This script performs backups of virtual machines residing on ESX(i) 3.5/4.x/5.x/6.x/7.x servers using methodology similar to VMware's VCB tool. The script takes snapshots of live running virtual machines, backs up the master VMDK(s) and then upon completion, deletes the snapshot until the next backup. The only caveat is that it utilizes resources available to the Service Console of the ESX server or Busybox Console (Tech Support Mode) of the ESXi server running the backups as opposed to following the traditional method of offloading virtual machine backups through a VCB proxy.
This script has been tested on ESX 3.5/4.x/5.x and ESXi 3.5/4.x/5.x/6.x/7.x and supports the following backup mediums: LOCAL STORAGE, SAN and NFS. The script is non-interactive and can be setup to run via cron. Currently, this script accepts a text file that lists the display names of virtual machine(s) that are to be backed up. Additionally, one can specify a folder containing configuration files on a per VM basis for granular control over backup policies.
Additionally, for ESX(i) environments that don't have persistent NFS datastores designated for backups, the script offers the ability to automatically connect the ESX(i) server to a NFS exported folder and then upon backup completion, disconnect it from the ESX(i) server. The connection is established by creating an NFS datastore link which enables monolithic (or thick) VMDK backups as opposed to using the usual *nix mount command which necessitates breaking VMDK files into the 2gbsparse format for backup. Enabling this mode is self-explanatory and will evidently be so when editing the script (Note: VM_BACKUP_VOLUME variable is ignored if ENABLE_NON_PERSISTENT_NFS=1 ).
In its current configuration, the script will allow up to 3 unique backups of the Virtual Machine before it will overwrite the previous backups; this however, can be modified to fit procedures if need be. Please be diligent in running the script in a test or staging environment before using it on production live Virtual Machines; this script functions well within our environment but there is a chance that it may not fit well into other environments.
If you have any questions, you may post in the dedicated ghettoVCB VMTN community group.
If you have found this script to be useful and would like to contribute back, please click here to donate.
Please read ALL documentation + FAQ's before posting a question about an issue or problem. Thank You
1) Download ghettoVCB from github by clicking on the ZIP button at the top and upload to either your ESX or ESXi system (use scp or WinSCP to transfer the file)
2) Extract the contents of the zip file (filename will vary):
# unzip ghettoVCB-master.zip
Archive: ghettoVCB-master.zip
creating: ghettoVCB-master/
inflating: ghettoVCB-master/README
inflating: ghettoVCB-master/ghettoVCB-restore.sh
inflating: ghettoVCB-master/ghettoVCB-restore_vm_restore_configuration_template
inflating: ghettoVCB-master/ghettoVCB-vm_backup_configuration_template
inflating: ghettoVCB-master/ghettoVCB.conf
inflating: ghettoVCB-master/ghettoVCB.sh
3) The script is now ready to be used and is located in a directory named ghettoVCB-master
# ls -l
-rw-r--r-- 1 root root 281 Jan 6 03:58 README
-rw-r--r-- 1 root root 16024 Jan 6 03:58 ghettoVCB-restore.sh
-rw-r--r-- 1 root root 309 Jan 6 03:58 ghettoVCB-restore_vm_restore_configuration_template
-rw-r--r-- 1 root root 356 Jan 6 03:58 ghettoVCB-vm_backup_configuration_template
-rw-r--r-- 1 root root 631 Jan 6 03:58 ghettoVCB.conf
-rw-r--r-- 1 root root 49375 Jan 6 03:58 ghettoVCB.sh
4) Before using the scripts, you will need to enable the execute permission on both ghettoVCB.sh and ghettoVCB-restore.sh by running the following:
chmod +x ghettoVCB.shchmod +x ghettoVCB-restore.sh
The following variables need to be defined within the script or in VM backup policy prior to execution.
Defining the backup datastore and folder in which the backups are stored (if folder does not exist, it will automatically be created):
VM_BACKUP_VOLUME=/vmfs/volumes/dlgCore-NFS-bigboi.VM-Backups/WILLIAM_BACKUPS
Defining the backup disk format (zeroedthick, eagerzeroedthick, thin, and 2gbsparse are available):
DISK_BACKUP_FORMAT=thin
Note: If you are using the 2gbsparse on an ESXi 5.1 host, backups may fail. Please download the latest version of the ghettoVCB script which automatically resolves this or take a look at this article for the details.
Defining the backup rotation per VM:
VM_BACKUP_ROTATION_COUNT=3
Defining whether the VM is powered down or not prior to backup (1 = enable, 0 = disable):
Note: VM(s) that are powered off will not require snapshoting
POWER_VM_DOWN_BEFORE_BACKUP=0
Defining whether the VM can be hard powered off when "POWER_VM_DOWN_BEFORE_BACKUP" is enabled and VM does not have VMware Tools installed
ENABLE_HARD_POWER_OFF=0
If "ENABLE_HARD_POWER_OFF" is enabled, then this defines the number of (60sec) iterations the script will before executing a hard power off when:
ITER_TO_WAIT_SHUTDOWN=3
The number (60sec) iterations the script will wait when powering off the VM and will give up and ignore the particular VM for backup:
POWER_DOWN_TIMEOUT=5
The number (60sec) iterations the script will wait when taking a snapshot of a VM and will give up and ignore the particular VM for backup:
Note: Default value should suffice
SNAPSHOT_TIMEOUT=15
Defining whether or not to enable compression (1 = enable, 0 = disable):
ENABLE_COMPRESSION=0
NOTE: With ESXi 3.x/4.x/5.x, there is a limitation of the maximum size of a VM for compression within the unsupported Busybox Console which should not affect backups running classic ESX 3.x,4.x or 5.x. On ESXi 3.x the largest supported VM is 4GB for compression and on ESXi 4.x the largest supported VM is 8GB. If you try to compress a larger VM, you may run into issues when trying to extract upon a restore. PLEASE TEST THE RESTORE PROCESS BEFORE MOVING TO PRODUCTION SYSTEMS!
Defining the adapter type for backed up VMDK (DEPERCATED - NO LONGER NEEDED😞
ADAPTER_FORMAT=buslogic
Defining whether virtual machine memory is snapped and if quiescing is enabled (1 = enable, 0 = disable):
Note: By default both are disabled
VM_SNAPSHOT_MEMORY=0
VM_SNAPSHOT_QUIESCE=0
NOTE: VM_SNAPSHOT_MEMORY is only used to ensure when the snapshot is taken, it's memory contents are also captured. This is only relevant to the actual snapshot and it's not used in any shape/way/form in regards to the backup. All backups taken whether your VM is running or offline will result in an offline VM backup when you restore. This was originally added for debugging purposes and in generally should be left disabled
Defining VMDK(s) to backup from a particular VM either a list of vmdks or "all"
VMDK_FILES_TO_BACKUP="myvmdk.vmdk"
Defining whether or not VM(s) with existing snapshots can be backed up. This flag means it will CONSOLIDATE ALL EXISTING SNAPSHOTS for a VM prior to starting the backup (1 = yes, 0 = no):
ALLOW_VMS_WITH_SNAPSHOTS_TO_BE_BACKEDUP=0
Defining the order of which VM(s) should be shutdown first, especially if there is a dependency between multiple VM(s). This should be a comma seperate list of VM(s)
VM_SHUTDOWN_ORDER=vm1,vm2,vm3
Defining the order of VM(s) that should be started up first after backups have completed, especially if there is a dependency between multiple VM(s). This should be a comma seperate list of VM(s)
VM_STARTUP_ORDER=vm3,vm2,vm1
Defining NON-PERSISTENT NFS Backup Volume (1 = yes, 0 = no):
ENABLE_NON_PERSISTENT_NFS=0
NOTE: This is meant for environments that do not want a persisted connection to their NFS backup volume and allows the NFS volume to only be mounted during backups. The script expects the following 5 variables to be defined if this is to be used: UNMOUNT_NFS, NFS_SERVER, NFS_MOUNT, NFS_LOCAL_NAME and NFS_VM_BACKUP_DIR
Defining whether or not to unmount the NFS backup volume (1 = yes, 0 = no):
UNMOUNT_NFS=0
Defining the NFS server address (IP/hostname):
NFS_SERVER=172.51.0.192
Defining the NFS export path:
NFS_MOUNT=/upload
Defining the NFS datastore name:
NFS_LOCAL_NAME=backup
Defining the NFS backup directory for VMs:
NFS_VM_BACKUP_DIR=mybackups
NOTE: Only supported if you are running vSphere 4.1 and this feature is experimental. If you are having issues with sending mail, please take a look at Email Backup Log section
Defining whether or not to email backup logs (1 = yes, 0 = no):
EMAIL_LOG=1
Defining whether or not to email message will be deleted off the host whether it is successful in sending, this is used for debugging purposes. (1 = yes, 0 = no):
EMAIL_DEBUG=1
Defining email server:
EMAIL_SERVER=auroa.primp-industries.com
Defining email server port:
EMAIL_SERVER_PORT=25
Defining email delay interval (useful if you have slow SMTP server and would like to include a delay in netcat using -i param, default is 1second):
EMAIL_DELAY_INTERVAL=1
Defining recipient of the email:
EMAIL_TO=auroa@primp-industries.com
Defining from user which may require specific domain entry depending on email server configurations:
EMAIL_FROM=root@ghettoVCB
Defining to support RSYNC symbolic link creation (1 = yes, 0 = no):
RSYNC_LINK=0
Note: This enables an automatic creation of a generic symbolic link (both a relative & absolution path) in which users can refer to run replication backups using rsync from a remote host. This does not actually support rsync backups with ghettoVCB. Please take a look at the Rsync Section of the documentation for more details.
# cat ghettoVCB.conf
VM_BACKUP_VOLUME=/vmfs/volumes/dlgCore-NFS-bigboi.VM-Backups/WILLIAM_BACKUPS
DISK_BACKUP_FORMAT=thin
VM_BACKUP_ROTATION_COUNT=3
POWER_VM_DOWN_BEFORE_BACKUP=0
ENABLE_HARD_POWER_OFF=0
ITER_TO_WAIT_SHUTDOWN=3
POWER_DOWN_TIMEOUT=5
ENABLE_COMPRESSION=0
VM_SNAPSHOT_MEMORY=0
VM_SNAPSHOT_QUIESCE=0
ALLOW_VMS_WITH_SNAPSHOTS_TO_BE_BACKEDUP=0
ENABLE_NON_PERSISTENT_NFS=0
UNMOUNT_NFS=0
NFS_SERVER=172.30.0.195
NFS_MOUNT=/nfsshare
NFS_LOCAL_NAME=nfs_storage_backup
NFS_VM_BACKUP_DIR=mybackups
SNAPSHOT_TIMEOUT=15
EMAIL_LOG=0
EMAIL_SERVER=auroa.primp-industries.com
EMAIL_SERVER_PORT=25
EMAIL_DELAY_INTERVAL=1
EMAIL_TO=auroa@primp-industries.com
EMAIL_FROM=root@ghettoVCB
WORKDIR_DEBUG=0
VM_SHUTDOWN_ORDER=
VM_STARTUP_ORDER=
To override any existing configurations within the ghettoVCB.sh script and to use a global configuration file, user just needs to specify the new flag -g and path to global configuration file (For an example, please refer to the sample execution section of the documenation)
Running multiple instances of ghettoVCB is now supported with the latest release by specifying the working directory (-w) flag.
By default, the working directory of the ghettoVCB instance is /tmp/ghettoVCB.work and you can run another instance by providing an alternate working directory. You should try to minimize the number of ghettoVCB instances running on your ESXi host as it does consume some amount of resources when running in the ESXi Shell. This is considered an experimental feature, so please test in a development environment to ensure everything is working prior to moving to production system.
Ensure that you do not edit past this section:
########################## DO NOT MODIFY PAST THIS LINE ##########################
# ./ghettoVCB.sh
###############################################################################
#
# ghettoVCB for ESX/ESXi 3.5, 4.x+ and 5.x
# Author: William Lam
# http://www.virtuallyghetto.com/
# Documentation: http://communities.vmware.com/docs/DOC-8760
# Created: 11/17/2008
# Last modified: 2012_12_17 Version 0
#
###############################################################################
Usage: ghettoVCB.sh [options]
OPTIONS:
-a Backup all VMs on host
-f List of VMs to backup
-m Name of VM to backup (overrides -f)
-c VM configuration directory for VM backups
-g Path to global ghettoVCB configuration file
-l File to output logging
-w ghettoVCB work directory (default: )
-d Debug level [info|debug|dryrun] (default: info)
(e.g.)
