
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tool](https://github.com/zulip/zulip_archive), which is primarily
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intended for public archives, but can also be useful to
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inexpensively preserve public stream conversations when
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decommissioning a Zulip organization.
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* It's possible to setup [postgres streaming
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replication](#postgres-streaming-replication) and the [S3 file
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upload
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backend](../production/upload-backends.html#s3-backend-configuration)
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as part of a high evailability environment.
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## Backups
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If you want to move hardware for a self-hosted Zulip installation, we
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recommend Zulip's
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[database-level backup and restoration process][backups] for a better
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experience. Zulip's database-level backup process is faster,
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structurally very unlikely to ever develop bugs, and will restore your
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Zulip server to the exact state it was left in. The big thing it
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can't do is support a migration to a server hosting a different set of
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organizations than the original one, e.g. migrations between
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self-hosting and Zulip Cloud (because doing so in the general case
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requires renumbering all the users/messages/etc.).
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The Zulip server has a built-in backup tool:
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Zulip's export/import tools (documented on this page) have full
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support for such a renumbering process. While these tools are
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carefully designed and tested to make various classes of bugs
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impossible or unlikely, the extra complexity required for renumbering
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makes them structurally more risky than the direct postgres backup
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process.
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```
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# As the zulip user
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/home/zulip/deployments/current/manage.py backup
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# Or as root
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su zulip -c '/home/zulip/deployments/current/manage.py backup'
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```
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[backups]: ../production/maintain-secure-upgrade.html#backups
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The backup tool provides the following options:
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- `--output`: Path where the output file should be stored. If no path is
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provided, the output file would be saved to a temporary directory.
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- `--skip-db`: Skip backup of the database. Useful if you're using a
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remote postgres host with its own backup system and just need to
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backup non-database state.
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- `--skip-uploads`: If `LOCAL_UPLOADS_DIR` is set, user-uploaded files
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in that directory will be ignored.
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## Preventing changes during the export
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This will generate a `.tar.gz` archive containing all the data stored
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on your Zulip server that would be needed to restore your Zulip
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server's state on another machine perfectly.
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### Restoring backups
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First, [install a new Zulip server through Step 3][install-server]
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with the same version of both the base OS and Zulip from your previous
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installation. Then, run as root:
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```
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/home/zulip/deployments/current/scripts/setup/restore-backup /path/to/backup
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```
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When that finishes, your Zulip server should be fully operational again.
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#### Changing the hostname
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It's common, when testing backup restoration, to restore backups with a
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different user-facing hostname than the original server to avoid
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disrupting service (e.g. `zuliptest.example.com` rather than
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`zulip.example.com`).
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If you do so, just like any other time you change the hostname, you'll
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need to [update `EXTERNAL_HOST`](../production/settings.md) and then
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restart the Zulip server (after backup restoration completes).
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Until you do, your Zulip server will think its user-facing hostname is
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still `zulip.example.com` and will return HTTP `400 BAD REQUEST`
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errors when trying to access it via `zuliptest.example.com`.
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#### Inspecting a backup tarball
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If you're not sure what versions were in use when a given backup was
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created, you can get that information via the files in the backup
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tarball: `postgres-version`, `os-version`, and `zulip-version`. The
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following command may be useful for viewing these files without
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extracting the entire archive.
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```
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tar -Oaxf /path/to/archive/zulip-backup-rest.tar.gz zulip-backup/zulip-version
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```
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[install-server]: ../production/install.md
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### What is included
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Backups contain everything you need to fully restore your Zulip
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server, including the database, settings, secrets from
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`/etc/zulip`, and user-uploaded files stored on the Zulip server.
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The following data is not included in these backup archives,
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and you may want to backup separately:
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* The server access/error logs from `/var/log/zulip`. The Zulip
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server only appends to logs, and they can be very large compared to
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the rest of the data for a Zulip server.
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* Files uploaded with the Zulip
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[S3 file upload backend](../production/upload-backends.md). We
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don't include these for two reasons. First, the uploaded file data
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in S3 can easily be many times larger than the rest of the backup,
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and downloading it all to a server doing a backup could easily
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exceed its disk capacity. Additionally, S3 is a reliable persistent
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storage system with its own high-quality tools for doing backups.
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|
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* Transient data present in Zulip's RabbitMQ queues. For example, a
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record that a missed-message email for a given Zulip message is
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scheduled to be sent to a given user in 2 minutes, if the recipient
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user doesn't interact with Zulip during that time window. You can
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check their status using `rabbitmq list_queues` as root.
