Backup MariaDB using KubeStash Auto-Backup
KubeStash can automatically be configured to backup any MariaDB
databases in your cluster. KubeStash enables cluster administrators to deploy backup blueprints
ahead of time so database owners can easily backup any MariaDB
database with a few annotations.
In this tutorial, we are going to show how you can configure a backup blueprint for MariaDB
databases in your cluster and backup them with a few annotations.
Before You Begin
- At first, you need to have a Kubernetes cluster, and the
kubectl
command-line tool must be configured to communicate with your cluster. If you do not already have a cluster, you can create one by usingMinikube
orKind
. - Install
KubeDB
in your cluster following the steps here. - Install
KubeStash
in your cluster following the steps here. - Install KubeStash
kubectl
plugin following the steps here. - If you are not familiar with how KubeStash backup and restore
MariaDB
databases, please check the following guide here.
You should be familiar with the following KubeStash
concepts:
To keep everything isolated, we are going to use a separate namespace called demo
throughout this tutorial.
$ kubectl create ns demo
namespace/demo created
Note: YAML files used in this tutorial are stored in docs/guides/mariadb/backup/kubestash/auto-backup/examples directory of kubedb/docs repository.
Prepare Backend
We are going to store our backup data into a GCS
bucket. We have to create a Secret
with necessary credentials and a BackupStorage
CR to use this backend. If you want to use a different backend, please read the respective backend configuration doc from here.
Create Secret:
Let’s create a secret called gcs-secret
with access credentials to our desired GCS bucket,
$ echo -n '<your-project-id>' > GOOGLE_PROJECT_ID
$ cat /path/to/downloaded-sa-key.json > GOOGLE_SERVICE_ACCOUNT_JSON_KEY
$ kubectl create secret generic -n demo gcs-secret \
--from-file=./GOOGLE_PROJECT_ID \
--from-file=./GOOGLE_SERVICE_ACCOUNT_JSON_KEY
secret/gcs-secret created
Create BackupStorage:
Now, create a BackupStorage
using this secret. Below is the YAML of BackupStorage
CR we are going to create,
apiVersion: storage.kubestash.com/v1alpha1
kind: BackupStorage
metadata:
name: gcs-storage
namespace: demo
spec:
storage:
provider: gcs
gcs:
bucket: kubestash-qa
prefix: blueprint
secretName: gcs-secret
usagePolicy:
allowedNamespaces:
from: All
default: true
deletionPolicy: Delete
Let’s create the BackupStorage we have shown above,
$ kubectl apply -f https://github.com/kubedb/docs/raw/v2024.9.30/docs/guides/mariadb/backup/kubestash/auto-backup/examples/backupstorage.yaml
backupstorage.storage.kubestash.com/gcs-storage created
Now, we are ready to backup our database to our desired backend.
Create RetentionPolicy:
Now, let’s create a RetentionPolicy
to specify how the old Snapshots should be cleaned up.
Below is the YAML of the RetentionPolicy
object that we are going to create,
apiVersion: storage.kubestash.com/v1alpha1
kind: RetentionPolicy
metadata:
name: demo-retention
namespace: demo
spec:
default: true
failedSnapshots:
last: 2
maxRetentionPeriod: 2mo
successfulSnapshots:
last: 5
usagePolicy:
allowedNamespaces:
from: All
Let’s create the above RetentionPolicy
,
$ kubectl apply -f https://github.com/kubedb/docs/raw/v2024.9.30/docs/guides/mariadb/backup/kubestash/auto-backup/examples/retentionpolicy.yaml
retentionpolicy.storage.kubestash.com/demo-retention created
Create Secret:
We also need to create a secret with a Restic
password for backup data encryption.
Let’s create a secret called encrypt-secret
with the Restic password,
$ echo -n 'changeit' > RESTIC_PASSWORD
$ kubectl create secret generic -n demo encrypt-secret \
--from-file=./RESTIC_PASSWORD \
secret "encrypt-secret" created
Auto-backup with default configurations
In this section, we are going to backup a MariaDB
database of demo
namespace. We are going to use the default configurations which will be specified in the BackupBlueprint
CR.
