This script can be used to backup essential configuration files from the Proxmox Virtual Enivronment (PVE) host.
The script will create backups using tar
with specified backup prefix and date and time stamp in the file name. Script will also delete backups that are older then number of days specified.
To create backup script that will be executed every day we can create backup script in /etc/cron.daily/
folder. We need to make it writeable by root (creator) only, but readable and executable by everyone:
touch /etc/cron.daily/pvehost-backup
chmod 755 /etc/cron.daily/pvehost-backup
Copy and paste following script into the created file (e.g. using vim.tiny
):
#!/bin/sh
BACKUP_PATH="/var/tmp/"
BACKUP_FILE="pve-host"
KEEP_DAYS=7
PVE_BACKUP_SET="/etc/pve/ /etc/lvm/ /etc/modprobe.d/ /etc/network/interfaces /etc/vzdump.conf /etc/sysctl.conf /etc/resolv.conf /etc/ksmtuned.conf /etc/hosts /etc/hostname /etc/cron* /etc/aliases"
PVE_CUSTOM_BACKUP_SET="/etc/apcupsd/ /etc/multipath/ /etc/multipath.conf"
tar -czf $BACKUP_PATH$BACKUP_FILE-$(date +%Y_%m_%d-%H_%M_%S).tar.gz --absolute-names $PVE_BACKUP_SET $PVE_CUSTOM_BACKUP_SET
find $BACKUP_PATH$BACKUP_FILE-* -mindepth 0 -maxdepth 0 -depth -mtime +$KEEP_DAYS -delete
Note: Please modify the PVE_CUSTOM_BACKUP_SET
variable to fit your PVE host needs. You can leave it as empty string (""
) if no host specific configuration is needed.
Don't forget to change path where to store backups, the best way is to store backups outside physical host, e.g. on attached NAS storage.
You can modify variables to fit backups for your individual hosts:
BACKUP_PATH
to specifiy where to store backups,BACKUP_FILE
to specify backups file prefix,KEEP_DAYS
to specify how many old backups to keep (in days)PVE_CUSTOM_BACKUP_SET
to add your installation specific folders and/or files,PVE_BACKUP_SET
defines standard set of folders and config files for generic PVE host.
Consider plugging in the network cable in another NIC if you have one. I lost connectivity too but on my motherboard when i change hardware the nic ports get served up in a different order so proxmox grabs the wrong one and thinks its the right one.
I went through a full reinstall only to find out i had to plug in the cable in the other nic :/