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* Certain highly transient state that Zulip doesn't store in a
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database, such as typing status, API rate-limiting counters,
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etc. that would have no value 1 minute after the backup is
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completed.
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* SSL certificates. Since these are particularly security-sensitive
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and either trivially replaced (if generated via Certbot) or provided
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by the system administrator.
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|
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#### Backup details
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|
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This section is primarily for users managing backups themselves
|
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(E.g. if they're using a remote postgres database with an existing
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backup strategy), and also serves as documentation for what is
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included in the backups generated by Zulip's standard tools. The
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data includes:
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* The postgres database. You can back it up like any postgres
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database. We have some example tooling for doing that incrementally
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into S3 using [wal-e](https://github.com/wal-e/wal-e) in
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`puppet/zulip_ops/manifests/postgres_common.pp`.
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In short, this requires:
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- Zulip 1.4 or newer release.
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- An Amazon S3 bucket for storing the backups.
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- `/etc/zulip/zulip-secrets.conf` on the postgres server like this:
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```
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[secrets]
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s3_backups_key = # aws public key
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s3_backups_secret_key = # aws secret key
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s3_backups_bucket = # name of S3 backup
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```
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- A cron job to run `/usr/local/bin/pg_backup_and_purge.py`. There's puppet
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config for this in `puppet/zulip_internal/manifests/postgres_common.pp`.
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- Verification that backups are running via
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`/usr/lib/nagios/plugins/zulip_postgres_common/check_postgres_backup`.
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* Any user-uploaded files. If you're using S3 as storage for file
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uploads, this is backed up in S3. But if you have instead set
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`LOCAL_UPLOADS_DIR`, any files uploaded by users (including avatars)
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will be stored in that directory and you'll want to back it up.
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|
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* Your Zulip configuration including secrets from `/etc/zulip/`.
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E.g. if you lose the value of `secret_key`, all users will need to
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login again when you setup a replacement server since you won't be
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able to verify their cookies. If you lose `avatar_salt`, any
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user-uploaded avatars will need to be re-uploaded (since avatar
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filenames are computed using a hash of `avatar_salt` and user's
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email), etc.
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[export-import]: ../production/export-and-import.md
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### Restore from manual backups
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To restore from a manual backup, the process is basically the reverse of the above:
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* Install new server as normal by downloading a Zulip release tarball
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and then using `scripts/setup/install`. You don't need
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to run the `initialize-database` second stage which puts default
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data into the database.
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* Unpack to `/etc/zulip` the `settings.py` and `zulip-secrets.conf` files
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from your backups.
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* Restore your database from the backup using `wal-e`. If you ran
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`initialize-database` anyway above, you'll want to run
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`scripts/setup/postgres-init-db` to drop the initial database first.
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|
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* Reconfigure rabbitmq to use the password from `secrets.conf`
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by running, as root, `scripts/setup/configure-rabbitmq`.
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* If you're using local file uploads, restore those files to the path
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specified by `settings.LOCAL_UPLOADS_DIR` and (if appropriate) any
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logs.
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|
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* Start the server using `scripts/restart-server`.
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This restoration process can also be used to migrate a Zulip
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installation from one server to another.
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We recommend running a disaster recovery after setting up your backups to
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confirm that your backups are working. You may also want to monitor
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that they are up to date using the Nagios plugin at:
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`puppet/zulip_ops/files/nagios_plugins/check_postgres_backup`.
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## Postgres streaming replication
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|
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Zulip has database configuration for using Postgres streaming
|
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replication. You can see the configuration in these files:
|
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|
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* `puppet/zulip_ops/manifests/postgres_slave.pp`
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* `puppet/zulip_ops/manifests/postgres_master.pp`
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* `puppet/zulip_ops/files/postgresql/*`
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|
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We use this configuration for zulipchat.com, and it works well in
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production, but it's not fully generic. Contributions to make it a
|
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supported and documented option for other installations are
|
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appreciated.
|
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|
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## Data export
|
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|
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Zulip's powerful data export tool is designed to handle migration of a
|
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Zulip organization between different hardware platforms; as a result,
|
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these exports contain all non-transient data for a Zulip organization,
|
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with the exception of passwords and API keys.
|
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|
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We recommend using the [backup tool](#backups) if your primary goal is
|
||||
backups.