Prepare Backup Blueprint
A BackupBlueprint
allows you to specify a template for the Repository
,Session
or Variables
of BackupConfiguration
in a Kubernetes native way.
Now, we have to create a BackupBlueprint
CR with a blueprint for BackupConfiguration
object.
apiVersion: core.kubestash.com/v1alpha1
kind: BackupBlueprint
metadata:
name: mariadb-default-backup-blueprint
namespace: demo
spec:
usagePolicy:
allowedNamespaces:
from: All
backupConfigurationTemplate:
deletionPolicy: OnDelete
backends:
- name: gcs-backend
storageRef:
namespace: demo
name: gcs-storage
retentionPolicy:
name: demo-retention
namespace: demo
sessions:
- name: frequent-backup
sessionHistoryLimit: 3
scheduler:
schedule: "*/5 * * * *"
jobTemplate:
backoffLimit: 1
repositories:
- name: default-blueprint
backend: gcs-backend
directory: /default-blueprint
encryptionSecret:
name: encrypt-secret
namespace: demo
addon:
name: mariadb-addon
tasks:
- name: logical-backup
Here,
.spec.backupConfigurationTemplate.backends[*].storageRef
refers our earlier createdgcs-storage
backupStorage..spec.backupConfigurationTemplate.sessions[*].schedule
specifies that we want to backup the database at5 minutes
interval.
Let’s create the BackupBlueprint
we have shown above,
$ kubectl apply -f https://github.com/kubedb/docs/raw/v2024.9.30/docs/guides/mariadb/backup/kubestash/auto-backup/examples/default-backupblueprint.yaml
backupblueprint.core.kubestash.com/mariadb-default-backup-blueprint created
Now, we are ready to backup our MariaDB
databases using few annotations.
Create Database
Now, we are going to create an MariaDB
CR in demo namespace.
Below is the YAML of the MariaDB
object that we are going to create,
apiVersion: kubedb.com/v1
kind: MariaDB
metadata:
name: sample-mariadb
namespace: demo
annotations:
blueprint.kubestash.com/name: mariadb-default-backup-blueprint
blueprint.kubestash.com/namespace: demo
spec:
version: 11.1.3
replicas: 3
storageType: Durable
storage:
accessModes:
- ReadWriteOnce
resources:
requests:
storage: 1Gi
deletionPolicy: WipeOut
Here,
.spec.annotations.blueprint.kubestash.com/name: mariadb-default-backup-blueprint
specifies the name of theBackupBlueprint
that will use in backup..spec.annotations.blueprint.kubestash.com/namespace: demo
specifies the name of thenamespace
where theBackupBlueprint
resides.
Let’s create the MariaDB
we have shown above,
$ kubectl apply -f https://github.com/kubedb/docs/raw/v2024.9.30/docs/guides/mariadb/backup/kubestash/auto-backup/examples/sample-mariadb.yaml
mariadb.kubedb.com/sample-mariadb created
Verify BackupConfiguration
If everything goes well, KubeStash should create a BackupConfiguration
for our MariaDB in demo namespace and the phase of that BackupConfiguration
should be Ready
. Verify the BackupConfiguration
object by the following command,
$ kubectl get backupconfiguration -n demo
NAME PHASE PAUSED AGE
appbinding-sample-mariadb Ready 2m50m
Now, let’s check the YAML of the BackupConfiguration
.
