27

What is the easiest way to do incremental backups of a git repository with git bundle?

If I just wanted to backup a single branch, I could do something along these lines:

git bundle create foo last-backup..master
git tag -f last-backup master

But what if I want to backup everything (including all branches)?


To answer the questions in the comments:

Strictly speaking, I do not need to use the usual Git bundles, as long as the solution satisfies the following properties:

  • Each incremental backup is a single file. I can store it somewhere and subsequent incremental backups do not need to modify this file.

  • The size of the file is approximately equal to the total size of Git commits since the previous backup. Changes in binary files are also efficiently stored.

  • A full backup + all incremental backups since then contain everything that I need to automatically reconstruct the repository, including all branches.

(As a naive example, simply constructing a tar archive with recently-changed files in the git repository fails to satisfy the second requirement if, for example, automatic garbage collection has occurred.)

And ideally I would also like to have a system that is idiot-proof:

  • I can take virtually any full backup of my Git repository, plus all recent incremental backups, and I can simply "pull" everything from the backups and the repository will be up-to-date. In particular, it does not matter if there is a partial overlap between the full backup and incremental backups.

Git bundles satisfy all this very nicely if I only need to handle one branch.

4
  • Why do you need to use git bundles for backups? Is that a PHB requirement? Aug 29, 2012 at 10:29
  • @user1338062: Bundles would be ideal for my workflow. If you have an alternative solution that achieves all the nice properties of Git bundles, I would be happy to hear. Aug 29, 2012 at 14:10
  • You probably should expand the question a bit with what are your requirements for git repository backup. Aug 29, 2012 at 14:43
  • This question (and the answers there) seem to be somewhat relevant: stackoverflow.com/questions/3635952/… Aug 31, 2012 at 12:48

4 Answers 4

16
+100

(We discussed this problem with Jukka, this is the outcome.)

Preliminaries:

  1. Have the last backup available as backup.bundle
  2. Have a remote backup that points at backup.bundle

Making a backup:

  1. git fetch backup – just to make sure we're up to date
  2. git bundle create newbackup.bundle ^backup/A ^backup/B A B C
    • This means we create a bundle that excludes all the stuff that was already in the bundle
    • It's easy to generate the needed ^backup/A-style arguments from refs/remotes/backup/
    • Likewise the A-style arguments are from refs/heads
  3. copy newbackup.bundle to wherever you keep your backups
  4. replace backup.bundle with newbackup.bundle so you know where to start the next incremental backup

Recovering:

  1. Have a repository that is either empty or represents an old version of your repository
  2. For every backup file, in sequence:
    1. git remote rm recovery
    2. git remote add recovery <name-of-bundle>
    3. git fetch recovery – you need to name the remote for this to work
  3. Now you should have every branch available in refs/remotes/backup
2
  • Reading the .git/refs/heads and .git/refs/remotes/backup directories does not seem to work as intended, so I ended up invoking git branch and git branch -r and parsing the output. Other than that, this basic approach seems to work perfectly. Sep 12, 2012 at 11:38
  • I think I understand what this approach is doing, I just don't understand the "It's easy to generate..." statements. How would I generate the excludes from refs/remotes/backup (and presumably the includes from refs/heads?) It is just a matter of doing an ls() on the directory and constructing the arguments from that? Mar 2, 2016 at 1:18
6

Try using --since with --all.

Create the first backup:

git bundle create mybundle-all --all

Do an incremental backup:

git bundle create mybundle-inc --since=10.days --all

The incremental should contain all commits on all branches that have happened in the past 10 days. Make sure the --since parameter goes back far enough or you might miss a commit. Git will also refuse to create the bundle if no commits have happened in that time-frame, so plan for that.

2
  • 1
    This is a good idea, but I wonder if I could easily use, e.g., tags instead of trying to calculate the right number of days for the --since flag? Aug 31, 2012 at 11:24
  • 1
    You could specify a date e.g. --since {2012-08-30} and encode the date into last increment bundle file name.
    – kan
    Aug 31, 2012 at 15:26
1

You could do

git clone --mirror <your_repo> my-backup.git

It will create a bare repo with all refs.

Then you could periodically do git push --mirror <my-backup>.

3
  • This is a good tip, but unfortunately it does not answer the question… I need to create bundles. Aug 26, 2012 at 22:26
  • You can run the command for creating a bundle using the git hooks after each push Aug 29, 2012 at 15:59
  • @jkremser: Can I write a hook that creates a bundle that contains all commits in the push, even if there are multiple branches involved? How? Aug 29, 2012 at 16:40
-1

Seems opqdonut solution will not work, cause ^backup/A ^backup/B only points to last incremental backup. And actually need to exclude refs from all previous incremental backups.

Need to create remotes for each of previous bundles.

UPD: No, it should work, see Jukka comment below.

4
  • Example: two branches: A, B (to simplify: no common commits between) first 10 backups: only A modified; 11th backup: B modified ;12th backup last bundle contains only "B" refs, so new bundle will contain all "A" refs (including those which were in first 10 backups)
    – vsespb
    Mar 1, 2013 at 23:51
  • UPD: here is example implementation github.com/vsespb/git-incremental-backup
    – vsespb
    Mar 1, 2013 at 23:52
  • In your scenario, after the 11th backup, both backup/A and backup/B will exist, and both of them will be up-to-date. Fetching from the 11th bundle does not delete backup/A. Note that you will never delete the remote called "backup", you just fetch new things from the new bundles. Mar 2, 2013 at 0:48
  • Yo're right. I was deleting the remote. That was the problem.
    – vsespb
    Mar 2, 2013 at 8:21

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