📦 borgjs
A tiny wrapper for BorgBackup to automate your backup workflow
Overview
Please note borgjs needs you to run node >=4 and has been tested using borg v1.0.7
borgjs is a nodejs command line tool for BorgBackup.
After having tried a lot of backup solutions for my data, I've been using Borg for quite a while. It's rock solid and never let me down.
It supports compression and authenticated encryption.
Backups should be as boring as possible, that's why I've created this tool in order to automate and constantly monitor the whole process, making it a little bit more user friendly.
Instead of writing complex bash scripts you can now just write a declarative configuration file, run borgjs in a crontab and forget about it.
It will take care of your backup workflow, sending you status reports through different possible channels.
Features
- backup creation
- prune old backup according to a set of rules declared in the configuration file.
- check backups for consistency and integrity.
- send success/failure reports via email, push notifications on your phone or native OS notifications.
- lockfile system to prevent concurrent backup process running in the same destination.
- output borg messages to stdout for easy logging.
- highly configurable.
Usage CLI
In order to use borgjs, you need to configure borg before.
This is an easy step, just follow the installation guide on the borg website.
Initialize an empty borg repository (for more details see the borg quickstart guide)
$ borg init /path/to/repo
Install borgjs globally
$ npm i -g borgjs
Running a backup is as easy as creating a borg repository and run
$ borgjs -c /User/me/borgjs.config.js
or
$ borgjs $(date +%Y-%m-%d-%H%M%S) -c /User/me/borgjs.config.js >> /Users/me/logs/$(date +%Y-%m-%d-%H%M%S).log
in case you want to specify the archive name and log to a file (useful if you run in as a cronjob).
$ borgjs --help
A tiny wrapper for BorgBackup to automate your backup workflow
Usage
$ borgjs <archive><options>
Options
-c, --config config file path
Examples
# run borgjs
$ borgjs -c=/User/me/borgjs.config.js
#run borgjs specifying the archive name, and log output to a file
$ borgjs $(date +%Y-%m-%d-%H%M%S) -c /path/to/your/borgjs.config.js >> $(date +%Y-%m-%d-%H%M%S).log
Usage API
You can also use borgjs programmatically:
const borgjs = require('borgjs')
const config = {
repository: '/Users/arny/Desktop/test/',
paths: [
'/Volumes/External/'
]
}
const archiveName = new Date().toString()
borgjs(config, archiveName)
.then(() => console.log('success'))
.catch((err) => console.log('error', err))
Notifications
borgjs supports a wide range of notifications.
This enables you to always keep an eye on your backups.
Notifications will never contain sensitive informations such as encryption keys of files involved in the backup process.
- push notifications (via pushbullet)
Configuration
module.exports = {
repository: '',
paths: [
],
compression: '',
check: true,
sendSystemNotification: true
}
Automate
A backup is not a backup if it's not automated.
I personally use cronnix to schedule my backup sessions on my mac.
Recipes
-
Borg can store data on any remote host accessible over SSH. If you prefer to store your offsite backup in some other fancy cloud storage, you can always backup to a local target, then upload it anywhere using rclone
-
I personally use rsync.net for my backup, they also apply dirty cheap pricing model to borg users.
Please note I'm not affiliated with them, I'm just an happy paying customer.
Change Log
This project adheres to Semantic Versioning.
Every release, along with the migration instructions, is documented in the CHANGELOG.md file.
License
MIT