Ian Evans
2018-Aug-07 21:48 UTC
Best practices for backing up small mailserver to remote location
My webserver also houses our mailserver. There's about six users on that mail system and I'm thinking it would be good to back up the mailboxes to my always on HTPC computer at home, which is reachable via a dynamic IP service. I know (or think) I need to use doveadm-backup for this but rather than reinvent the wheel (or use the wrong wheel altogether) I'm wondering if anyone can recommend a good tutorial or wiki entry that shows the best way to loop through the users and send their backups to a remote server. Thanks. -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: <https://dovecot.org/pipermail/dovecot/attachments/20180807/6d3e9e33/attachment.html>
Adi Pircalabu
2018-Aug-08 00:08 UTC
Best practices for backing up small mailserver to remote location
On 08-08-2018 7:48, Ian Evans wrote:> My webserver also houses our mailserver. There's about six users on > that mail system and I'm thinking it would be good to back up the > mailboxes to my always on HTPC computer at home, which is reachable > via a dynamic IP service. > > I know (or think) I need to use doveadm-backup for this but rather > than reinvent the wheel (or use the wrong wheel altogether) I'm > wondering if anyone can recommend a good tutorial or wiki entry that > shows the best way to loop through the users and send their backups to > a remote server.Assuming you're running *nix on your HTPC and can install your own software on it a safe, secure and reliable way of doing it is: - Since you're on dynamic IP at home, set up a VPN tunnel using the mailserver as server and HTPC as client. OpenVPN is ubiquitous and widely supported. - rsync your mailboxes using the tunnel connection. This way you can back up your entire server, not only the mailboxes. You can add doveadm in the mix if you want, or use imapsync and so on and so forth. YMMV -- Adi Pircalabu
daniel_1983 at protonmail.com
2018-Aug-08 11:39 UTC
Best practices for backing up small mailserver to remote location
??????? Original Message ??????? On August 8, 2018 1:08 AM, Adi Pircalabu <adi at ddns.com.au> wrote:> - rsyncmay not be the best option depending on the format of mailboxes. If you're using maildir or maildir+ that's fine, but what about mbox or dbox ?
Kenneth Porter
2018-Aug-09 00:05 UTC
Best practices for backing up small mailserver to remote location
On 8/7/2018 5:08 PM, Adi Pircalabu wrote:> - Since you're on dynamic IP at home, set up a VPN tunnel using the > mailserver as server and HTPC as client. OpenVPN is ubiquitous and > widely supported. > - rsync your mailboxes using the tunnel connection. > This way you can back up your entire server, not only the mailboxes.Instead of openvpn, I use openssh. Use compression in the ssh tunnel, not the rsync connection, as rsync compression tends to be buggy and interrupts the download. I run sshd on a non-standard port to keep my logs relatively free of script kiddy noise from people looking for an ssh connection to crack. Run fail2ban to lock out the remaining script kiddies. Use a client certificate to log in with ssh unprompted, making it easy to download in a cron job. Here's an example of scripting the download. Uncomment the DRYRUN line for testing, then comment for production. Add more rsync commands to back up different partitions. The --one-file-system prevents rsync from trying to back up /dev, /proc, and /sys. The --delete option will remove local files that were deleted on the remote server. Use that set of options once you're happy that the backup is working right. #!/bin/sh #set -e set -x #DRYRUN=--dry-run #RSYNC_OPTIONS="$DRYRUN --one-file-system -avH --delete" RSYNC_OPTIONS="$DRYRUN --one-file-system -avH" DEST=/home/rsync/Server1 # Allow one hour so we don't burn up our bandwidth allowance # from a command error time timeout 1h \ rsync -e 'ssh -C -p 1234' $RSYNC_OPTIONS example.com:/ ${DEST}/ \ --exclude tmp # add more rsync commands here for other partitions
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