## ## This is an example rdiff-backup configuration file. ## The defaults are useful in most cases, just make sure ## to configure the destination host and user. ## ## passed directly to rdiff-backup # options = --force ## default is 0, but set to 19 if you want to lower the priority. # nicelevel = 19 ## default is yes. set to no to skip the test if the remote host is alive # testconnect = no ## default is not to limit bandwidth. ## set to a number in bytes/second to limit bandwidth usage. Use a negative ## number to set a limit that will never be exceeded, or a positive number ## to set a target average bandwidth use. cstream is required. See cstream's ## -t option for more information. 62500 bytes = 500 Kb (.5 Mb) # bwlimit = 62500 ###################################################### ## source section ## (where the files to be backed up are coming from) [source] # an optional subdirectory below 'directory' (see [dest]) label = thishostname # type can be "local" or "remote" type = local # only use if '[source] type = remote' #host = srchost #user = srcuser # how many days of data to keep # (you can also use the time format of rdiff-backup, e.g. 6D5h) # (to keep everything, set this to yes) #keep = yes keep = 60 # A few notes about includes and excludes: # 1. include, exclude and vsinclude statements support globbing with '*' # 2. Symlinks are not dereferenced. Moreover, an include line whose path # contains, at any level, a symlink to a directory, will only have the # symlink backed-up, not the target directory's content. Yes, you have to # dereference yourself the symlinks, or to use 'mount --bind' instead. # Example: let's say /home is a symlink to /mnt/crypt/home ; the following # line will only backup a "/home" symlink ; neither /home/user nor # /home/user/Mail will be backed-up : # include = /home/user/Mail # A workaround is to 'mount --bind /mnt/crypt/home /home' ; another one is to # write : # include = /mnt/crypt/home/user/Mail # 3. All the excludes come after all the includes. The order is not otherwise # taken into account. # files to include in the backup include = /var/spool/cron/crontabs include = /var/backups include = /etc include = /root include = /home include = /usr/local/bin include = /usr/local/sbin include = /var/lib/dpkg/status include = /var/lib/dpkg/status-old # If vservers = yes in /etc/backupninja.conf then the following variables can # be used: # vsnames = all | ... (default = all) # vsinclude = # vsinclude = # ... # Any path specified in vsinclude is added to the include list for each vserver # listed in vsnames (or all if vsnames = all, which is the default). # # For example, vsinclude = /home will backup the /home directory in every # vserver listed in vsnames. If you have 'vsnames = foo bar baz', this # vsinclude will add to the include list /vservers/foo/home, /vservers/bar/home # and /vservers/baz/home. # Vservers paths are derived from $VROOTDIR. # files to exclude from the backup #exclude = /home/*/.gnupg ###################################################### ## destination section ## (where the files are copied to) [dest] # type can be "local" or "remote" type = remote # put the backups under this directory directory = /backups # the machine which will receive the backups. # only use if "[dest] type = remote" host = backuphost # make the files owned by this user. you must be able to # `su -c "ssh backupuser@backhost"` without specifying a password. # only use if "[dest] type = remote" user = backupuser