<imgsrc="http://openoid.net/gplv3-127x51.png"width=127height=51align="right">Sanoid is a policy-driven snapshot management tool for ZFS filesystems. When combined with the Linux KVM hypervisor, you can use it to make your systems <ahref="http://openoid.net/transcend"target="_blank">functionally immortal</a>.
<palign="center"><ahref="https://youtu.be/ZgowLNBsu00"target="_blank"><imgsrc="http://www.openoid.net/sanoid_video_launcher.png"alt="sanoid rollback demo"title="sanoid rollback demo"></a><brclear="all"><sup>(Real time demo: rolling back a full-scale cryptomalware infection in seconds!)</sup></p>
More prosaically, you can use Sanoid to create, automatically thin, and monitor snapshots and pool health from a single eminently human-readable TOML config file at /etc/sanoid/sanoid.conf. (Sanoid also requires a "defaults" file located at /etc/sanoid/sanoid.defaults.conf, which is not user-editable.) A typical Sanoid system would have a single cron job:
Which would be enough to tell sanoid to take and keep 36 hourly snapshots, 30 dailies, 3 monthlies, and no yearlies for all datasets under data/images (but not data/images itself, since process_children_only is set). Except in the case of data/images/win7-spice, which follows the same template (since it's a child of data/images) but only keeps 4 hourlies for whatever reason.
This will process your sanoid.conf file, create snapshots, but it will NOT purge expired ones. Note that snapshots are not atomic relative to one another.
This will process your sanoid.conf file, it will NOT create snapshots, but it will purge expired ones.
+ --monitor-snapshots
This option is designed to be run by a Nagios monitoring system. It reports on the health of your snapshots.
+ --monitor-health
This option is designed to be run by a Nagios monitoring system. It reports on the health of the zpool your filesystems are on. It only monitors filesystems that are configured in the sanoid.conf file.
Sanoid also includes a replication tool, syncoid, which facilitates the asynchronous incremental replication of ZFS filesystems. A typical syncoid command might look like this:
```
syncoid data/images/vm backup/images/vm
```
Which would replicate the specified ZFS filesystem (aka dataset) from the data pool to the backup pool on the local system, or
Syncoid supports recursive replication (replication of a dataset and all its child datasets) and uses mbuffer buffering, lzop compression, and pv progress bars if the utilities are available on the systems used.
Currently accepts gzip and lzo. lzo is fast and light on the processsor and is the default. If the selected compression method is unavailable on the source and destination, no compression will be used.
This is the bandwidth limit imposed upon the source. This is mainly used if the target does not have mbuffer installed, but bandwidth limites are desired.
+ --target-bw-limit <limitt|g|m|k>
This is the bandwidth limit imposed upon the target. This is mainly used if the source does not have mbuffer installed, but bandwidth limites are desired.
+ --nocommandchecks
Do not check the existance of commands before attempting the transfer. It assumes all programs are available. This should never be used.
This argument tells syncoid to use -i incrementals, not -I. This updates the target with the newest snapshot from the source, without replicating the intermediate snapshots in between. (If used for an initial synchronization, will do a full replication from newest snapshot and exit immediately, rather than starting with the oldest and then doing an immediate -i to the newest.)
This argument tells syncoid to restrict itself to existing snapshots, instead of creating a semi-ephemeral syncoid snapshot at execution time. Especially useful in multi-target (A->B, A->C) replication schemes, where you might otherwise accumulate a large number of foreign syncoid snapshots.