|
||||
|
||||
### Preventing changes during the export
|
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|
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For best results, you'll want to shut down access to the organization
|
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before exporting, so that nobody can send new messages (etc.) while
|
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before exporting; so that nobody can send new messages (etc.) while
|
||||
you're exporting data. There are two ways to do this:
|
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|
||||
1. `supervisorctl stop all`, which stops the whole server. This is
|
||||
preferred if you're not hosting multiple organizations, because it has
|
||||
no side effects other than disabling the Zulip server for the
|
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duration.
|
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1. `manage.py deactivate_realm`, which deactivates the target
|
||||
1. `manage.py deactivate_realm -r 'target_org'`, which deactivates the target
|
||||
organization, logging out all active login sessions and preventing all
|
||||
accounts in the from logging in or accessing the API. This is
|
||||
accounts from logging in or accessing the API. This is
|
||||
preferred for environments like Zulip Cloud where you might want to
|
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export a single organization without disrupting any other users, and
|
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the intent is to move hosting of the organization (and forcing users
|
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|
@ -55,15 +276,15 @@ that neither runs (using the `# ` at the start of the lines). If
|
|||
you'd like to use one of these options, remove the `# ` at the start
|
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of the lines for the appropriate option.
|
||||
|
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## Export your Zulip data
|
||||
### Export your Zulip data
|
||||
|
||||
Log in to a shell on your Zulip server as the `zulip` user. Run the
|
||||
following commands:
|
||||
|
||||
```
|
||||
cd /home/zulip/deployments/current
|
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# ./manage.py deactivate_realm -r '' # Deactivates the organization
|
||||
# supervisorctl stop all # Stops the Zulip server
|
||||
# ./manage.py deactivate_realm -r '' # Deactivates the organization
|
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./manage.py export -r '' # Exports the data
|
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```
|
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|
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|
@ -77,32 +298,31 @@ archive of all the organization's uploaded files.
|
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|
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## Import into a new Zulip server
|
||||
|
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(1.) [Install a new Zulip server](../production/install.md),
|
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skipping "Step 3: Create a Zulip organization, and log in" (you'll
|
||||
create your Zulip organization via the data import tool instead).
|
||||
|
||||
(1a.) Ensure that the Zulip server you're importing into is running the same
|
||||
1. [Install a new Zulip server](../production/install.md),
|
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**skipping Step 3** (you'll create your Zulip organization via the data
|
||||
import tool instead).
|
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* Ensure that the Zulip server you're importing into is running the same
|
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version of Zulip as the server you're exporting from.
|
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|
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For exports from zulipchat.com, run the following:
|
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* For exports from zulipchat.com, run the following:
|
||||
|
||||
```
|
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/home/zulip/deployments/current/scripts/upgrade-zulip-from-git master
|
||||
```
|
||||
```
|
||||
/home/zulip/deployments/current/scripts/upgrade-zulip-from-git master
|
||||
```
|
||||
|
||||
Note that if your server has 2GB of RAM or less, you'll want to read the detailed instructions
|
||||
[here][upgrade-zulip-from-git].
|
||||
It is not sufficient to be on the latest stable release, as zulipchat.com is
|
||||
often several months of development ahead of the latest release.
|
||||
* Note that if your server has 2GB of RAM or less, you'll want to read the
|
||||
detailed instructions [here][upgrade-zulip-from-git].
|
||||
It is not sufficient to be on the latest stable release, as zulipchat.com is
|
||||
often several months of development ahead of the latest release.
|
||||
|
||||
(2.) If your new Zulip server is meant to fully replace a previous Zulip
|
||||
2. If your new Zulip server is meant to fully replace a previous Zulip
|
||||
server, you may want to copy the contents of `/etc/zulip` to your new
|
||||
server to reuse the server-level configuration and
|
||||
secret keys from your old server. See our
|
||||
[documentation on backups][backups] for details on the contents of
|
||||
[documentation on backups](#backups) for details on the contents of
|
||||
this directory.
|
||||
|
||||
(3.) Log in to a shell on your Zulip server as the `zulip` user. Run the
|
||||
3. Log in to a shell on your Zulip server as the `zulip` user. Run the
|
||||
following commands, replacing the filename with the path to your data
|
||||
export tarball:
|
||||
|
||||
|
@ -115,12 +335,12 @@ cd /home/zulip/deployments/current
|
|||
# ./manage.py reactivate_realm -r '' # Reactivates the organization
|
||||
```
|
||||
|
||||
This could take several minutes to run, depending on how much data you're
|
||||
This could take several minutes to run depending on how much data you're
|
||||
importing.