$ kubectl get backupconfiguration -n demo appbinding-sample-mariadb -o yaml
apiVersion: core.kubestash.com/v1alpha1
kind: BackupConfiguration
metadata:
creationTimestamp: "2024-09-18T05:34:15Z"
finalizers:
- kubestash.com/cleanup
generation: 1
labels:
app.kubernetes.io/managed-by: kubestash.com
kubestash.com/invoker-name: mariadb-default-backup-blueprint
kubestash.com/invoker-namespace: demo
name: appbinding-sample-mariadb
namespace: demo
resourceVersion: "1700384"
uid: 927ac985-e3d2-43a2-9d25-00ba55ce5fc1
spec:
backends:
- name: gcs-backend
retentionPolicy:
name: demo-retention
namespace: demo
storageRef:
name: gcs-storage
namespace: demo
sessions:
- addon:
name: mariadb-addon
tasks:
- name: logical-backup
name: frequent-backup
repositories:
- backend: gcs-backend
directory: /default-blueprint
encryptionSecret:
name: encrypt-secret
namespace: demo
name: default-blueprint
scheduler:
jobTemplate:
backoffLimit: 1
template:
controller: {}
metadata: {}
spec:
resources: {}
schedule: '*/5 * * * *'
sessionHistoryLimit: 3
target:
apiGroup: kubedb.com
kind: MariaDB
name: sample-mariadb
namespace: demo
status:
backends:
- name: gcs-backend
ready: true
retentionPolicy:
found: true
ref:
name: demo-retention
namespace: demo
storage:
phase: Ready
ref:
name: gcs-storage
namespace: demo
conditions:
- lastTransitionTime: "2024-09-18T05:34:17Z"
message: Validation has been passed successfully.
reason: ResourceValidationPassed
status: "True"
type: ValidationPassed
dependencies:
- found: true
kind: Addon
name: mariadb-addon
phase: Ready
repositories:
- name: default-blueprint
phase: Ready
sessions:
- conditions:
- lastTransitionTime: "2024-09-18T05:34:17Z"
message: Scheduler has been ensured successfully.
reason: SchedulerEnsured
status: "True"
type: SchedulerEnsured
- lastTransitionTime: "2024-09-18T05:34:18Z"
message: Initial backup has been triggered successfully.
reason: SuccessfullyTriggeredInitialBackup
status: "True"
type: InitialBackupTriggered
name: frequent-backup
targetFound: true
Notice the spec.backends
, spec.sessions
and spec.target
sections, KubeStash automatically resolved those info from the BackupBluePrint
and created above BackupConfiguration
.
Verify BackupSession:
KubeStash triggers an instant backup as soon as the BackupConfiguration
is ready. After that, backups are scheduled according to the specified schedule.
$ kubectl get backupsession -n demo -w
NAME INVOKER-TYPE INVOKER-NAME PHASE DURATION AGE
appbinding-sample-mariadb-frequent-backup-1726637655 BackupConfiguration appbinding-sample-mariadb Succeeded 2m11s 3m15s
We can see from the above output that the backup session has succeeded. Now, we are going to verify whether the backup data has been stored in the backend.
Verify Backup:
Once a backup is complete, KubeStash will update the respective Repository
CR to reflect the backup. Check that the repository sample-mariadb-backup
has been updated by the following command,
$ kubectl get repository -n demo default-blueprint
NAME INTEGRITY SNAPSHOT-COUNT SIZE PHASE LAST-SUCCESSFUL-BACKUP AGE
default-blueprint true 3 1.559 KiB Ready 80s 7m32s
At this moment we have one Snapshot
. Run the following command to check the respective Snapshot
which represents the state of a backup run for an application.
$ kubectl get snapshot.storage.kubestash.com -n demo -l=kubestash.com/repo-name=default-blueprint
NAME REPOSITORY SESSION SNAPSHOT-TIME DELETION-POLICY PHASE AGE
default-blueprint-appbinding-samiadb-frequent-backup-1726637655 default-blueprint frequent-backup 2024-09-18T05:34:18Z Delete Succeeded 7m39s
Note: KubeStash creates a
Snapshot
with the following labels:
kubestash.com/app-ref-kind: <target-kind>
kubestash.com/app-ref-name: <target-name>
kubestash.com/app-ref-namespace: <target-namespace>
kubestash.com/repo-name: <repository-name>
These labels can be used to watch only the
Snapshot
s related to our target Database orRepository
.
If we check the YAML of the Snapshot
, we can find the information about the backup components of the Database.
