Backing up the Undercloud

Backing up the Undercloud

In order to backup your Undercloud you need to make sure a set of files and databases are stored correctly to be used in case of an issue running the updates or upgrades workflows.

The following sections will describe how to execute an Undercloud backup.

NTP service

OpenStack services are time sensitive, users need to be sure their environment have the time synchronized correctly before proceeding with any backup task.

By default, both Undercloud and Overcloud should have configured correctly the NTP service as there are parameters specifically defined to manage this service.

The user is responsible to ensure that the Undercloud restore is consistent in time. For example, a user installs the Undercloud at the time ‘m’, then they deploy the Undercloud and the Overcloud at the time ‘n’, and they create an Undercloud backup at the time ‘o’. When the user restore the Undercloud it needs to be sure is restored at a time later than ‘o’. So, before and after restoring the Undercloud node is important to have all the deployment with the time updated and synchronized correctly.

In case this is done manually, execute:

sudo yum install -y ntp
sudo chkconfig ntpd on
sudo service ntpd stop
sudo ntpdate pool.ntp.org
sudo service ntpd restart

After ensuring the environment have the time synchronized correctly you can continue with the backup tasks.

CLI driven backups

There is an automated way of creating an Undercloud backup, this CLI option allows the operator to run a database and filesystem backup. By default, all databases are included in the backup, also, the folder /home/stack.

The command usage is:

openstack undercloud backup [--add-path ADD_FILES_TO_BACKUP] [--exclude-path EXCLUDE_FILES_TO_BACKUP]

For example, we can run a full MySQL backup with additional paths as:

openstack undercloud backup --add-path /etc/ \
                            --add-path /var/log/ \
                            --add-path /root/ \
                            --add-path /var/lib/glance/ \
                            --add-path /var/lib/docker/ \
                            --add-path /var/lib/certmonger/ \
                            --add-path /var/lib/registry/ \
                            --add-path /srv/node/ \
                            --exclude-path /home/stack/

Note that we are excluding the folder /home/stack/ from the backup, but this folder is not included using the --add-path, CLI option, this is due to the fact that the /home/stack/ folder is added by default in any backup as it contains necessary files to restore correctly the Undercloud. You can exclude that folder and add specific files if you are required to do so.

When executing the Undercloud backup via the OpenStack CLI, the backup is stored in a temporary folder called /var/tmp/. After this operation, the result of the backup procedure is stored in the swift container called undercloud-backups and it will expire after 24 hours of its creation.

Manual backups

If the user needs to run the backup manually, the following steps must be executed.

Database backups

The operator needs to backup all databases in the Undercloud node:

mysqldump --opt --single-transaction --all-databases > /root/undercloud-all-databases.sql

Filesystem backups

  • MariaDB configuration file on undercloud (so we can restore databases accurately).
  • All glance image data in /var/lib/glance/images.
  • All swift data in /srv/node.
  • All data in stack users home directory.
  • Also the DB backup created in the previous step.

The following command can be used to perform a backup of all data from the undercloud node:

sudo tar --xattrs --ignore-failed-read -cf \
    UC-backup-`date +%F`.tar \
    /root/undercloud-all-databases.sql \
    /etc \
    /var/log \
    /root \
    /var/lib/glance \
    /var/lib/docker \
    /var/lib/certmonger \
    /var/lib/registry \
    /srv/node \
    /home/stack
Creative Commons Attribution 3.0 License

Except where otherwise noted, this document is licensed under Creative Commons Attribution 3.0 License. See all OpenStack Legal Documents.