Backup VMs stored in a list
./ghettoVCB.sh -f vms_to_backup
Backup a single VM
./ghettoVCB.sh -m vm_to_backup
Backup all VMs residing on this host
./ghettoVCB.sh -a
Backup all VMs residing on this host except for the VMs in the exclusion list
./ghettoVCB.sh -a -e vm_exclusion_list
Backup VMs based on specific configuration located in directory
./ghettoVCB.sh -f vms_to_backup -c vm_backup_configs
Backup VMs using global ghettoVCB configuration file
./ghettoVCB.sh -f vms_to_backup -g /global/ghettoVCB.conf
Output will log to /tmp/ghettoVCB.log (consider logging to local or remote datastore to persist logs)
./ghettoVCB.sh -f vms_to_backup -l /vmfs/volume/local-storage/ghettoVCB.log
Dry run (no backup will take place)
./ghettoVCB.sh -f vms_to_backup -d dryrun
The input to this script is a file that contains the display name of the virtual machine(s) separated by a newline. When creating this file on a non-Linux/UNIX system, you may introduce ^M character which can cause the script to miss-behave. To ensure this does not occur, plesae create the file on the ESX/ESXi host.
Here is a sample of what the file would look like:
[root@himalaya ~]# cat vms_to_backup
vCOPS
vMA
vCloudConnector
Debug Mode
Note: This execution mode provides a qucik summary of details on whether a given set of VM(s)/VMDK(s) will be backed up. It provides additional information such as VMs that may have snapshots, VMDK(s) that are configured as independent disks, or other issues that may cause a VM or VMDK to not backed up.
[root@himalaya ghettoVCB]# ./ghettoVCB.sh -f vms_to_backup -d dryrun
Logging output to "/tmp/ghettoVCB-2011-03-13_15-19-57.log" ...
2011-03-13 15:19:57 -- info: ============================== ghettoVCB LOG START ==============================
2011-03-13 15:19:57 -- info: CONFIG - VERSION = 2011_03_13_1
2011-03-13 15:19:57 -- info: CONFIG - GHETTOVCB_PID = 30157
2011-03-13 15:19:57 -- info: CONFIG - VM_BACKUP_VOLUME = /vmfs/volumes/dlgCore-NFS-bigboi.VM-Backups/WILLIAM_BACKUPS
2011-03-13 15:19:57 -- info: CONFIG - VM_BACKUP_ROTATION_COUNT = 3
2011-03-13 15:19:57 -- info: CONFIG - VM_BACKUP_DIR_NAMING_CONVENTION = 2011-03-13_15-19-57
2011-03-13 15:19:57 -- info: CONFIG - DISK_BACKUP_FORMAT = thin
2011-03-13 15:19:57 -- info: CONFIG - POWER_VM_DOWN_BEFORE_BACKUP = 0
2011-03-13 15:19:57 -- info: CONFIG - ENABLE_HARD_POWER_OFF = 0
2011-03-13 15:19:57 -- info: CONFIG - ITER_TO_WAIT_SHUTDOWN = 3
2011-03-13 15:19:57 -- info: CONFIG - POWER_DOWN_TIMEOUT = 5
2011-03-13 15:19:57 -- info: CONFIG - SNAPSHOT_TIMEOUT = 15
2011-03-13 15:19:57 -- info: CONFIG - LOG_LEVEL = dryrun
2011-03-13 15:19:57 -- info: CONFIG - BACKUP_LOG_OUTPUT = /tmp/ghettoVCB-2011-03-13_15-19-57.log
2011-03-13 15:19:57 -- info: CONFIG - VM_SNAPSHOT_MEMORY = 0
2011-03-13 15:19:57 -- info: CONFIG - VM_SNAPSHOT_QUIESCE = 0
2011-03-13 15:19:57 -- info: CONFIG - VMDK_FILES_TO_BACKUP = all
2011-03-13 15:19:57 -- info: CONFIG - EMAIL_LOG = 0
2011-03-13 15:19:57 -- info:
2011-03-13 15:19:57 -- dryrun: ###############################################
2011-03-13 15:19:57 -- dryrun: Virtual Machine: scofield
2011-03-13 15:19:57 -- dryrun: VM_ID: 704
2011-03-13 15:19:57 -- dryrun: VMX_PATH: /vmfs/volumes/himalaya-local-SATA.RE4-GP:Storage/scofield/scofield.vmx
2011-03-13 15:19:57 -- dryrun: VMX_DIR: /vmfs/volumes/himalaya-local-SATA.RE4-GP:Storage/scofield
2011-03-13 15:19:57 -- dryrun: VMX_CONF: scofield/scofield.vmx
2011-03-13 15:19:57 -- dryrun: VMFS_VOLUME: himalaya-local-SATA.RE4-GP:Storage
2011-03-13 15:19:57 -- dryrun: VMDK(s):
2011-03-13 15:19:58 -- dryrun: scofield_3.vmdk 3 GB
2011-03-13 15:19:58 -- dryrun: scofield_2.vmdk 2 GB
2011-03-13 15:19:58 -- dryrun: scofield_1.vmdk 1 GB
2011-03-13 15:19:58 -- dryrun: scofield.vmdk 5 GB
2011-03-13 15:19:58 -- dryrun: INDEPENDENT VMDK(s):
2011-03-13 15:19:58 -- dryrun: TOTAL_VM_SIZE_TO_BACKUP: 11 GB
2011-03-13 15:19:58 -- dryrun: ###############################################
2011-03-13 15:19:58 -- dryrun: ###############################################
2011-03-13 15:19:58 -- dryrun: Virtual Machine: vMA
2011-03-13 15:19:58 -- dryrun: VM_ID: 1440
2011-03-13 15:19:58 -- dryrun: VMX_PATH: /vmfs/volumes/himalaya-local-SATA.RE4-GP:Storage/vMA/vMA.vmx
2011-03-13 15:19:58 -- dryrun: VMX_DIR: /vmfs/volumes/himalaya-local-SATA.RE4-GP:Storage/vMA
2011-03-13 15:19:58 -- dryrun: VMX_CONF: vMA/vMA.vmx
2011-03-13 15:19:58 -- dryrun: VMFS_VOLUME: himalaya-local-SATA.RE4-GP:Storage
2011-03-13 15:19:58 -- dryrun: VMDK(s):
2011-03-13 15:19:58 -- dryrun: vMA-000002.vmdk 5 GB
2011-03-13 15:19:58 -- dryrun: INDEPENDENT VMDK(s):
2011-03-13 15:19:58 -- dryrun: TOTAL_VM_SIZE_TO_BACKUP: 5 GB
2011-03-13 15:19:58 -- dryrun: Snapshots found for this VM, please commit all snapshots before continuing!
2011-03-13 15:19:58 -- dryrun: THIS VIRTUAL MACHINE WILL NOT BE BACKED UP DUE TO EXISTING SNAPSHOTS!
2011-03-13 15:19:58 -- dryrun: ###############################################
2011-03-13 15:19:58 -- dryrun: ###############################################
2011-03-13 15:19:58 -- dryrun: Virtual Machine: vCloudConnector
2011-03-13 15:19:58 -- dryrun: VM_ID: 2064
2011-03-13 15:19:58 -- dryrun: VMX_PATH: /vmfs/volumes/himalaya-local-SATA.RE4-GP:Storage/vCloudConnector/vCloudConnector.vmx
2011-03-13 15:19:58 -- dryrun: VMX_DIR: /vmfs/volumes/himalaya-local-SATA.RE4-GP:Storage/vCloudConnector
2011-03-13 15:19:58 -- dryrun: VMX_CONF: vCloudConnector/vCloudConnector.vmx
2011-03-13 15:19:58 -- dryrun: VMFS_VOLUME: himalaya-local-SATA.RE4-GP:Storage
2011-03-13 15:19:58 -- dryrun: VMDK(s):
2011-03-13 15:19:59 -- dryrun: vCloudConnector.vmdk 3 GB
2011-03-13 15:19:59 -- dryrun: INDEPENDENT VMDK(s):
2011-03-13 15:19:59 -- dryrun: vCloudConnector_1.vmdk 40 GB
2011-03-13 15:19:59 -- dryrun: TOTAL_VM_SIZE_TO_BACKUP: 3 GB
2011-03-13 15:19:59 -- dryrun: Snapshots can not be taken for indepdenent disks!
2011-03-13 15:19:59 -- dryrun: THIS VIRTUAL MACHINE WILL NOT HAVE ALL ITS VMDKS BACKED UP!
2011-03-13 15:19:59 -- dryrun: ###############################################
2011-03-13 15:19:59 -- info: ###### Final status: OK, only a dryrun. ######
2011-03-13 15:19:59 -- info: ============================== ghettoVCB LOG END ================================
In the example above, we have 3 VMs to be backed up:
Note: This execution modes provides more in-depth information about environment/backup process including additional storage debugging information which provides information about both the source/destination datastore pre and post backups. This can be very useful in troubleshooting backups
[root@himalaya ghettoVCB]# ./ghettoVCB.sh -f vms_to_backup -d debug
Logging output to "/tmp/ghettoVCB-2011-03-13_15-27-59.log" ...
2011-03-13 15:27:59 -- info: ============================== ghettoVCB LOG START ==============================
2011-03-13 15:27:59 -- debug: Succesfully acquired lock directory - /tmp/ghettoVCB.lock
2011-03-13 15:27:59 -- debug: HOST VERSION: VMware ESX 4.1.0 build-260247
2011-03-13 15:27:59 -- debug: HOST LEVEL: VMware ESX 4.1.0 GA
2011-03-13 15:27:59 -- debug: HOSTNAME: himalaya.primp-industries.com
2011-03-13 15:27:59 -- info: CONFIG - VERSION = 2011_03_13_1
2011-03-13 15:27:59 -- info: CONFIG - GHETTOVCB_PID = 31074
2011-03-13 15:27:59 -- info: CONFIG - VM_BACKUP_VOLUME = /vmfs/volumes/dlgCore-NFS-bigboi.VM-Backups/WILLIAM_BACKUPS
2011-03-13 15:27:59 -- info: CONFIG - VM_BACKUP_ROTATION_COUNT = 3
2011-03-13 15:27:59 -- info: CONFIG - VM_BACKUP_DIR_NAMING_CONVENTION = 2011-03-13_15-27-59
2011-03-13 15:27:59 -- info: CONFIG - DISK_BACKUP_FORMAT = thin
2011-03-13 15:27:59 -- info: CONFIG - POWER_VM_DOWN_BEFORE_BACKUP = 0
2011-03-13 15:27:59 -- info: CONFIG - ENABLE_HARD_POWER_OFF = 0
2011-03-13 15:27:59 -- info: CONFIG - ITER_TO_WAIT_SHUTDOWN = 3
2011-03-13 15:27:59 -- info: CONFIG - POWER_DOWN_TIMEOUT = 5
2011-03-13 15:27:59 -- info: CONFIG - SNAPSHOT_TIMEOUT = 15
2011-03-13 15:27:59 -- info: CONFIG - LOG_LEVEL = debug
2011-03-13 15:27:59 -- info: CONFIG - BACKUP_LOG_OUTPUT = /tmp/ghettoVCB-2011-03-13_15-27-59.log
2011-03-13 15:27:59 -- info: CONFIG - VM_SNAPSHOT_MEMORY = 0
2011-03-13 15:27:59 -- info: CONFIG - VM_SNAPSHOT_QUIESCE = 0
2011-03-13 15:27:59 -- info: CONFIG - VMDK_FILES_TO_BACKUP = all
2011-03-13 15:27:59 -- info: CONFIG - EMAIL_LOG = 0
2011-03-13 15:27:59 -- info:
2011-03-13 15:28:01 -- debug: Storage Information before backup:
2011-03-13 15:28:01 -- debug: SRC_DATASTORE: himalaya-local-SATA.RE4-GP:Storage
2011-03-13 15:28:01 -- debug: SRC_DATASTORE_CAPACITY: 1830.5 GB
2011-03-13 15:28:01 -- debug: SRC_DATASTORE_FREE: 539.4 GB
2011-03-13 15:28:01 -- debug: SRC_DATASTORE_BLOCKSIZE: 4
2011-03-13 15:28:01 -- debug: SRC_DATASTORE_MAX_FILE_SIZE: 1024 GB
2011-03-13 15:28:01 -- debug:
2011-03-13 15:28:01 -- debug: DST_DATASTORE: dlgCore-NFS-bigboi.VM-Backups
2011-03-13 15:28:01 -- debug: DST_DATASTORE_CAPACITY: 1348.4 GB
2011-03-13 15:28:01 -- debug: DST_DATASTORE_FREE: 296.8 GB
2011-03-13 15:28:01 -- debug: DST_DATASTORE_BLOCKSIZE: NA
2011-03-13 15:28:01 -- debug: DST_DATASTORE_MAX_FILE_SIZE: NA
2011-03-13 15:28:01 -- debug:
2011-03-13 15:28:02 -- info: Initiate backup for scofield
2011-03-13 15:28:02 -- debug: /usr/sbin/vmkfstools -i "/vmfs/volumes/himalaya-local-SATA.RE4-GP:Storage/scofield/scofield_3.vmdk" -a "buslogic" -d "thin" "/vmfs/volumes/dlgCore-NFS-bigboi.VM-Backups/WILLIAM_BACKUPS/scofield/scofield-2011-03-13_15-27-59/scofield_3.vmdk"
Destination disk format: VMFS thin-provisioned
Cloning disk '/vmfs/volumes/himalaya-local-SATA.RE4-GP:Storage/scofield/scofield_3.vmdk'...