$ kubectl get snapshot.storage.kubestash.com -n demo default-blueprint-appbinding-samgres-frequent-backup-1725533628 -oyaml
apiVersion: storage.kubestash.com/v1alpha1
kind: Snapshot
metadata:
creationTimestamp: "2024-09-18T05:34:18Z"
finalizers:
- kubestash.com/cleanup
generation: 1
labels:
kubestash.com/app-ref-kind: MariaDB
kubestash.com/app-ref-name: sample-mariadb
kubestash.com/app-ref-namespace: demo
kubestash.com/repo-name: default-blueprint
annotations:
kubedb.com/db-version: 11.1.3
name: default-blueprint-appbinding-samiadb-frequent-backup-1726637655
namespace: demo
ownerReferences:
- apiVersion: storage.kubestash.com/v1alpha1
blockOwnerDeletion: true
controller: true
kind: Repository
name: default-blueprint
uid: ec1ba99f-ac95-4197-9ddd-0f978053a5d6
resourceVersion: "1701057"
uid: fee77218-c06a-43a5-8ad4-fa9baf72a128
spec:
appRef:
apiGroup: kubedb.com
kind: MariaDB
name: sample-mariadb
namespace: demo
backupSession: appbinding-sample-mariadb-frequent-backup-1726637655
deletionPolicy: Delete
repository: default-blueprint
session: frequent-backup
snapshotID: 01J81SZM8G6AQ5XZAN85CSBP96
type: FullBackup
version: v1
status:
components:
dump:
driver: Restic
duration: 2.762583481s
integrity: true
path: repository/v1/frequent-backup/dump
phase: Succeeded
resticStats:
- hostPath: dumpfile.sql
id: c4d4c26ad6e03f372b60dfc8bb7901900c4be9b791d44c68564753fb9e9e424c
size: 2.206 KiB
uploaded: 2.498 KiB
size: 2.190 KiB
conditions:
- lastTransitionTime: "2024-09-18T05:34:18Z"
message: Recent snapshot list updated successfully
reason: SuccessfullyUpdatedRecentSnapshotList
status: "True"
type: RecentSnapshotListUpdated
- lastTransitionTime: "2024-09-18T05:36:26Z"
message: Metadata uploaded to backend successfully
reason: SuccessfullyUploadedSnapshotMetadata
status: "True"
type: SnapshotMetadataUploaded
integrity: true
phase: Succeeded
size: 2.189 KiB
snapshotTime: "2024-09-18T05:34:18Z"
totalComponents: 1
KubeStash uses
mariadb-dump
to perform backups of targetMariaDB
databases. Therefore, the component name for logical backups is set asdump
.
Now, if we navigate to the GCS bucket, we will see the backup data stored in the blueprint/default-blueprint/repository/v1/frequent-backup/dump
directory. KubeStash also keeps the backup for Snapshot
YAMLs, which can be found in the blueprint/default-blueprint/snapshots
directory.
Note: KubeStash stores all dumped data encrypted in the backup directory, meaning it remains unreadable until decrypted.
Auto-backup with custom configurations
In this section, we are going to backup a MariaDB
database of demo
namespace. We are going to use the custom configurations which will be specified in the BackupBlueprint
CR.
Prepare Backup Blueprint
A BackupBlueprint
allows you to specify a template for the Repository
,Session
or Variables
of BackupConfiguration
in a Kubernetes native way.
Now, we have to create a BackupBlueprint
CR with a blueprint for BackupConfiguration
object.
apiVersion: core.kubestash.com/v1alpha1
kind: BackupBlueprint
metadata:
name: mariadb-customize-backup-blueprint
namespace: demo
spec:
usagePolicy:
allowedNamespaces:
from: All
backupConfigurationTemplate:
deletionPolicy: OnDelete
backends:
- name: gcs-backend
storageRef:
namespace: demo
name: gcs-storage
retentionPolicy:
name: demo-retention
namespace: demo
sessions:
- name: frequent-backup
sessionHistoryLimit: 3
scheduler:
schedule: ${schedule}
jobTemplate:
backoffLimit: 1
repositories:
- name: ${repoName}
backend: gcs-backend
directory: ${namespace}/${targetName}
encryptionSecret:
name: encrypt-secret
namespace: demo
addon:
name: mariadb-addon
tasks:
- name: logical-backup
params:
args: ${targetedDatabase}
Note that we have used some variables (format: ${<variable name>}
) in different fields. KubeStash will substitute these variables with values from the respective target’s annotations. You’re free to use any variables you like.