|
||||
|
||||
[upgrade-zulip-from-git]: ../production/maintain-secure-upgrade.html#upgrading-from-a-git-repository
|
||||
|
||||
**Import options**
|
||||
#### Import options
|
||||
|
||||
The commands above create an imported organization on the root domain
|
||||
(`EXTERNAL_HOST`) of the Zulip installation. You can also import into a
|
||||
|
@ -133,13 +353,13 @@ root domain. Replace the last two lines above with the following, after replacin
|
|||
./manage.py reactivate_realm -r <subdomain> # Reactivates the organization
|
||||
```
|
||||
|
||||
## Logging in
|
||||
### Logging in
|
||||
|
||||
Once the import completes, all your users will have accounts in your
|
||||
new Zulip organization, but those accounts won't have passwords yet
|
||||
(since for security reasons, passwords are not exported).
|
||||
Your users will need to either authenticate using something like
|
||||
Google auth, or start by resetting their passwords.
|
||||
Google auth or start by resetting their passwords.
|
||||
|
||||
You can use the `./manage.py send_password_reset_email` command to
|
||||
send password reset emails to your users. We
|
||||
|
@ -156,7 +376,7 @@ and then once you're ready, you can email them to everyone using e.g.
|
|||
|
||||
(replace `''` with your subdomain if you're using one).
|
||||
|
||||
## Deleting and re-importing
|
||||
### Deleting and re-importing
|
||||
|
||||
If you did a test import of a Zulip organization, you may want to
|
||||
delete the test import data from your Zulip server before doing a
|
||||
|
|
|
@ -80,7 +80,7 @@ and return to the import instructions.
|
|||
|
||||
[hipchat-import]: https://zulipchat.com/help/import-from-hipchat
|
||||
[slack-import]: https://zulipchat.com/help/import-from-slack
|
||||
[zulip-backups]: ../production/maintain-secure-upgrade.html#backups
|
||||
[zulip-backups]: ../production/export-and-import.html#backups
|
||||
|
||||
Otherwise, open the link in a browser. Follow the prompts to set up
|
||||
your organization, and your own user account as an administrator.
|
||||
|
|
|
@ -6,7 +6,6 @@ secure Zulip installation, including:
|
|||
- [Upgrading](#upgrading)
|
||||
- [Upgrading from a git repository](#upgrading-from-a-git-repository)
|
||||
- [Upgrading the operating system](#upgrading-the-operating-system)
|
||||
- [Backups](#backups)
|
||||
- [Monitoring](#monitoring)
|
||||
- [Scalability](#scalability)
|
||||
- [Management commands](#management-commands)
|
||||
|
@ -369,204 +368,6 @@ That last command will finish by restarting your Zulip server; you
|
|||
should now be able to navigate to its URL and confirm everything is
|
||||
working correctly.
|
||||
|
||||
## Backups
|
||||
|
||||
Starting with Zulip 2.0, Zulip has a built-in backup tool:
|
||||
|
||||
```
|
||||
# As the zulip user
|
||||
/home/zulip/deployments/current/manage.py backup
|
||||
# Or as root
|
||||
su zulip -c '/home/zulip/deployments/current/manage.py backup'
|
||||
```
|
||||
|
||||
The backup tool provides the following options:
|
||||
- `--output`: Path where the output file should be stored. If no path is
|
||||
provided, the output file would be saved to a temporary directory.
|
||||
- `--skip-db`: If set, the tool will skip the backup of your database.
|
||||
- `--skip-uploads`: If set, the tool will skip the backup of the uploads.
|
||||
|
||||
This will generate a `.tar.gz` archive containing all the data stored
|
||||
on your Zulip server that would be needed to restore your Zulip
|
||||
server's state on another machine perfectly.
|
||||
|
||||
### Restoring backups
|
||||
|
||||
Backups generated using the Zulip 2.0 backup tool can be restored as
|
||||
follows.
|
||||
|
||||
First, [install a new Zulip server through Step 3][install-server]
|
||||
with the version of both the base OS and Zulip from your previous
|
||||
installation. Then, run as root:
|
||||
|
||||
```
|
||||
/home/zulip/deployments/current/scripts/setup/restore-backup /path/to/backup
|
||||
```
|
||||
|
||||
When that finishes, your Zulip server should be fully operational again.