Clone: 37% done.
2011-03-13 15:28:04 -- debug: /usr/sbin/vmkfstools -i "/vmfs/volumes/himalaya-local-SATA.RE4-GP:Storage/scofield/scofield_2.vmdk" -a "buslogic" -d "thin" "/vmfs/volumes/dlgCore-NFS-bigboi.VM-Backups/WILLIAM_BACKUPS/scofield/scofield-2011-03-13_15-27-59/scofield_2.vmdk"
Destination disk format: VMFS thin-provisioned
Cloning disk '/vmfs/volumes/himalaya-local-SATA.RE4-GP:Storage/scofield/scofield_2.vmdk'...
Clone: 85% done.
2011-03-13 15:28:05 -- debug: /usr/sbin/vmkfstools -i "/vmfs/volumes/himalaya-local-SATA.RE4-GP:Storage/scofield/scofield_1.vmdk" -a "buslogic" -d "thin" "/vmfs/volumes/dlgCore-NFS-bigboi.VM-Backups/WILLIAM_BACKUPS/scofield/scofield-2011-03-13_15-27-59/scofield_1.vmdk"
2011-03-13 15:28:06 -- debug: /usr/sbin/vmkfstools -i "/vmfs/volumes/himalaya-local-SATA.RE4-GP:Storage/scofield/scofield.vmdk" -a "buslogic" -d "thin" "/vmfs/volumes/dlgCore-NFS-bigboi.VM-Backups/WILLIAM_BACKUPS/scofield/scofield-2011-03-13_15-27-59/scofield.vmdk"
Destination disk format: VMFS thin-provisioned
Cloning disk '/vmfs/volumes/himalaya-local-SATA.RE4-GP:Storage/scofield/scofield.vmdk'...
Clone: 78% done.
2011-03-13 15:29:52 -- info: Backup Duration: 1.83 Minutes
2011-03-13 15:29:52 -- info: Successfully completed backup for scofield!
2011-03-13 15:29:54 -- debug: Storage Information after backup:
2011-03-13 15:29:54 -- debug: SRC_DATASTORE: himalaya-local-SATA.RE4-GP:Storage
2011-03-13 15:29:54 -- debug: SRC_DATASTORE_CAPACITY: 1830.5 GB
2011-03-13 15:29:54 -- debug: SRC_DATASTORE_FREE: 539.4 GB
2011-03-13 15:29:54 -- debug: SRC_DATASTORE_BLOCKSIZE: 4
2011-03-13 15:29:54 -- debug: SRC_DATASTORE_MAX_FILE_SIZE: 1024 GB
2011-03-13 15:29:54 -- debug:
2011-03-13 15:29:54 -- debug: DST_DATASTORE: dlgCore-NFS-bigboi.VM-Backups
2011-03-13 15:29:54 -- debug: DST_DATASTORE_CAPACITY: 1348.4 GB
2011-03-13 15:29:54 -- debug: DST_DATASTORE_FREE: 296.8 GB
2011-03-13 15:29:54 -- debug: DST_DATASTORE_BLOCKSIZE: NA
2011-03-13 15:29:54 -- debug: DST_DATASTORE_MAX_FILE_SIZE: NA
2011-03-13 15:29:54 -- debug:
2011-03-13 15:29:55 -- debug: Storage Information before backup:
2011-03-13 15:29:55 -- debug: SRC_DATASTORE: himalaya-local-SATA.RE4-GP:Storage
2011-03-13 15:29:55 -- debug: SRC_DATASTORE_CAPACITY: 1830.5 GB
2011-03-13 15:29:55 -- debug: SRC_DATASTORE_FREE: 539.4 GB
2011-03-13 15:29:55 -- debug: SRC_DATASTORE_BLOCKSIZE: 4
2011-03-13 15:29:55 -- debug: SRC_DATASTORE_MAX_FILE_SIZE: 1024 GB
2011-03-13 15:29:55 -- debug:
2011-03-13 15:29:55 -- debug: DST_DATASTORE: dlgCore-NFS-bigboi.VM-Backups
2011-03-13 15:29:55 -- debug: DST_DATASTORE_CAPACITY: 1348.4 GB
2011-03-13 15:29:55 -- debug: DST_DATASTORE_FREE: 296.8 GB
2011-03-13 15:29:55 -- debug: DST_DATASTORE_BLOCKSIZE: NA
2011-03-13 15:29:55 -- debug: DST_DATASTORE_MAX_FILE_SIZE: NA
2011-03-13 15:29:55 -- debug:
2011-03-13 15:29:55 -- info: Snapshot found for vMA, backup will not take place
2011-03-13 15:29:57 -- debug: Storage Information before backup:
2011-03-13 15:29:57 -- debug: SRC_DATASTORE: himalaya-local-SATA.RE4-GP:Storage
2011-03-13 15:29:57 -- debug: SRC_DATASTORE_CAPACITY: 1830.5 GB
2011-03-13 15:29:57 -- debug: SRC_DATASTORE_FREE: 539.4 GB
2011-03-13 15:29:57 -- debug: SRC_DATASTORE_BLOCKSIZE: 4
2011-03-13 15:29:57 -- debug: SRC_DATASTORE_MAX_FILE_SIZE: 1024 GB
2011-03-13 15:29:57 -- debug:
2011-03-13 15:29:57 -- debug: DST_DATASTORE: dlgCore-NFS-bigboi.VM-Backups
2011-03-13 15:29:57 -- debug: DST_DATASTORE_CAPACITY: 1348.4 GB
2011-03-13 15:29:57 -- debug: DST_DATASTORE_FREE: 296.8 GB
2011-03-13 15:29:57 -- debug: DST_DATASTORE_BLOCKSIZE: NA
2011-03-13 15:29:57 -- debug: DST_DATASTORE_MAX_FILE_SIZE: NA
2011-03-13 15:29:57 -- debug:
2011-03-13 15:29:58 -- info: Initiate backup for vCloudConnector
2011-03-13 15:29:58 -- debug: /usr/sbin/vmkfstools -i "/vmfs/volumes/himalaya-local-SATA.RE4-GP:Storage/vCloudConnector/vCloudConnector.vmdk" -a "buslogic" -d "thin" "/vmfs/volumes/dlgCore-NFS-bigboi.VM-Backups/WILLIAM_BACKUPS/vCloudConnector/vCloudConnector-2011-03-13_15-27-59/vCloudConnector.vmdk"
Destination disk format: VMFS thin-provisioned
Cloning disk '/vmfs/volumes/himalaya-local-SATA.RE4-GP:Storage/vCloudConnector/vCloudConnector.vmdk'...
Clone: 97% done.
2011-03-13 15:30:45 -- info: Backup Duration: 47 Seconds
2011-03-13 15:30:45 -- info: WARN: vCloudConnector has some Independent VMDKs that can not be backed up!
2011-03-13 15:30:45 -- info: ###### Final status: ERROR: Only some of the VMs backed up, and some disk(s) failed! ######
2011-03-13 15:30:45 -- debug: Succesfully removed lock directory - /tmp/ghettoVCB.lock
2011-03-13 15:30:45 -- info: ============================== ghettoVCB LOG END ================================
[root@himalaya ~]# ./ghettoVCB.sh -f vms_to_backup
# ./ghettoVCB.sh -m MyVM
/ghettoVCB # ./ghettoVCB.sh -a
/ghettoVCB # ./ghettoVCB.sh -a -e vm_exclusion_list
1. Create folder to hold individual VM backup policies (can be named anything):
[root@himalaya ~]# mkdir backup_config
2. Create individual VM backup policies for each VM that ensure each file is named exactly as the display name of the VM being backed up (use provided template to create duplicates):
[root@himalaya backup_config]# cp ghettoVCB-vm_backup_configuration_template scofield
[root@himalaya backup_config]# cp ghettoVCB-vm_backup_configuration_template vCloudConnector
Listing of VM backup policy within backup configuration directory
[root@himalaya backup_config]# ls
scofield vCloudConnector
ghettoVCB-vm_backup_configuration_template
Backup policy for "scofield" (backup only 2 specific VMDKs)
[root@himalaya backup_config]# cat scofield
scofield_2.vmdk,scofield_1.vmdk
VM_BACKUP_VOLUME=/vmfs/volumes/dlgCore-NFS-bigboi.VM-Backups/WILLIAM_BACKUPS
DISK_BACKUP_FORMAT=thin
VM_BACKUP_ROTATION_COUNT=3
POWER_VM_DOWN_BEFORE_BACKUP=0
ENABLE_HARD_POWER_OFF=0
ITER_TO_WAIT_SHUTDOWN=4
POWER_DOWN_TIMEOUT=5
SNAPSHOT_TIMEOUT=15
ENABLE_COMPRESSION=0
VM_SNAPSHOT_MEMORY=0
VM_SNAPSHOT_QUIESCE=0
VMDK_FILES_TO_BACKUP=""
Backup policy for VM "vCloudConnector" (backup all VMDKs found)
[root@himalaya backup_config]# cat
vCloudConnectorVM_BACKUP_VOLUME=/vmfs/volumes/dlgCore-NFS-bigboi.VM-Backups/WILLIAM_BACKUPS
vCloudConnector.vmdk
DISK_BACKUP_FORMAT=thin
VM_BACKUP_ROTATION_COUNT=3
POWER_VM_DOWN_BEFORE_BACKUP=0
ENABLE_HARD_POWER_OFF=0
ITER_TO_WAIT_SHUTDOWN=4
POWER_DOWN_TIMEOUT=5
SNAPSHOT_TIMEOUT=15
ENABLE_COMPRESSION=0
VM_SNAPSHOT_MEMORY=0
VM_SNAPSHOT_QUIESCE=0
VMDK_FILES_TO_BACKUP=""
Note: When specifying -c option (individual VM backup policy mode) if a VM is listed in the backup list but DOES NOT have a corresponding backup policy, the VM will be backed up using the default configuration found within the ghettoVCB.sh script.