Here,
.spec.backupConfigurationTemplate.backends[*].storageRef
refers our earlier createdgcs-storage
backupStorage..spec.backupConfigurationTemplate.sessions[*]
:.schedule
defines${schedule}
variable, which determines the time interval for the backup..repositories[*].name
defines the${repoName}
variable, which specifies the name of the backupRepository
..repositories[*].directory
defines two variables,${namespace}
and${targetName}
, which are used to determine the path where the backup will be stored..addon.tasks[*].params.args
defines${targetedDatabase}
variable, which identifies a single database to backup.
Let’s create the BackupBlueprint
we have shown above,
$ kubectl apply -f https://github.com/kubedb/docs/raw/v2024.9.30/docs/guides/mariadb/backup/kubestash/auto-backup/examples/customize-backupblueprint.yaml
backupblueprint.core.kubestash.com/mariadb-customize-backup-blueprint created
Now, we are ready to backup our MariaDB
databases using few annotations. You can check available auto-backup annotations for a databases from here.
Create Database
Now, we are going to create an MariaDB
CR in demo namespace.
Below is the YAML of the MariaDB
object that we are going to create,
apiVersion: kubedb.com/v1
kind: MariaDB
metadata:
name: sample-mariadb-2
namespace: demo
annotations:
blueprint.kubestash.com/name: mariadb-customize-backup-blueprint
blueprint.kubestash.com/namespace: demo
variables.kubestash.com/schedule: "*/10 * * * *"
variables.kubestash.com/repoName: customize-blueprint
variables.kubestash.com/namespace: demo
variables.kubestash.com/targetName: sample-mariadb-2
variables.kubestash.com/targetedDatabase: mysql
spec:
version: 11.1.3
replicas: 3
storageType: Durable
storage:
accessModes:
- ReadWriteOnce
resources:
requests:
storage: 1Gi
deletionPolicy: WipeOut
Notice the metadata.annotations
field, where we have defined the annotations related to the automatic backup configuration. Specifically, we’ve set the BackupBlueprint
name as mariadb-customize-backup-blueprint
and the namespace as demo
. We have also provided values for the blueprint template variables, such as the backup schedule
, repositoryName
, namespace
, targetName
, and targetedDatabase
. These annotations will be used to create a BackupConfiguration
for this MariaDB
database.
Let’s create the MariaDB
we have shown above,
$ kubectl apply -f https://github.com/kubedb/docs/raw/v2024.9.30/docs/guides/mariadb/backup/kubestash/auto-backup/examples/sample-mariadb-2.yaml
mariadb.kubedb.com/sample-mariadb-2 created
Verify BackupConfiguration
If everything goes well, KubeStash should create a BackupConfiguration
for our MariaDB in demo namespace and the phase of that BackupConfiguration
should be Ready
. Verify the BackupConfiguration
object by the following command,
$ kubectl get backupconfiguration -n demo
NAME PHASE PAUSED AGE
appbinding-sample-mariadb-2 Ready 2m50m
Now, let’s check the YAML of the BackupConfiguration
.