|
||||
|
||||
#### Changing the hostname
|
||||
|
||||
It's common when testing backup restoration to restore backups with a
|
||||
different user-facing hostname than the original server to avoid
|
||||
disrupting service (e.g. `zuliptest.example.com` rather than
|
||||
`zulip.example.com`).
|
||||
|
||||
If you do so, just like any other time you change the hostname, you'll
|
||||
need to [update `EXTERNAL_HOST`](../production/settings.md) and then
|
||||
restart the Zulip server (after backup restoration completes).
|
||||
|
||||
Until you do, your Zulip server will think its user-facing hostname is
|
||||
still `zulip.example.com` and will return HTTP `400 BAD REQUEST`
|
||||
errors when trying to access it via `zuliptest.example.com`.
|
||||
|
||||
#### Inspecting a backup tarball
|
||||
|
||||
If you're not sure what versions were in use when a given backup was
|
||||
created, you can get that information via the files in the backup
|
||||
tarball `postgres-version`, `os-version`, and `zulip-version`. The
|
||||
following command may be useful for viewing these files without
|
||||
extracting the entire archive.
|
||||
|
||||
```
|
||||
tar -Oaxf /path/to/archive/zulip-backup-rest.tar.gz zulip-backup/zulip-version
|
||||
```
|
||||
|
||||
[install-server]: ../production/install.md
|
||||
|
||||
### What is included
|
||||
|
||||
Zulip's backup tools includes everything you need to fully restore
|
||||
your Zulip server from a user perspective.
|
||||
|
||||
The following data present on a Zulip server is not included in these
|
||||
backup archives, and you may want to backup separately:
|
||||
|
||||
* Transient data present in Zulip's RabbitMQ queues. For example, a
|
||||
record that a missed-message email for a given Zulip message is
|
||||
scheduled to be sent to a given user in 2 minutes if the recipient
|
||||
user doesn't interact with Zulip during that time window. You can
|
||||
check their status using `rabbitmq list_queues` as root.
|
||||
|
||||
* Certain highly transient state that Zulip doesn't store in a
|
||||
database, such as typing status, API rate-limiting counters,
|
||||
etc. that would have no value 1 minute after the backup is
|
||||
completed.
|
||||
|
||||
* The server access/error logs from `/var/log/zulip`, because a Zulip
|
||||
server only appends to those log files (i.e. they aren't necessarily
|
||||
to precisely restore your Zulip data), and they can be very large
|
||||
compared to the rest of the data for a Zulip server.
|
||||
|
||||
* Files uploaded with the Zulip
|
||||
[S3 file upload backend](../production/upload-backends.md). We
|
||||
don't include these for two reasons. First, the uploaded file data
|
||||
in S3 can easily be many times larger than the rest of the backup,
|
||||
and downloading it all to a server doing a backup could easily
|
||||
exceed its disk capacity. Additionally, S3 is a reliable persistent
|
||||
storage system with its own high-quality tools for doing backups.
|
||||
Contributions of (documentation on) ready-to-use scripting for S3
|
||||
backups are welcome.
|
||||
|
||||
* SSL certificates. Since these are security-sensitive and either
|
||||
trivially replaced (if generated via Certbot) or provided by the
|
||||
system administrator, we do not include them in these backups.
|
||||
|
||||
### Backup details
|
||||
|
||||
This section is primarily for users managing backups themselves
|
||||
(E.g. if they're using a remote postgres database with an existing
|
||||
backup strategy), and also serves as documentation for what is
|
||||
included in the backups generated by Zulip's standard tools. That
|
||||
data includes:
|
||||
|
||||
* The postgres database. That you can back up like any postgres
|
||||
database; we have some example tooling for doing that incrementally
|
||||
into S3 using [wal-e](https://github.com/wal-e/wal-e) in
|
||||
`puppet/zulip_ops/manifests/postgres_common.pp` (that's what we
|
||||
use for zulip.com's database backups). Note that this module isn't
|
||||
part of the Zulip server releases since it's part of the zulip.com
|
||||
configuration (see <https://github.com/zulip/zulip/issues/293>
|
||||
for a ticket about fixing this to make life easier for running
|
||||
backups).
|
||||
|
||||
* Any user-uploaded files. If you're using S3 as storage for file
|
||||
uploads, this is backed up in S3, but if you have instead set
|
||||
`LOCAL_UPLOADS_DIR`, any files uploaded by users (including avatars)
|
||||
will be stored in that directory and you'll want to back it up.