Execution of backup
[root@himalaya ~]# ./ghettoVCB.sh -f vms_to_backup -c backup_config -l /tmp/ghettoVCB.log
2011-03-13 15:40:50 -- info: ============================== ghettoVCB LOG START ==============================
2011-03-13 15:40:51 -- info: CONFIG - USING CONFIGURATION FILE = backup_config//scofield
2011-03-13 15:40:51 -- info: CONFIG - VERSION = 2011_03_13_1
2011-03-13 15:40:51 -- info: CONFIG - GHETTOVCB_PID = 2967
2011-03-13 15:40:51 -- info: CONFIG - VM_BACKUP_VOLUME = /vmfs/volumes/dlgCore-NFS-bigboi.VM-Backups/WILLIAM_BACKUPS
2011-03-13 15:40:51 -- info: CONFIG - VM_BACKUP_ROTATION_COUNT = 3
2011-03-13 15:40:51 -- info: CONFIG - VM_BACKUP_DIR_NAMING_CONVENTION = 2011-03-13_15-40-50
2011-03-13 15:40:51 -- info: CONFIG - DISK_BACKUP_FORMAT = thin
2011-03-13 15:40:51 -- info: CONFIG - POWER_VM_DOWN_BEFORE_BACKUP = 0
2011-03-13 15:40:51 -- info: CONFIG - ENABLE_HARD_POWER_OFF = 0
2011-03-13 15:40:51 -- info: CONFIG - ITER_TO_WAIT_SHUTDOWN = 4
2011-03-13 15:40:51 -- info: CONFIG - POWER_DOWN_TIMEOUT = 5
2011-03-13 15:40:51 -- info: CONFIG - SNAPSHOT_TIMEOUT = 15
2011-03-13 15:40:51 -- info: CONFIG - LOG_LEVEL = info
2011-03-13 15:40:51 -- info: CONFIG - BACKUP_LOG_OUTPUT = /tmp/ghettoVCB.log
2011-03-13 15:40:51 -- info: CONFIG - VM_SNAPSHOT_MEMORY = 0
2011-03-13 15:40:51 -- info: CONFIG - VM_SNAPSHOT_QUIESCE = 0
2011-03-13 15:40:51 -- info: CONFIG - VMDK_FILES_TO_BACKUP = scofield_2.vmdk,scofield_1.vmdk
2011-03-13 15:40:51 -- info: CONFIG - EMAIL_LOG = 0
2011-03-13 15:40:51 -- info:
2011-03-13 15:40:53 -- info: Initiate backup for scofield
Destination disk format: VMFS thin-provisioned
Cloning disk '/vmfs/volumes/himalaya-local-SATA.RE4-GP:Storage/scofield/scofield_2.vmdk'...
Clone: 100% done.
Destination disk format: VMFS thin-provisioned
Cloning disk '/vmfs/volumes/himalaya-local-SATA.RE4-GP:Storage/scofield/scofield_1.vmdk'...
Clone: 100% done.
2011-03-13 15:40:55 -- info: Backup Duration: 2 Seconds
2011-03-13 15:40:55 -- info: Successfully completed backup for scofield!
2011-03-13 15:40:57 -- info: CONFIG - VERSION = 2011_03_13_1
2011-03-13 15:40:57 -- info: CONFIG - GHETTOVCB_PID = 2967
2011-03-13 15:40:57 -- info: CONFIG - VM_BACKUP_VOLUME = /vmfs/volumes/dlgCore-NFS-bigboi.VM-Backups/WILLIAM_BACKUPS
2011-03-13 15:40:57 -- info: CONFIG - VM_BACKUP_ROTATION_COUNT = 3
2011-03-13 15:40:57 -- info: CONFIG - VM_BACKUP_DIR_NAMING_CONVENTION = 2011-03-13_15-40-50
2011-03-13 15:40:57 -- info: CONFIG - DISK_BACKUP_FORMAT = thin
2011-03-13 15:40:57 -- info: CONFIG - POWER_VM_DOWN_BEFORE_BACKUP = 0
2011-03-13 15:40:57 -- info: CONFIG - ENABLE_HARD_POWER_OFF = 0
2011-03-13 15:40:57 -- info: CONFIG - ITER_TO_WAIT_SHUTDOWN = 3
2011-03-13 15:40:57 -- info: CONFIG - POWER_DOWN_TIMEOUT = 5
2011-03-13 15:40:57 -- info: CONFIG - SNAPSHOT_TIMEOUT = 15
2011-03-13 15:40:57 -- info: CONFIG - LOG_LEVEL = info
2011-03-13 15:40:57 -- info: CONFIG - BACKUP_LOG_OUTPUT = /tmp/ghettoVCB.log
2011-03-13 15:40:57 -- info: CONFIG - VM_SNAPSHOT_MEMORY = 0
2011-03-13 15:40:57 -- info: CONFIG - VM_SNAPSHOT_QUIESCE = 0
2011-03-13 15:40:57 -- info: CONFIG - VMDK_FILES_TO_BACKUP = all
2011-03-13 15:40:57 -- info: CONFIG - EMAIL_LOG = 0
2011-03-13 15:40:57 -- info:
2011-03-13 15:40:59 -- info: Snapshot found for vMA, backup will not take place
2011-03-13 15:40:59 -- info: CONFIG - USING CONFIGURATION FILE = backup_config//vCloudConnector
2011-03-13 15:40:59 -- info: CONFIG - VERSION = 2011_03_13_1
2011-03-13 15:40:59 -- info: CONFIG - GHETTOVCB_PID = 2967
2011-03-13 15:40:59 -- info: CONFIG - VM_BACKUP_VOLUME = /vmfs/volumes/dlgCore-NFS-bigboi.VM-Backups/WILLIAM_BACKUPS
2011-03-13 15:40:59 -- info: CONFIG - VM_BACKUP_ROTATION_COUNT = 3
2011-03-13 15:40:59 -- info: CONFIG - VM_BACKUP_DIR_NAMING_CONVENTION = 2011-03-13_15-40-50
2011-03-13 15:40:59 -- info: CONFIG - DISK_BACKUP_FORMAT = thin
2011-03-13 15:40:59 -- info: CONFIG - POWER_VM_DOWN_BEFORE_BACKUP = 0
2011-03-13 15:40:59 -- info: CONFIG - ENABLE_HARD_POWER_OFF = 0
2011-03-13 15:40:59 -- info: CONFIG - ITER_TO_WAIT_SHUTDOWN = 4
2011-03-13 15:40:59 -- info: CONFIG - POWER_DOWN_TIMEOUT = 5
2011-03-13 15:40:59 -- info: CONFIG - SNAPSHOT_TIMEOUT = 15
2011-03-13 15:40:59 -- info: CONFIG - LOG_LEVEL = info
2011-03-13 15:40:59 -- info: CONFIG - BACKUP_LOG_OUTPUT = /tmp/ghettoVCB.log
2011-03-13 15:40:59 -- info: CONFIG - VM_SNAPSHOT_MEMORY = 0
2011-03-13 15:40:59 -- info: CONFIG - VM_SNAPSHOT_QUIESCE = 0
2011-03-13 15:40:59 -- info: CONFIG - VMDK_FILES_TO_BACKUP = vCloudConnector.vmdk
2011-03-13 15:40:59 -- info: CONFIG - EMAIL_LOG = 0
2011-03-13 15:40:59 -- info:
2011-03-13 15:41:01 -- info: Initiate backup for vCloudConnector
Destination disk format: VMFS thin-provisioned
Cloning disk '/vmfs/volumes/himalaya-local-SATA.RE4-GP:Storage/vCloudConnector/vCloudConnector.vmdk'...
Clone: 100% done.
2011-03-13 15:41:51 -- info: Backup Duration: 50 Seconds
2011-03-13 15:41:51 -- info: WARN: vCloudConnector has some Independent VMDKs that can not be backed up!
2011-03-13 15:41:51 -- info: ###### Final status: ERROR: Only some of the VMs backed up, and some disk(s) failed! ######
2011-03-13 15:41:51 -- info: ============================== ghettoVCB LOG END ================================
Please take a look at FAQ #25 for more details before continuing
To make use of this feature, modify the variable ENABLE_COMPRESSION from 0 to 1. Please note, do not mix uncompressed backups with compressed backups. Ensure that directories selected for backups do not contain any backups with previous versions of ghettoVCB before enabling and implementing the compressed backups feature.
nc (netcat) utility must be present for email support to function, this utility is a now a default with the release of vSphere 4.1 or greater, previous releases of VI 3.5 and/or vSphere 4.0 does not contain this utility. The reason this is listed as experimental is it may not be compatible with all email servers as the script utlizes nc (netcat) utility to communicate to an email server. This feature is provided as-is with no guarantees. If you enable this feature, a separate log will be generated along side any normal logging which will be used to email recipient. If for whatever reason, the email fails to send, an entry will appear per the normal logging mechanism.
Users should also make note due to limited functionality of netcat, it uses SMTP pipelining which is not the most ideal method of communicating with an SMTP server. Email from ghettoVCB may not work if your email server does not support this feature.
You can define an email recipient in the following two ways:
EMAIL_TO=william@virtuallyghetto.com
OR
EMAIL_TO=william@virtuallyghetto.com,tuan@virtuallyghetto.com
If you are running ESXi 5.1, you will need to create a custom firewall rule to allow your email traffic to go out which I will assume is default port 25. Here are the steps for creating a custom email rule.
Step 1 - Create a file called /etc/vmware/firewall/email.xml with contains the following:
<ConfigRoot>
<service>
<id>email</id>
<rule id="0000">
<direction>outbound</direction>
<protocol>tcp</protocol>
<porttype>dst</porttype>
<port>25</port>
</rule>
<enabled>true</enabled>
<required>false</required>
</service>
</ConfigRoot>
Step 2 - Reload the ESXi firewall by running the following ESXCLI command:
~ #
esxcli network firewall refresh
Step 3 - Confirm that your email rule has been loaded by running the following ESXCLI command:
~ # esxcli network firewall ruleset list | grep email
email true
Step 4 - Connect to your email server by usingn nc (netcat) by running the following command and specifying the IP Address/Port of your email server:
~ # nc 172.30.0.107 25
220 mail.primp-industries.com ESMTP Postfix
You should recieve a response from your email server and you can enter Ctrl+C to exit. This custom ESXi firewall rule will not persist after a reboot, so you should create a custom VIB to ensure it persists after a system reboot. Please take a look at this article for the details.
To make use of this feature, modify the variable RSYNC_LINK from 0 to 1. Please note, this is an experimental feature request from users that rely on rsync to replicate changes from one datastore volume to another datastore volume. The premise of this feature is to have a standardized folder that rsync can monitor for changes to replicate to another backup datastore. When this feature is enabled, a symbolic link will be generated with the format of "<VMNAME>-symlink" and will reference the latest successful VM backup. You can then rely on this symbolic link to watch for changes and replicate to your backup datastore.
Here is an example of what this would look like:
[root@himalaya ghettoVCB]# ls -la /vmfs/volumes/dlgCore-NFS-bigboi.VM-Backups/WILLIAM_BACKUPS/vcma/
total 0
drwxr-xr-x 1 nobody nobody 110 Sep 27 08:08 .
drwxr-xr-x 1 nobody nobody 17 Sep 16 14:01 ..
lrwxrwxrwx 1 nobody nobody 89 Sep 27 08:08 vcma-symlink -> /vmfs/volumes/dlgCore-NFS-bigboi.VM-Backups/WILLIAM_BACKUPS/vcma/vcma-2010-09-27_08-07-37
drwxr-xr-x 1 nobody nobody 58 Sep 27 08:04 vcma-2010-09-27_08-04-26
drwxr-xr-x 1 nobody nobody 58 Sep 27 08:06 vcma-2010-09-27_08-05-55
drwxr-xr-x 1 nobody nobody 58 Sep 27 08:08 vcma-2010-09-27_08-07-37
FYI - This feature has not been tested, please provide feedback if this does not work as expected.
To recover a VM that has been processed by ghettoVCB, please take a look at this document: Ghetto Tech Preview - ghettoVCB-restore.sh - Restoring VM's backed up from ghettoVCB to ESX(i) 3.5, ...
There may be a situation where you need to stop the ghettoVCB process and entering Ctrl+C will only kill off the main ghettoVCB process, however there may still be other spawn processes that you may need to identify and stop. Below are two scenarios you may encounter and the process to completely stop all processes related to ghettoVCB.
Step 1 - Press Ctrl+C which will kill off the main ghettoVCB instance
Step 2 - Search for any existing ghettoVCB process by running the following:
# ps -c | grep ghettoVCB | grep -v grep
3360136 3360136 tail tail -f /tmp/ghettoVCB.work/ghettovcb.Cs1M1x
Step 3 - Here we can see there is a tail command that was used in the script. We need to stop this process by using the kill command which accepts the PID (Process ID) which is identified by the first value on the far left hand side of the command. In this example, it is 3360136.
# kill -9 3360136
Note: Make sure you identify the correct PID, else you could accidently impact a running VM or worse your ESXi host.
Step 4 - Depending on where you stopped the ghettoVCB process, you may need to consolidate or remove any existing snapshots that may exist on the VM that was being backed up. You can easily do so by using the vSphere Client.