$ kubectl get backupconfiguration -n demo appbinding-sample-mariadb-2 -o yaml
apiVersion: core.kubestash.com/v1alpha1
kind: BackupConfiguration
metadata:
creationTimestamp: "2024-09-18T06:23:21Z"
finalizers:
- kubestash.com/cleanup
generation: 1
labels:
app.kubernetes.io/managed-by: kubestash.com
kubestash.com/invoker-name: mariadb-customize-backup-blueprint
kubestash.com/invoker-namespace: demo
name: appbinding-sample-mariadb-2
namespace: demo
resourceVersion: "1709334"
uid: 08ff19bc-ab81-46c1-9e40-32ff3eb02144
spec:
backends:
- name: gcs-backend
retentionPolicy:
name: demo-retention
namespace: demo
storageRef:
name: gcs-storage
namespace: demo
sessions:
- addon:
name: mariadb-addon
tasks:
- name: logical-backup
params:
args: mysql
name: frequent-backup
repositories:
- backend: gcs-backend
directory: demo/sample-mariadb-2
encryptionSecret:
name: encrypt-secret
namespace: demo
name: customize-blueprint
scheduler:
jobTemplate:
backoffLimit: 1
template:
controller: {}
metadata: {}
spec:
resources: {}
schedule: '*/10 * * * *'
sessionHistoryLimit: 3
target:
apiGroup: kubedb.com
kind: MariaDB
name: sample-mariadb-2
namespace: demo
status:
backends:
- name: gcs-backend
ready: true
retentionPolicy:
found: true
ref:
name: demo-retention
namespace: demo
storage:
phase: Ready
ref:
name: gcs-storage
namespace: demo
conditions:
- lastTransitionTime: "2024-09-18T06:23:21Z"
message: Validation has been passed successfully.
reason: ResourceValidationPassed
status: "True"
type: ValidationPassed
dependencies:
- found: true
kind: Addon
name: mariadb-addon
phase: Ready
repositories:
- name: customize-blueprint
phase: Ready
sessions:
- conditions:
- lastTransitionTime: "2024-09-18T06:23:23Z"
message: Scheduler has been ensured successfully.
reason: SchedulerEnsured
status: "True"
type: SchedulerEnsured
- lastTransitionTime: "2024-09-18T06:23:24Z"
message: Initial backup has been triggered successfully.
reason: SuccessfullyTriggeredInitialBackup
status: "True"
type: InitialBackupTriggered
name: frequent-backup
targetFound: true
Notice the spec.backends
, spec.sessions
and spec.target
sections, KubeStash automatically resolved those info from the BackupBluePrint
and created above BackupConfiguration
.
Verify BackupSession:
KubeStash triggers an instant backup as soon as the BackupConfiguration
is ready. After that, backups are scheduled according to the specified schedule.
$ kubectl get backupsession -n demo -w
NAME INVOKER-TYPE INVOKER-NAME PHASE DURATION AGE
appbinding-sample-mariadb-2-frequent-backup-1726640601 BackupConfiguration appbinding-sample-mariadb-2 Succeeded 2m6s 10m
We can see from the above output that the backup session has succeeded. Now, we are going to verify whether the backup data has been stored in the backend.
Verify Backup:
Once a backup is complete, KubeStash will update the respective Repository
CR to reflect the backup. Check that the repository customize-blueprint
has been updated by the following command,
$ kubectl get repository -n demo customize-blueprint
NAME INTEGRITY SNAPSHOT-COUNT SIZE PHASE LAST-SUCCESSFUL-BACKUP AGE
customize-blueprint true 2 1.021 MiB Ready 4m29s 11ms
At this moment we have one Snapshot
. Run the following command to check the respective Snapshot
which represents the state of a backup run for an application.
$ kubectl get snapshot.storage.kubestash.com -n demo -l=kubestash.com/repo-name=customize-blueprint
NAME REPOSITORY SESSION SNAPSHOT-TIME DELETION-POLICY PHASE AGE
customize-blueprint-appbinding-sdb-2-frequent-backup-1726640601 customize-blueprint frequent-backup 2024-09-18T06:23:24Z Delete Succeeded 12m
Note: KubeStash creates a
Snapshot
with the following labels:
kubedb.com/db-version: <db-version>
kubestash.com/app-ref-kind: <target-kind>
kubestash.com/app-ref-name: <target-name>
kubestash.com/app-ref-namespace: <target-namespace>
kubestash.com/repo-name: <repository-name>
These labels can be used to watch only the
Snapshot
s related to our target Database orRepository
.