|
||||
|
||||
* Your Zulip configuration including secrets from `/etc/zulip/`.
|
||||
E.g. if you lose the value of `secret_key`, all users will need to
|
||||
login again when you setup a replacement server since you won't be
|
||||
able to verify their cookies; if you lose `avatar_salt`, any
|
||||
user-uploaded avatars will need to be re-uploaded (since avatar
|
||||
filenames are computed using a hash of `avatar_salt` and user's
|
||||
email), etc.
|
||||
|
||||
Zulip also has a logical [data export and import tool][export-import],
|
||||
which is useful for migrating data between Zulip Cloud and other Zulip
|
||||
servers, as well as various auditing purposes. The big advantage of
|
||||
the `manage.py backup` system over the export/import process is that
|
||||
it's structurally very unlikely for the `postgres` process to ever
|
||||
develop bugs, whereas the import/export tool requires some work for
|
||||
every new feature we add to Zulip, and thus may occasionally have bugs
|
||||
around corner cases. The export tool's advantage is that the export is
|
||||
more human-readable and easier to parse, and doesn't have the
|
||||
requirement that the same set of Zulip organizations exist on the two
|
||||
servers (which is critical for migrations to and from Zulip Cloud).
|
||||
|
||||
[export-import]: ../production/export-and-import.md
|
||||
|
||||
### Restore from manual backups
|
||||
|
||||
To restore from a manual backup, the process is basically the reverse of the above:
|
||||
|
||||
* Install new server as normal by downloading a Zulip release tarball
|
||||
and then using `scripts/setup/install`, you don't need
|
||||
to run the `initialize-database` second stage which puts default
|
||||
data into the database.
|
||||
|
||||
* Unpack to `/etc/zulip` the `settings.py` and `zulip-secrets.conf` files
|
||||
from your backups.
|
||||
|
||||
* Restore your database from the backup using `wal-e`; if you ran
|
||||
`initialize-database` anyway above, you'll want to first
|
||||
`scripts/setup/postgres-init-db` to drop the initial database first.
|
||||
|
||||
* Reconfigure rabbitmq to use the password from `secrets.conf`
|
||||
by running, as root, `scripts/setup/configure-rabbitmq`.
|
||||
|
||||
* If you're using local file uploads, restore those files to the path
|
||||
specified by `settings.LOCAL_UPLOADS_DIR` and (if appropriate) any
|
||||
logs.
|
||||
|
||||
* Start the server using `scripts/restart-server`.
|
||||
|
||||
This restoration process can also be used to migrate a Zulip
|
||||
installation from one server to another.
|
||||
|
||||
We recommend running a disaster recovery after you setup backups to
|
||||
confirm that your backups are working; you may also want to monitor
|
||||
that they are up to date using the Nagios plugin at:
|
||||
`puppet/zulip_ops/files/nagios_plugins/check_postgres_backup`.
|
||||
|
||||
Contributions to more fully automate this process or make this section
|
||||
of the guide much more explicit and detailed are very welcome!
|
||||
|
||||
|
||||
### Postgres streaming replication
|
||||
|
||||
Zulip has database configuration for using Postgres streaming
|
||||
replication; you can see the configuration in these files:
|
||||
|
||||
* `puppet/zulip_ops/manifests/postgres_slave.pp`
|
||||
* `puppet/zulip_ops/manifests/postgres_master.pp`
|
||||
* `puppet/zulip_ops/files/postgresql/*`
|
||||
|
||||
Contribution of a step-by-step guide for setting this up (and moving
|
||||
this configuration to be available in the main `puppet/zulip/` tree)
|
||||
would be very welcome!
|
||||
|
||||
## Monitoring
|
||||
|
||||
The complete Nagios configuration (sans secret keys) used to
|
||||
|
|
|
@ -80,6 +80,6 @@ their use of such an export.
|
|||
|
||||
* [Import into an on-premises installation][import-only]
|
||||
|
||||
[production-backups]: https://zulip.readthedocs.io/en/stable/production/maintain-secure-upgrade.html#backups
|
||||
[production-backups]: https://zulip.readthedocs.io/en/stable/production/export-and-import.html#backups
|
||||
[export-and-import]: https://zulip.readthedocs.io/en/latest/production/export-and-import.html
|
||||
[import-only]: https://zulip.readthedocs.io/en/latest/production/export-and-import.html#import-into-a-new-zulip-server
|
||||
|
|
Loading…
Reference in New Issue