Step 1 - Search for the ghettoVCB process (you can also validate the PID from the logs)
~ # ps -c | grep ghettoVCB | grep -v grep
3360393 3360393 busybox ash ./ghettoVCB.sh -f list -d debug
3360790 3360790 tail tail -f /tmp/ghettoVCB.work/ghettovcb.deGeB7
Step 2 - Stop both the main ghettoVCB instance & tail command by using the kill command and specifying their respective PID IDs:
kill -9 3360393
kill -9 3360790
Step 3 - If a VM was in the process of being backed up, there is an additional process for the actual vmkfstools copy. You will need to identify the process for that and kill that as well. We will again use ps -c command and search for any vmkfstools that are running:
# ps -c | grep vmkfstools | grep -v grep
3360796 3360796 vmkfstools /sbin/vmkfstools -i /vmfs/volumes/himalaya-temporary/VC-Windows/VC-Windows.vmdk -a lsilogic -d thin /vmfs/volumes/test-dont-use-this-volume/backups/VC-Windows/VC-Windows-2013-01-26_16-45-35/VC-Windows.vmdk
Step 4 - In case there is someone manually running a vmkfstools, make sure you take a look at the command itself and that it maps back to the current VM that was being backed up before kill the process. Once you have identified the proper PID, go ahead and use the kill command:
# kill -9 3360796
Step 5 - Depending on where you stopped the ghettoVCB process, you may need to consolidate or remove any existing snapshots that may exist on the VM that was being backed up. You can easily do so by using the vSphere Client.
Please take a moment to read over what is a cronjob and how to set one up, before continuing
The task of configuring cronjobs on classic ESX servers (with Service Console) is no different than traditional cronjobs on *nix operating systems (this procedure is outlined in the link above). With ESXi on the other hand, additional factors need to be taken into account when setting up cronjobs in the limited shell console called Busybox because changes made do not persist through a system reboot. The following document will outline steps to ensure that cronjob configurations are saved and present upon a reboot.
Important Note: Always redirect the ghettoVCB output to /dev/null and/or to a log when automating via cron, this becomes very important as one user has identified a limited amount of buffer capacity in which once filled, may cause ghettoVCB to stop in the middle of a backup. This primarily only affects users on ESXi, but it is good practice to always redirect the output. Also ensure you are specifying the FULL PATH when referencing the ghettoVCB script, input or log files.
e.g.
0 0 * * 1-5 /vmfs/volumes/dlgCore-NFS-bigboi.VM-Backups/ghettoVCB.sh -f /vmfs/volumes/dlgCore-NFS-bigboi.VM-Backups/backuplist > /dev/null
or
0 0 * * 1-5 /vmfs/volumes/dlgCore-NFS-bigboi.VM-Backups/ghettoVCB.sh -f /vmfs/volumes/dlgCore-NFS-bigboi.VM-Backups/backuplist > /tmp/ghettoVCB.log
Task: Configure ghettoVCB.sh to execute a backup five days a week (M-F) at 12AM (midnight) everyday and send output to a unique log file
Configure on ESX:
1. As root, you'll install your cronjob by issuing:
[root@himalaya ~]# crontab -e
2. Append the following entry:
0 0 * * 1-5 /vmfs/volumes/dlgCore-NFS-bigboi.VM-Backups/ghettoVCB.sh -f /vmfs/volumes/dlgCore-NFS-bigboi.VM-Backups/backuplist > /vmfs/volumes/dlgCore-NFS-bigboi.VM-Backups/ghettoVCB-backup-$(date +\%s).log
3. Save and exit
[root@himalaya dlgCore-NFS-bigboi.VM-Backups]# crontab -e
no crontab for root - using an empty one
crontab: installing new crontab
4. List out and verify the cronjob that was just created:
[root@himalaya dlgCore-NFS-bigboi.VM-Backups]# crontab -l
0 0 * * 1-5 /vmfs/volumes/dlgCore-NFS-bigboi.VM-Backups/ghettoVCB.sh -f /vmfs/volumes/dlgCore-NFS-bigboi.VM-Backups/backuplist > /vmfs/volumes/dlgCore-NFS-bigboi.VM-Backups/ghettoVCB-backup-$(date +\%s).log
You're ready to go!
Configure on ESXi:
1. Setup the cronjob by appending the following line to /var/spool/cron/crontabs/root:
0 0 * * 1-5 /vmfs/volumes/simplejack-local-storage/ghettoVCB.sh -f /vmfs/volumes/simplejack-local-storage/backuplist > /vmfs/volumes/simplejack-local-storage/ghettoVCB-backup-$(date +\%s).log
If you are unable to edit/modify /var/spool/cron/crontabs/root, please make a copy and then edit the copy with the changes
cp /var/spool/cron/crontabs/root /var/spool/cron/crontabs/root.backup
Once your changes have been made, then "mv" the backup to the original file. This may occur on ESXi 4.x or 5.x hosts
mv /var/spool/cron/crontabs/root.backup /var/spool/cron/crontabs/root
You can now verify the crontab entry has been updated by using "cat" utility.
2. Kill the current crond (cron daemon) and then restart the crond for the changes to take affect:
On ESXi < 3.5u3
kill $(ps | grep crond | cut -f 1 -d ' ')
On ESXi 3.5u3+
~ # kill $(pidof crond)
~ # crond
On ESXi 4.x/5.0
~ # kill $(cat /var/run/crond.pid)
~ # busybox crond
On ESXi 5.1 to 6.x
~ # kill $(cat /var/run/crond.pid)
~ # crond
On ESXi 7.x
~ # kill $(cat /var/run/crond.pid)
~ # /usr/lib/vmware/busybox/bin/busybox crond
3. Now that the cronjob is ready to go, you need to ensure that this cronjob will persist through a reboot. You'll need to add the following two lines to /etc/rc.local (ensure that the cron entry matches what was defined above). In ESXi 5.1, you will need to edit /etc/rc.local.d/local.sh instead of /etc/rc.local as that is no longer valid.
On ESXi 3.5
/bin/kill $(pidof crond)
/bin/echo "0 0 * * 1-5 /vmfs/volumes/simplejack-local-storage/ghettoVCB.sh -f /vmfs/volumes/simplejack-local-storage/backuplist > /vmfs/volumes/simplejack-local-storage/ghettoVCB-backup-\$(date +\\%s).log" >> /var/spool/cron/crontabs/root
crond
On ESXi 4.x/5.0
/bin/kill $(cat /var/run/crond.pid)
/bin/echo "0 0 * * 1-5 /vmfs/volumes/simplejack-local-storage/ghettoVCB.sh -f /vmfs/volumes/simplejack-local-storage/backuplist > /vmfs/volumes/simplejack-local-storage/ghettoVCB-backup-\$(date +\\%s).log" >> /var/spool/cron/crontabs/root
/bin/busybox crond
On ESXi 5.1 to 6.x
/bin/kill $(cat /var/run/crond.pid)
/bin/echo "0 0 * * 1-5 /vmfs/volumes/simplejack-local-storage/ghettoVCB.sh -f /vmfs/volumes/simplejack-local-storage/backuplist > /vmfs/volumes/simplejack-local-storage/ghettoVCB-backup-\$(date +\\%s).log" >> /var/spool/cron/crontabs/root
crond
On ESXi 7.x
/bin/kill $(cat /var/run/crond.pid) > /dev/null 2>&1
/bin/echo "0 0 * * 1-5 /vmfs/volumes/simplejack-local-storage/ghettoVCB.sh -f /vmfs/volumes/simplejack-local-storage/backuplist > /vmfs/volumes/simplejack-local-storage/ghettoVCB-backup-\$(date +\\%s).log" >> /var/spool/cron/crontabs/root
/usr/lib/vmware/busybox/bin/busybox crond
Afterwards the file should look like the following:
~ # cat /etc/rc.local
#! /bin/ash
export PATH=/sbin:/bin
log() {
echo "$1"
logger init "$1"
}
#execute all service retgistered in /etc/rc.local.d
if [http:// -d /etc/rc.local.d |http:// -d /etc/rc.local.d ]; then
for filename in `find /etc/rc.local.d/ | sort`
do
if [ -f $filename ] && [ -x $filename ]; then
log "running $filename"
$filename
fi
done
fi
/bin/kill $(cat /var/run/crond.pid)
/bin/echo "0 0 * * 1-5 /vmfs/volumes/simplejack-local-storage/ghettoVCB.sh -f /vmfs/volumes/simplejack-local-storage/backuplist > /vmfs/volumes/simplejack-local-storage/ghettoVCB-backup-\$(date +\\%s).log" >> /var/spool/cron/crontabs/root
/bin/busybox crond
This will ensure that the cronjob is re-created upon a reboot of the system through a startup script
2. To ensure that this is saved in the ESXi configuration, we need to manually initiate an ESXi backup by running:
~ # /sbin/auto-backup.sh
config implicitly loaded
local.tgz
etc/vmware/vmkiscsid/vmkiscsid.db
etc/dropbear/dropbear_dss_host_key
etc/dropbear/dropbear_rsa_host_key
etc/opt/vmware/vpxa/vpxa.cfg
etc/opt/vmware/vpxa/dasConfig.xml
etc/sysconfig/network
etc/vmware/hostd/authorization.xml
etc/vmware/hostd/hostsvc.xml
etc/vmware/hostd/pools.xml
etc/vmware/hostd/vmAutoStart.xml
etc/vmware/hostd/vmInventory.xml
etc/vmware/hostd/proxy.xml
etc/vmware/ssl/rui.crt
etc/vmware/ssl/rui.key
etc/vmware/vmkiscsid/initiatorname.iscsi
etc/vmware/vmkiscsid/iscsid.conf
etc/vmware/vmware.lic
etc/vmware/config
etc/vmware/dvsdata.db
etc/vmware/esx.conf
etc/vmware/license.cfg
etc/vmware/locker.conf
etc/vmware/snmp.xml
etc/group
etc/hosts
etc/inetd.conf
etc/rc.local
etc/chkconfig.db
etc/ntp.conf
etc/passwd
etc/random-seed
etc/resolv.conf
etc/shadow
etc/sfcb/repository/root/interop/cim_indicationfilter.idx
etc/sfcb/repository/root/interop/cim_indicationhandlercimxml.idx
etc/sfcb/repository/root/interop/cim_listenerdestinationcimxml.idx
etc/sfcb/repository/root/interop/cim_indicationsubscription.idx
Binary files /etc/vmware/dvsdata.db and /tmp/auto-backup.31345.dir/etc/vmware/dvsdata.db differ
config implicitly loaded
Saving current state in /bootbank
Clock updated.
Time: 20:40:36 Date: 08/14/2009 UTC
Now you're really done!
If you're still having trouble getting the cronjob to work, ensure that you've specified the correct parameters and there aren’t any typos in any part of the syntax.
Ensure crond (cron daemon) is running:
ESX 3.x/4.0:
[root@himalaya dlgCore-NFS-bigboi.VM-Backups]# ps -ef | grep crond | grep -v grep
root 2625 1 0 Aug13 ? 00:00:00 crond
ESXi 3.x/4.x/5.x:
~ # ps | grep crond | grep -v grep
5196 5196 busybox crond
Ensure that the date/time on your ESX(i) host is setup correctly:
ESX(i):
[root@himalaya dlgCore-NFS-bigboi.VM-Backups]# date
Fri Aug 14 23:44:47 PDT 2009
Note: Careful attention must be noted if more than one backup is performed per day. Backup windows should be staggered to avoid contention or saturation of resources during these periods.
0Q: I'm getting error X when using the script or I'm not getting any errors, the backup didn’t even take place. What can I do?
0A: First off, before posting a comment/question, please thoroughly read through the ENTIRE documentation including the FAQs to see if your question has already been ansered.
1Q: I've read through the entire documentation + FAQs and still have not found my answer to the problem I'm seeing. What can I do?
1A: Please join the ghettoVCB Group to post your question/comment.
2Q: I've sent you private message or email but I haven't received a response? What gives?
2A: I do not accept issues/bugs reported via PM or email, I will reply back, directing you to post on the appropriate VMTN forum (that's what it's for). If the data/results you're providing is truely senstive to your environment I will hear you out, but 99.99% it is not, so please do not messsage/email me directly. I do monitor all forums that contain my script including the normal VMTN forums and will try to get back to your question as soon as I can and as time permits. Please do be patient as you're not the only person using the script (600,000+ views), thank you.
3Q: Can I schedule backups to take place hourly, daily, monthly, yearly?
3A: Yes, do a search online for crontab.
4Q: I would like to setup cronjob for ESX(i) 3.5 or 4.0?
4A: Take a look at the Cronjob FAQ section in this document.
5Q: I want to schedule my backup on Windows, how do I do this?