If we check the YAML of the Snapshot
, we can find the information about the backup components of the Database.
$ kubectl get snapshot.storage.kubestash.com -n demo customize-blueprint-appbinding-sql-2-frequent-backup-1725597000 -oyaml
apiVersion: storage.kubestash.com/v1alpha1
kind: Snapshot
metadata:
creationTimestamp: "2024-09-18T06:23:24Z"
finalizers:
- kubestash.com/cleanup
generation: 1
labels:
kubestash.com/app-ref-kind: MariaDB
kubestash.com/app-ref-name: sample-mariadb-2
kubestash.com/app-ref-namespace: demo
kubestash.com/repo-name: customize-blueprint
annotations:
kubedb.com/db-version: 11.1.3
name: customize-blueprint-appbinding-sdb-2-frequent-backup-1726640601
namespace: demo
ownerReferences:
- apiVersion: storage.kubestash.com/v1alpha1
blockOwnerDeletion: true
controller: true
kind: Repository
name: customize-blueprint
uid: 224a1fe8-4897-4de6-b933-fc3537c2a881
resourceVersion: "1709934"
uid: e28deec8-a7a4-43ba-b314-b95ef2991a85
spec:
appRef:
apiGroup: kubedb.com
kind: MariaDB
name: sample-mariadb-2
namespace: demo
backupSession: appbinding-sample-mariadb-2-frequent-backup-1726640601
deletionPolicy: Delete
repository: customize-blueprint
session: frequent-backup
snapshotID: 01J81WSH71CCD611AZ5PTC1N6G
type: FullBackup
version: v1
status:
components:
dump:
driver: Restic
duration: 2.836904485s
integrity: true
path: repository/v1/frequent-backup/dump
phase: Succeeded
resticStats:
- hostPath: dumpfile.sql
id: 6aa144d43ea5d70fd1018390d4d22f98f6ab568c74eee9a386d6a9b29ad21d8b
size: 4.887 MiB
uploaded: 4.887 MiB
size: 907.341 KiB
conditions:
- lastTransitionTime: "2024-09-18T06:23:24Z"
message: Recent snapshot list updated successfully
reason: SuccessfullyUpdatedRecentSnapshotList
status: "True"
type: RecentSnapshotListUpdated
- lastTransitionTime: "2024-09-18T06:25:27Z"
message: Metadata uploaded to backend successfully
reason: SuccessfullyUploadedSnapshotMetadata
status: "True"
type: SnapshotMetadataUploaded
integrity: true
phase: Succeeded
size: 907.341 KiB
snapshotTime: "2024-09-18T06:23:24Z"
totalComponents: 1
KubeStash uses
mariadb-dump
to perform backups of targetMariaDB
databases. Therefore, the component name for logical backups is set asdump
.
Now, if we navigate to the GCS bucket, we will see the backup data stored in the blueprint/demo/sample-mariadb-2/repository/v1/frequent-backup/dump
directory. KubeStash also keeps the backup for Snapshot
YAMLs, which can be found in the blueprint/demo/sample-mariadb-2/snapshots
directory.
Note: KubeStash stores all dumped data encrypted in the backup directory, meaning it remains unreadable until decrypted.
Cleanup
To cleanup the resources crated by this tutorial, run the following commands,
kubectl delete backupblueprints.core.kubestash.com -n demo mariadb-default-backup-blueprint
kubectl delete backupblueprints.core.kubestash.com -n demo mariadb-customize-backup-blueprint
kubectl delete retentionpolicies.storage.kubestash.com -n demo demo-retention
kubectl delete backupstorage -n demo gcs-storage
kubectl delete secret -n demo gcs-secret
kubectl delete secret -n demo encrypt-secret
kubectl delete mariadb -n demo sample-mariadb
kubectl delete mariadb -n demo sample-mariadb-2