5A: Do a search for plink. Make sure you have paired SSH keys setup between your Windows system and ESX/ESXi host.
6Q: I only have a single ESXi host. I want to take backups and store them somewhere else. The problem is: I don't have NFS, iSCSI nor FC SAN. What can I do?
6A: You can use local storage to store your backups assuming that you have enough space on the destination datastore. Afterwards, you can use scp (WinSCP/FastSCP) to transfer the backups from the ESXi host to your local desktop.
7Q: I’m pissed; the backup is taking too long. My datastore is of type X?
7A: YMMV, take a look at your storage configuration and make sure it is optimized.
8Q: I noticed that the backup rotation is occurring after a backup. I don't have enough local storage space, can the process be changed?
8A: This is primarily done to ensure that you have at least one good backup in case the new backup fails. If you would like to modify the script, you're more than welcome to do so.
9Q: What is the best storage configuration for datastore type X?
9A: Search the VMTN forums; there are various configurations for the different type of storage/etc.
10Q: I want to setup an NFS server to run my backups. Which is the best and should it be virtual or physical?
10A: Please refer to answer 7A. From experience, we’ve seen physical instances of NFS servers to be faster than their virtual counterparts. As always, YMMV.
11Q: I have VMs that have snapshots. I want to back these things up but the script doesn’t let me do it. How do I fix that?
11A: VM snapshots are not meant to be kept for long durations. When backing up a VM that contains a snapshot, you should ensure all snapshots have been committed prior to running a backup. No exceptions will be made…ever.
12Q: I would like to restore from backup, what is the best method?
12A: The restore process will be unique for each environment and should be determined by your backup/recovery plans. At a high level you have the option of mounting the backup datastore and registering the VM in question or copy the VM from the backup datastore to the ESX/ESXi host. The latter is recommended so that you're not running a VM living on the backup datastore or inadvertently modifying your backup VM(s). You can also take a look at ghettoVCB-restore which is experimentally supported.
13Q: When I try to run the script I get: "-bash: ./ghettoVCB.sh: Permission denied", what is wrong?
13A: You need to change the permission on the script to be executable, chmod +x ghettoVCB.sh
14Q: Where can I download the latest version of the script?
14A: The latest version is available on on github - https://github.com/lamw/ghettoVCB/downloads
15Q: I would like to suggest/recommend feature X, can I get it? When can I get it? Why isn't it here, what gives?
15A: The general purpose of this script is to provide a backup solution around VMware VMs. Any additional features outside of that process will be taken into consideration depending on the amount of time, number of requests and actual usefulness as a whole to the community rather than to an individual.
16Q: I have found this script to be very useful and would like to contribute back, what can I do?
16A: To continue to develop and share new scripts and resources with the community, we need your support. You can donate here Thank You!
17Q: What are the different type of backup uses cases that are supported with ghettoVCB?
17A: 1) Live backup of VM with the use of a snapshot and 2) Offline backup of a VM without a snapshot. These are the only two use cases supported by the script.
18Q: When I execute the script on ESX(i) I get some funky errors such as ": not found.sh" or "command not found". What is this?
18A: Most likely you have some ^M characters within the script which may have come from either editing the script using Windows editor, uploading the script using the datastore browser OR using wget. The best option is to either using WinSCP on Windows to upload the script and edit using vi editor on ESX(i) host OR Linux/UNIX scp to copy the script into the host. If you still continue to have the issue, do a search online on various methods of removing this Windows return carriage from the script
19Q: My backup works fine OR it works for a single backup but I get an error message "Input/output error" or "-ash: YYYY-MM-DD: not found" during the snapshot removal process. What is this?
19A: The issue has been recently identified by few users as a problem with user's NFS server in which it reports an error when deleting large files that take longer than 10seconds. VMware has recently released a KB article http://kb.vmware.com/kb/1035332 explaining the details and starting with vSphere 4.1 Update 2 or vSphere 5.0, a new advanced ESX(i) parameter has been introduced to increase the timeout. This has resolved the problem for several users and maybe something to consider if you are running into this issue, specifically with NFS based backups.
20Q: Will this script function with vCenter and DRS enabled?
20Q: No, if the ESX(i) hosts are in a DRS enabled cluster, VMs that are to be backed up could potentially be backed up twice or never get backed up. The script is executed on a per host basis and one would need to come up a way of tracking backups on all hosts and perhaps write out to external file to ensure that all VMs are backed up. The main use case for this script are for standalone ESX(i) host
21Q: I'm trying to use WinSCP to manually copy VM files but it's very slow or never completes on huge files, why is that?
21A: WinSCP was not designed for copying VM files out of your ESX(i) host, take a look at Veeam's FastSCP which is designed for moving VM files and is a free utility.
22Q: Can I use setup NFS Server using Windows Services for UNIX (WSFU) and will it work?
22A: I've only heard a handful of users that have successfully implemented WSFU and got it working, YMMV. VMware also has a KB article decribing the setup process here: http://kb.vmware.com/kb/1004490 for those that are interested. Here is a thread on a user's experience between Windows Vs. Linux NFS that maybe helpful.
23Q: How do VMware Snapshots work?
23A: http://kb.vmware.com/kb/1015180
24Q: What files make up a Virtual Machine?
24A: http://virtualisedreality.wordpress.com/2009/09/16/quick-reminder-of-what-files-make-up-a-virtual-ma...
25Q: I'm having some issues restoring a compressed VM backup?
25A: There is a limitation in the size of the VM for compression under ESXi 3.x & 4.x, this limitation is in the unsupported Busybox console and should not affect classic ESX 3.x/4.x. On ESXi 3.x, the maximum largest supported VM is 4GB for compression and on ESXi 4.x the largest supported VM is 8GB. If you try to compress a larger VM, you may run into issues when trying to extract upon a restore. PLEASE TEST THE RESTORE PROCESS BEFORE MOVING TO PRODUCTION SYSTEMS!
26Q: I'm backing up my VM as "thin" format but I'm still not noticing any size reduction in the backup? What gives?
2bA: Please refer to this blog post which explains what's going on: http://www.yellow-bricks.com/2009/07/31/storage-vmotion-and-moving-to-a-thin-provisioned-disk/
27Q: I've enabled VM_SNAPSHOT_MEMORY and when I restore my VM it's still offline, I thought this would keep it's memory state?
27A: VM_SNAPSHOT_MEMORY is only used to ensure when the snapshot is taken, it's memory contents are also captured. This is only relavent to the actual snapshot itself and it's not used in any shape/way/form in regards to the backup. All backups taken whether your VM is running or offline will result in an offline VM backup when you restore. This was originally added for debugging purposes and in generally should be left disabled
28Q: Can I rename the directories and the VMs after a VM has been backed up?
28A: The answer yes, you can ... but you may run into all sorts of issues which may break the backup process. The script expects a certain layout and specific naming scheme for it to maintain the proper rotation count. If you need to move or rename a VM, please take it out of the directory and place it in another location
29Q: Can ghettoVCB support CBT (Change Block Tracking)?
29A: No, that is a functionality of the vSphere API + VDDK API (vSphere Disk Development Kit). You will need to look at paid solutions such as VMware vDR, Veeam Backup & Recovery, PHD Virtual Backups, etc. to leverage that functionailty.
30Q: Does ghettoVCB support rsync backups?
30A: Currently ghettoVCB does not support rsync backups, you either obtain or compile your own static rsync binary and run on ESXi, but this is an unsupported configuration. You may take a look at this blog post for some details.
31Q: How can I contribute back?
31A: You can provide feedback/comments on the ghettoVCB Group. If you have found this script to be useful and would like to contribute back, please click here to donate.
32Q: How can select individual VMDKs to backup from a VM?
32A: Ideally you would use the "-c" option which requires you to create individual VM configuration file, this is where you would select specific VMDKs to backup. Note, that if you do not need to define all properties, anything not defined will adhere from the default global properties whether you're editing the ghettoVCB.sh script or using ghettoVCB global configuration file. It is not recommended that you edit the ghettoVCB.sh script and modify the VMDK_FILES_TO_BACKUP variable, but if you would like to keep everything in one script, you may add the extensive list of VMDKs to backup but do know this can get error prone as script may be edited frequently and lose some flexibility to support multiple environments.
33Q: Why is email not working when I'm using ESXi 5.x but it worked in ESXi 4.x?
33A: ESXi 5.x has implemented a new firewall which requires the email port that is being used to be opened. Please refer to the following articles on creating a custom firewall rule for email:
http://www.virtuallyghetto.com/2012/09/creating-custom-vibs-for-esxi-50-51.html
How to Create Custom Firewall Rules in ESXi 50
How to Persist Configuration Changes in ESXi 4.x/5.x Part 1
How to Persist Configuration Changes in ESXi 4.x/5.x Part 2
34Q: How do I stop the ghettoVCB process?
34A: Take a look at the Stopping ghettoVCB Process section of the documentation for more details.
Many have asked what is the best configuration and recommendation for setting up a cheap NFS Server to run backups for VMs. This has been a question we've tried to stay away from just because the possiblities and solutions are endless. One can go with physical vs. virtual, use VSA (Virtual Storage Appliances) such as OpenFiler or Lefthand Networks, Windows vs. Linux/UNIX. We've not personally tested and verify all these solutions and it all comes down to "it depends" type of answer. Though from our experience, we've had much better success with a physical server than a virtual.
It is also well known that some users are experiencing backup issues when running specifically against NFS, primarily around the rotation and purging of previous backups. The theory from what we can tell by talking to various users is that when the rotation is occuring, the request to delete the file(s) may take awhile and does not return within a certain time frame and causes the script to error out with unexpected messages. Though the backups were successful, it will cause unexpected results with directory structures on the NFS target. We've not been able to isolate why this is occuring and maybe due to NFS configuration/exports or hardware or connection not being able to support this process.
We'll continue to help where we can in diagonising this issus but we wanted to share our current NFS configuration, perhaps it may help some users who are new or trying to setup their system. ( Disclaimer: These configurations are not recommendations nor endorsement for any of the components being used)
UPDATE: Please also read FAQ #19 for details + resolution
Server Type: Physical
Model: HP DL320 G2
OS: Arch linux 2.6.28
Disks: 2 x 1.5TB
RAID: Software RAID1
Source Host Backups: ESX 3.5u4 and ESX 4.0u1 (We don't run any ESXi hosts)
uname -a output
Linux XXXXX.XXXXX.ucsb.edu 2.6.28-ARCH #1 SMP PREEMPT Sun Jan 18 20:17:17 UTC 2009 i686 Intel(R) Pentium(R) 4 CPU 3.06GHz GenuineIntel GNU/Linux
NICs:
00:05.0 Ethernet controller: Broadcom Corporation NetXtreme BCM5702X Gigabit Ethernet (rev 02)
00:06.0 Ethernet controller: Broadcom Corporation NetXtreme BCM5702X Gigabit Ethernet (rev 02)
NFS Export Options:
/exports/vm-backups XXX.XXX.XXX.XXX/24(rw,async,all_squash,anonuid=99,anongid=99)
*One important thing to check is to verify that your NFS exportion options are setup correctly, "async" should be configured to ensure that all IO requests are processed and reply back to the client before waiting for the data to be written to the storage.
*Recently VMware released a KB article describing the various "Advanced NFS Options" and their meanings and recommendations: http://kb.vmware.com/kb/1007909 We've not personally had to touch any of these, but for other vendors such as EMC and NetApp, there are some best practices around configuring some of these values depending on the number of NFS volumes or number of ESX(i) host connecting to a volume. You may want to take a look to see if any of these options may help with NFS issue that some are seeing
*Users should also try to look at their ESX(i) host logs during the time interval when they're noticing these issues and see if they can find any correlation along with monitoring the performance on their NFS Server.
*Lastly, there are probably other things that can be done to improve NFS performance or further optimization, a simple search online will also yield many resources.
Windows utility to email ghettoVCB Backup Logs - http://www.waldrondigital.com/2010/05/11/ghettovcb-e-mail-rotate-logs-batch-file-for-vmware/
Windows front-end utility to ghettoVCB - http://www.magikmon.com/mkbackup/ghettovcb.en.html
Note: Neither of these tools are supported, for questions or comments regarding these utilities please refer to the author's pages.
Enhancements:
Fixes:
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Big thanks to Alain Spineux and his contributions to the ghettoVCB script and helping with debugging and testing.
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Big thanks goes out to the community for the suggested features and to those that submitted snippet of their modifications.
Updated FAQ #20-24 for common issues/questions. Also included a new section about our "personal" NFS configuration and setup.
Fix the crontab section to reflect the correct syntax + updated FAQ #17,#18 and #19 for common issues.
The following enhancements and fixes have been implemented in this release of ghettoVCB. Special thanks goes out to all the ghettoVCB BETA testers for providing time and their environments to test features/fixes of the new script!
Enhancements:
Fixes:
I'm not sure what you mean by regular snapshots, I'm aware of only one type and the snapshot can be taken with/without the state of the memory. Please look into script on where the snapshot is being taken, I believe it's documented in the script if you go through it.
=========================================================================
--William
VMware ESX/ESXi scripts and resources at: http://engineering.ucsb.edu/~duonglt/vmware/
What would be the procedure to restore the ghettoVCB backups?
the procedure i use is
If you just need to restore a vm to a state it was during the backup, and you still have your existing vm:
1. delete the hard drive of the vm from within vic, choosing to remove tne files from the disk as well.
2. clone the disk from backup to the directory of your vm with
vmkfstools -i /path/to/backup/disk.vmdk /path/to/vm/
3. add the hard drive to your vm choosing to use an existing virtual disk, select the /path/to/vm/disk.vmdk that you just made
If you need to restore the vm to another host or simply deleted it all together
1. make a directory /vmfs/volumes/whatever/vm-name
2. copy the .vmx file from backup to this dir
3. clone the disk from backup to the directory of the vm
vmkfstools -i /path/to/backup/disk.vmdk /vmfs/volumes/whatever/vm-name/
4. Browse the datastore in VIC, find the .vmx file, right click and select add to inventory.
not sure if theres a better way of doing it but it works for me.
How were you able to create a directory? When I try "mkdir whatever" I get: Operation not permitted.
I am logged in as "root". Am I missing something?
Thanks
Hi, first of all thank you again for your response! I see you have quite a lot of questions to answer. One thing I would like to ask because I have problems is: I am using 3.02 and don't have vmware-vim-cmd so I use vmware-cmd or shall I use vimsh -n -e to execute commands. Unfortunately the execution stops here: echo "Error: failed to extract VM_ID for $!" Does it mean that the script is looking for der VirtualMachine ID in /tmp/vms_list.
Regards
Please take a look at the vimsh documentation to understand how it works.
http://engineering.ucsb.edu/~duonglt/vmware/#vmware_vimsh
=========================================================================
--William
VMware ESX/ESXi scripts and resources at: http://engineering.ucsb.edu/~duonglt/vmware/
Hello
Thank you for this script! Really good work. The only thing that does not seem to work for me is backing up more than one vmdk in a vm. I tried several times with no luck. Do I have to do something special to get it to work?
Thank you for an answer.
Are you running ESXi? If so, you might need to change the line "grep fileName" to' grep -i fileName".
Multi-VMDK(s) are supported, so long they're valid and presented to the guestOS.
=========================================================================
--William
VMware ESX/ESXi scripts and resources at: http://engineering.ucsb.edu/~duonglt/vmware/
Yes, I am running ESXi. If I run the command:
VMDKS_FOUND=`grep scsi "$" | grep -i fileName | awk -F " " '{print $1}'`
on a cmd-sh, it gives me both scsi-vm-hdd... so thats all ok. But when I run your script, only the first (50G) HDD is backed-up, the second HD (300GB) not.
Do you have any ideas what could cause this problem?
Thank you very much!
you have to modify the script to have grep -i as well, it only uses grep without the -i which only returns matches to the exact case fileName. esxi servers sometimes have it as filename (lower case n)
Thank you for the response.
Of course I also modified the script... But still got only one vm-hdd backuped. I tried to troubleshoot in the script and what I found is the following. After the line:
grep "$.present" "$" | grep "true" > /dev/null 2>&1
it gives me the Value "1" for the second vm-hdd, which probably means it is not present??? But it is my data-disk which IS present in the vm... what do I have to modify?
Thank you.
if you get a value of 1 for that particular line, it means that within the .vmx file for the $.present = "true". This means that the VMDK was either removed from the VM but not deleted from the filesystem or it was removed and deleted from the filesystem. In either case, the reference is left in the .vmx file and the flag is just changed from true to false.
To verify this, you can look at your .vmx file, and if the code is returning a 1, it means that disk is not present to the VM which means it should not be showing up in the VI Client when you go into it's properties unless the .vmx file has been manually modified without the ESX/ESXi knowing about it.
=========================================================================
--William
VMware ESX/ESXi scripts and resources at: http://engineering.ucsb.edu/~duonglt/vmware/
That seems to be strange... if you look at the content of my vmx-file:
/vmfs/volumes/497b9254-df6992a6-9fc0-0090270f57c5/Win2K3 TS # cat Win2K3\ TS.vmx
config.version = "8"
virtualHW.version = "4"
floppy0.present = "true"
nvram = "Win2K3 TS.nvram"
deploymentPlatform = "windows"
virtualHW.productCompatibility = "hosted"
tools.upgrade.policy = "useGlobal"
powerType.powerOff = "default"
powerType.powerOn = "default"
powerType.suspend = "default"
powerType.reset = "default"
displayName = "Win2K3 TS"
extendedConfigFile = "Win2K3 TS.vmxf"
numvcpus = "2"
scsi0.present = "true"
scsi0.sharedBus = "none"
scsi0.virtualDev = "lsilogic"
memsize = "1024"
scsi0:0.present = "true"
scsi0:0.fileName = "Win2K3 TS.vmdk"
scsi0:0.deviceType = "scsi-hardDisk"
ide0:0.present = "true"
ide0:0.clientDevice = "FALSE"
ide0:0.deviceType = "cdrom-image"
ide0:0.startConnected = "TRUE"
floppy0.startConnected = "false"
floppy0.clientDevice = "true"
ethernet0.present = "true"
ethernet0.networkName = "VM Network"
ethernet0.addressType = "generated"
guestOSAltName = "Microsoft Windows Server 2003, Standard Edition (32-bit)"
guestOS = "winnetstandard"
uuid.location = "56 4d 61 2a b1 4c 7f ca-b4 81 00 31 27 13 e1 0d"
uuid.bios = "56 4d 61 2a b1 4c 7f ca-b4 81 00 31 27 13 e1 0d"
toolScripts.afterPowerOn = "true"
toolScripts.afterResume = "true"
toolScripts.beforeSuspend = "true"
toolScripts.beforePowerOff = "true"
ide0:0.fileName = "/vmfs/volumes/497b9254-df6992a6-9fc0-0090270f57c5/Windows Server 2003/Windows Server 2003.Enterprise.German.ISO"
floppy0.fileName = "/dev/fd0"
scsi0:0.redo = ""
ethernet0.generatedAddress = "00:0c:29:13:e1:0d"
tools.syncTime = "FALSE"
sched.swap.derivedName = "/vmfs/volumes/497b9254-df6992a6-9fc0-0090270f57c5/Win2K3 TS/Win2K3 TS-af7ea147.vswp"
ethernet0.generatedAddressOffset = "0"
hostCPUID.0 = "0000000a756e65476c65746e49656e69"
guestCPUID.0 = "0000000a756e65476c65746e49656e69"
userCPUID.0 = "0000000a756e65476c65746e49656e69"
hostCPUID.1 = "00010676000208000008e39dbfebfbff"
guestCPUID.1 = "0001067800010800000802010febbbff"
userCPUID.1 = "0001067600020800000802010febbbff"
hostCPUID.80000001 = "00000000000000000000000120100000"
guestCPUID.80000001 = "00000000000000000000000000100000"
userCPUID.80000001 = "00000000000000000000000120100000"
evcCompatibilityMode = "FALSE"
scsi0:1.present = "TRUE"
scsi0:1.deviceType = "scsi-hardDisk"
scsi0:1.filename = "Win2K3 TS_1.vmdk"
scsi0:1.mode = "persistent"
scsi0:1.redo = ""
****************************************
Here you can see that scsi0:0 as well as scsi0:1 is present and true.... And I am working with this device every day, so it IS present...
Do you have any idea? Thank you very much for your help, I am really out of any guess....
Look at what the script is doing .... it's grepping for "true" ... looks like your .vmx has "TRUE", see the problem.
I'm curious on why some of the user's .vmx files are slightly different from the one's I've worked with. I'm not sure if this is due to any specific version or user's are manually modifying their files. I've always seen the right hand side use lower case values, but I have seen it few times in older releases where it's all caps. I'll try to find some time this weekend to fix those two issues, it should be using grep -i.
That should fix your issue
=========================================================================
--William
VMware ESX/ESXi scripts and resources at: http://engineering.ucsb.edu/~duonglt/vmware/
Thank you, it's now working like a charme!
But does somebody know how to start this script automatically with some kind of "cronjob" in ESXi? I tried the idea with "autobackup.sh" and included the "cron" directory in this script, but it does not seem to work... (Always get the following error:
diff: Can't stat '/tmp/auto-backup.237536.dir/var/spool/cron/crontabs/root': No such file or directory
which means this temporary directory/file has not been created by the script...
Thank you!
I did it by adding the following lines to /etc/rc.local
/bin/echo "0 19 5 * * /vmfs/volumes/vmback/ghettoVCB.sh" >> /var/spool/cron/crontabs/root
/bin/busybox crond -b
then run auto-backup.sh it will backup the changes to the rc.local file
basically this makes it so on boot the ghettovcb entry is added to the crontab and crond is restarted.
I believe these changes do not persist do a reboot? I remember talking to someone about this and on reboot these changes are reverted to their original configurations, including the cron entry. Is that correct?
=========================================================================
--William
VMware ESX/ESXi scripts and resources at: http://engineering.ucsb.edu/~duonglt/vmware/
the auto-backup.sh script which runs like every hour or so i think backs up a number of files in /etc to be persistant upon reboot. this is why things like modifying inetd.conf to enable ssh still work after reboot. /etc/rc.local is another one that changes will be saved. that is why i put the code in there to add the crontab entry on boot.
Ah good to know, I'm aware of the backup but I thought someone had mentioned earlier in another forum thread that files are not persisted through a reboot. That is good to hear, I'll try to find some time to update the doc stating that fact. Thanks
=========================================================================
--William
VMware ESX/ESXi scripts and resources at: http://engineering.ucsb.edu/~duonglt/vmware/
Hello
Yes, I can confirm the Backups are persistent when you write the stuff in rc.local. All runs without problems.
Thank you for all the good tipps!
First, thank for the great script lamw!
Everything works well when I do ghetto from SAN to local hard drive, but when I try gheto to NFS I get
"DiskLib_Check() failed for source disk The system cannot find the file specified (25)" after cloning and snapshot remove lasts about 2 mins with lot of "...missing *-delta.vmdk" in ESX's /var/log/messages. There is no difference with Windows or Linux NFS server - backed vmdk looks fine but I don't know is this only warning or something to worry about. It's same story with all my ESXs.
Usually when you get those warnings, it means it was not able to find the source VMDK for whatever reason. I know some user's have had issues in the past where their VMDK(s) were stored in other directories or if they had multiple VMDK(s), earlier versions of the script did not handle that use case.
The latest script should be validating that certain VMDK(s) exists prior to trying to take a backup, though if you've manually edited the .VMX file, there could be some inconsistencies in the .vmx itself. You can always try the script with a -x flag which gives detail verbosity of what's happening while the script execute and see if you can anything that's off. If it works for SAN to Local, then it should also work for NFS unless you some miss-configurations on your NFS Server (you can always manually take a snapshot and manually run vmkfstools copy manually to make sure it's working with your NFS Server)
(e.g.)
sh -x ghettoVCB.sh my_back_vm_list.txt
If you're still not sure, you can direct that output to a file and attach to your reply and I can try to take a look.
Thanks, I'll try.
Another thing; currently I do three kind of backups from san: daily to local hard drive (raid1), dayly to nfs (raid1) and weekly to tape. Since there is not enough space on local hard drives to do rotation, ghetto returns error every second day (and delete files then, so backup is ok tommorow). Rotation count is 0.
What can I do to make this backup daily?
Well nothing is stopping the script do run daily backups, that is up to the end user's and the setup of their cron schedule. If you're looking for more elaborate backup processes such as transfer from SAN to local, then to NFS, etc, etc. You'll need to script that process, this script is intended to help provide a backup solution for your VM(s), it's left open for any modifications/specific requirements one may have for their environment.
=========================================================================
--William
VMware ESX/ESXi scripts and resources at: http://engineering.ucsb.edu/~duonglt/vmware/
William,
Thanks for sharing your great scripts and knowledge.
Everyone,
Thanks for the great forum. I've learned a lot here.
We are using ESXi with an NFS datastore on Openfiler 2.3.
I've modified William's script to make ESXi "thin" disk format backups, as it was not too easy to add backups or clones of VMs back to the VM inventory when they were in 2gbsparse disk format, and I did not want to lose the disk space "thick" backups would have required.
The backups and restore/clone seem to work fine with thin format, but I feel it seems too easy. Am I missing something?
Is there any reason why I should not use William's ghettoVCB.sh script to do thin backups rather than thick or 2gbsparse?
(I realize the 2gbsparse format is more portable to other filesystems, other versions of VMware, etc.)
Thanks,
-David
First off, this is really some great work. Thank you for posting this.
But, unfortunately I am having some issues. I downloaded the file yesterday 2-12-2009, onto my ubuntu machine. I opened it with gedit and it had the ^M throughout the file. I dont know if Ubuntu did that or the file up there has them but either way I fixed it with dostounix. So I set it up and ran it on a VM with 1 vmdk file and it worked like a charm. HDD to HDD on a 10 GB VM takes consistently less than 5 mins, which is great.
My next step was I added a vmdk with the VIC, I used the VM and added a partition and put files on the new hard drive, works fine. When I run the backup it still only backups the main HDD, or the first vmdk. I checked the vmx file and they are both set to "true". I checked your script and it is grep -i. So I am totally at a loss at what could be preventing the script from backing up the second vmdk.
Now my next question would be I have 4 HDD in the server. Disk 1 has a vmdk, Disk 2 has a vmdk, both for the same VM. Can I backup Disk 1 vmdk to Disk 3, and Disk 2 vmdk to Disk 4. All 4 drives are 1 TB drives. So both vmdk files are more than 1 TB which is the size of the other disk so I need each vmdk to go to a seperate location on the same server. I hope this makes sense if not let me know.
Also my last question is how does this backup run while the machine is on, can I still get a restorable copy of my files if I do the backup when the machine is powered on? Is it best to power down then do the backup?
*******EDIT*******02-13-2009 09:12
The 2nd vmdk that doesnt get backed up is stored on another drive, I added a 3rd disk to the same directory as the vmx and it backs up both, so for some reason it cannot find the 2nd vmdk on another drive.
Im also getting this when it tries to clone the disk:
DiskLib_Check() failed for source disk The system cannot find the file specified (25).
*******EDIT*******02-13-2009 09:45
I have attached the portion of my file that I believe to show the issue. As you can see the _2.vmdk and regular vmdk that are in the same directory as the vmx file backup fine. These files are in /vmfs/volumes/Main
Now the _1.vmdk is on /vmfs/volumes/Third, which it calls out by the long string of numbers which also match the string of numbers in the vmx file.
What looks wrong to me is it is starting out in the /Main directory then tries to go find it but cant. I could use some guidance on this one.
+ echo ################## Starting backup for MyVM ... #####################
+ OLD_IFS=
+ IFS=:
+ VMDK=MyVM_2.vmdk
+ vmkfstools -i /vmfs/volumes/Main/MyVM/MyVM_2.vmdk /vmfs/volumes/Secondary/MyVMbkup/MyVM/MyVM-2009-02-13/MyVM_2.vmdk
+ VMDK=/vmfs/volumes/4896efad-39367fad-4058-00151762f7d0/MyVM/MyVM_1.vmdk
+ vmkfstools -i /vmfs/volumes/Main/MyVM//vmfs/volumes/4896efad-39367fad-4058-00151762f7d0/MyVM/MyVM_1.vmdk /vmfs/volumes/Secondary/MyVMbkup/MyVM/MyVM-2009-02-13//vmfs/volumes/4896efad-39367fad-4058-00151762f7d0/MyVM/MyVM_1.vmdk
DiskLib_Check() failed for source disk The system cannot find the file specified (25).
+ VMDK=MyVM.vmdk
+ vmkfstools -i /vmfs/volumes/Main/MyVM/MyVM.vmdk /vmfs/volumes/Secondary/MyVMbkup/MyVM/MyVM-2009-02-13/MyVM.vmdk
+ IFS=
I hope you can help me out, I do appreciate you taking a look.
Thanks again for the great work.
-Ryan
I noticed another user had a similar issue too, I may have to look at the case when the VMDK(s) are stored in another datastore other than the root VM directory. I'm curious when it tries to backup the other drives, is the location correct? In terms of how it's able to backup VM(s) while it's still running is with a snapshot. When you take a snapshot, the main VMDK is changed to readonly and a new delta file is created which will contain all changes after the snapshot has been taken. This then releases a file lock on the main disk which allows you to backup the disk. Once the snapshot has been removed (committed), all changes will merge back with the primary disk. Then on the next backup, it'll do the same and those changes will be captured.
I'll take a look at the issue sometime next week ... need to spend sometime with the gf this weekend 😃
=========================================================================
--William
VMware ESX/ESXi scripts and resources at: http://engineering.ucsb.edu/~duonglt/vmware/
The location is correct that it comes up with. It matches the same string thats in the vmx file so it almost knows its there it just cannot copy it.
Also is there a way to backup one vmdk to one location and a second vmdk to another, even though they are in the same VM?
I thought it was using the snapshot feature, but I wasnt sure. I appreciate the update, and have a good weekend!
hm ... that's interesting. If the snapshot was taken successfully, then both those disks should be unlocked. You can always manually do what the script is doing to just verify that it should work. In terms of your second question, you would need to modify the script to duplicate it to two destinations. You can always just re-run the script with a second destination as a work around.
=========================================================================
--William
VMware ESX/ESXi scripts and resources at: http://engineering.ucsb.edu/~duonglt/vmware/
Has anybody come up with a reliable method of monitoring this script for success/failure? Here's an idea off the top of my head for Windows users who use Kaseya/LPI for monitoring. I wouldn't have the expertise to write something like this but maybe somebody else would see value in this.
- Have ghettoVCB produce a log file. Does it already do this?
- Modify the .bat file in your scheduled task to download the log file to the Windows machine via Plink.
From there you could:
- Launch a .vbs that would parse the log and write custom events to the event viewer. Monitor events with your monitoring tool of choice.
- Parse the log file directly if your monitoring tools are capable of this (Kaseya is).
How do I run it with 2 destinations, wont it copy the first vmdk each time. So I would only end up with one of the 2 vmdks in 2 places?
Im not sure where in the script I should try manually.
Thanks for the help.
You'll have to add that logic into the script if you're looking to split your destination copy.
=========================================================================
--William
VMware ESX/ESXi scripts and resources at: http://engineering.ucsb.edu/~duonglt/vmware/
Many thanks for your great script!!
To everyone:
Everything works great except the output to a log file. I have a scheduled task on a windows 2003 server machine to run batch file which executes ghettoVCB.sh via plink.exe. Thanks to Raj Perumal for his blog guide.
The command looks like this:
plink.exe root@192.168.100.200 -pw mypassword "nohup ./vmfs/volumes/vmfs-storage/ghettoVCB.sh /vmfs/volumes/vmfs-storage/vmlist > /vmfs/volumes/vmfs-storage/backuplog.txt &"
After a successful backup the backuplog.txt contains not a single line and the file size is 0 btyes.
When I execute the command in a putty session the output to the backuplog.txt works great.
Any ideas whats wrong?
I have a problem.....
It all works find but VM_BACKUP_ROTATION_COUNT=1 does not do any thing.
I have now
.15_SpiceWorks-2009-02-17
.15_SpiceWorks-2009-02-16
as backups and if I run it now I get
.15_SpiceWorks-2009-02-18
any ideas?
Looks like something was modified in the script because the rotation count is kept track by a special extension "--X" ... I don't see that in your output, did you change something in the script?
=========================================================================
--William
VMware ESX/ESXi scripts and resources at: http://engineering.ucsb.edu/~duonglt/vmware/
Config part
VM_BACKUP_VOLUME=/vmfs/volumes/489326a8-7adbcdf8-a9f4-00188bf6e6f5
POWER_VM_DOWN_BEFORE_BACKUP=0
Code part
LIST_BACKUPS=$(ls -Atr $)
This is due to that my VM names are .15_Name_XXXX
BTW, wnat can I comment out in order to run all but the actual cloning of the folder?
OK, I recopied the original code.
this is my output.
~ # /ghettoVCB.sh /backup_vms
Taking backup snapshot for .15_SpiceWorks ... ################
Destination disk format: VMFS thick
Cloning disk '/vmfs/volumes/Virtual_OS_V2/SpiceWorks/XP_Base_1.vmdk'...
Clone: 100% done.
Removing snapshot from .15_SpiceWorks ...
bash: /vmfs/volumes/489326a8-7adbcdf8-a9f4-00188bf6e6f5/.15_SpiceWorks/.15_SpiceWorks-2009-02-17: bad number
/ghettoVCB.sh: /ghettoVCB.sh: 322: Syntax error: /vmfs/volumes/489326a8-7adbcdf8-a9f4-00188bf6e6f5/.15_SpiceWorks/.15_SpiceWorks-2009-02-17+1
Ah, then I think you can just remove the -A param, as that ignores "." Any reason why you're naming convention is in that form? I would probably change that since that usually interpreted as hidden directories (just a thought).
=========================================================================
--William
VMware ESX/ESXi scripts and resources at: http://engineering.ucsb.edu/~duonglt/vmware/
I'm not sure what you mean by actual cloning of the folder? If you're asking about the rotation count, you'll need to set that = 1, it does not make sense to set it to 0.
You should give the script a read through, the logic should not be too difficult to follow and you're welcome to ask further questions. If you can manually run through this process, then the script will make more sense.
=========================================================================
--William
VMware ESX/ESXi scripts and resources at: http://engineering.ucsb.edu/~duonglt/vmware/
Again, this is probably due to your naming convention, so it's unable to rename the directory since it's looking for a "--X' extension. Please take a look at the previous reply for a fix or modify the way you VM directory.
=========================================================================
--William
VMware ESX/ESXi scripts and resources at: http://engineering.ucsb.edu/~duonglt/vmware/
Just changed the name of the VM. No .15_ as prefix.
Running the code.....
Lets see.
What I ment about cloning the folder... was that I would like to coment the part that actualy does the backup until I get the rotation count working
BTW, VM_BACKUP_DIR_NAMING_CONVENTION="$(date +%F)" is what is set for the naming.
is Date: 11/01/2008 the last version of the file? I see updates later than that
That is actually the date I started the project. The latest script will always be available in the download section
To your other comemnt, that is the naming convention that is appended to the backup directory, this can be anything but I thought having the date as part of the backup directory might be useful. This can be changed to any string you would like.
=========================================================================
--William
VMware ESX/ESXi scripts and resources at: http://engineering.ucsb.edu/~duonglt/vmware/
mmmm
now its creating
SpiceWorks-2009-02-18--1
I will rename to 02-17--1 and run again.
YES!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
Thanks!!!!!!!!
Now I need to just find a way to get the files of the ESXi server.
Regards.
George.
Glad to hear. Try setting up an NFS Server, it's pretty simple and this will allow you to get the VM(s) off the host to other backup or tape storage.
=========================================================================
--William
VMware ESX/ESXi scripts and resources at: http://engineering.ucsb.edu/~duonglt/vmware/
When I am running the script I am getting the following error:
DiskLib_Check() failed for source disk The system cannot find the file specified (25).
I turned on tracing on the script and discovered it is happening as a result of this command:
vmkfstools -i /vmfs/volumes/datastore2/OpenFiler//vmfs/volumes/4947b0ac-5b9a4e28-9b21-0011092a9380/OpenFiler/OpenFiler_2.vmdk /vmfs/volumes/Disk1/vmbackups/OpenFiler/OpenFiler-2009-02-19//vmfs/volumes/4947b0ac-5b9a4e28-9b21-0011092a9380/OpenFiler/OpenFiler_2.vmdk
Any ideas what is causing this?
Realy nice Work, but I found an Izzue
When you have multiple vmdks on different datastores in one vmx thd filename contains the fullpath to the vmdk
So the Script could not save this vmdk because it is not in the VMX_DIR Path.
I hope you understand this.