I don't know of a way to make bacula backups always fit within a set amount of space. This could be dangerous. Depends on how far back you want your backup data to go. If such a thing was possible using bacula, you wouldn't want bacula to delete the last full backup or you wouldn't have any valid backups for a given host. Even assuming bacula could do this and was smart enough to not delete the latest full backup, you could encounter a situation where you previously had a certain amount of data retention (say, 2 months), but as backup sizes increased that time slowly went down until you only had 1 week of retention. Could be very dangerous, esp if ransomware struck some of your clients. In the event of ransomware, you will absolutely want backups going back further than 2 weeks. Also, a usage based purge of backup data could be initiated by the ransomware encrypting many files on your customer systems, resulting in a rapidly ballooning backup size as your server backed up the encrypted files. In a worst case scenario, a system configured the way you described could be prompted to throw out its last good backups of a system by the influx of data from a new ransomware infection.
Now on to discussion of your current issue: If I recall correctly, you first started messaging this list within 2023. I suspect that no volume is older than 365 days, and as such, no volume will be reused, end of story. The volume, file, and job retention options are all time based. If you've hit 100GB of utilization before 365 days was up, you will need to change one of several things: Increase available storage space. Decrease storage utilization. For instance, maybe do full backups less frequently, relying on differential and incremental backups for a longer period of time. Decrease your volume/job/file retention. With the exception of increasing your storage space, as far as I know your situation requires that you manually purge older volumes. I strongly advise caution when doing this. The purge command is DANGEROUS. Running it without parameters will delete all your database records for whichever file daemon you select. Take catalog backups and restore those backups to a safe place before doing anything related to purging or deleting existing volumes. Understand the database restore process BEFORE you need it. If possible set up a test environment to test any proposed changes of this scale. Manually changing the volume retention period on a per volume basis might make the volumes valid targets for pruning. Not sure. What I am pretty sure about is that changing the default volume retention period in your config won't retroactively change that value for your volumes that already exist. Double check everything I've said here. My knowledge is limited, and I may be incorrect on some points. Pretty sure on the first paragraph diagnosing your issue and your list of options, though. You can confirm the validity of my diagnosis by checking the dates associated with your volumes. As a matter of opinion, your 1GB volumes seem small, though that's not necessarily something I can back up with anything other than opinion. I do imagine that smaller 1GB volumes would be easier to export from cloud hosted storage (which I think you are using, iirc). Don't feel pressured to change this unless it bothers you or you have other knowledge supporting my opinion. Changing maximum volume sizes could impact access to and use of existing volumes. Be careful. Regards, Robert Gerber 402-237-8692 r...@craeon.net On Sat, Jan 27, 2024 at 8:33 AM MylesDearBusiness via Bacula-users < bacula-users@lists.sourceforge.net> wrote: > Hello, > > I'm having some problems with backup file configuration. > > I want the backup file area to consume 100GB and no more. > > I decided on file sizes of 1GB > > Pool { > > ... > > Volume Retention = 365 days # one year > Maximum Volume Bytes = 1G # Limit Volume size to something > reasonable > Maximum Volumes = 100 # Limit number of Volumes in Pool > > Recycle = yes # Bacula can automatically recycle > Volumes > AutoPrune = yes # Prune expired volumes > > ... > > } > > I enabled the following schedule: > > # > # When to do the backups, full backup on first sunday of the month, > # differential (i.e. incremental since full) every other sunday, > # and incremental backups other days > Schedule { > Name = "WeeklyCycle" > Run = Full 1st sun at 23:05 > Run = Differential 2nd-5th sun at 23:05 > Run = Incremental mon-sat at 23:05 > } > > ... and what I saw is 100 files written and filled, and then all backups > stopping in their tracks and no further backups produced. > > Every new job errors out. > > None of the older backup files were reused. > > Backups only resumed when I manually deleted the oldest volumes from > bconsole, and stopped again when the maximum number of files had been > reached > > I want automatic space management so that when the maximum number of > volumes are created, the oldest ones are reused. > > I don't know how to set the "Volume Retention" accurately (as my backup > sizes are not predictable, as I install new software or accumulate business > data their size will likely increase), > I want the backups to always fit within my prescribed amount of storage > space and recycle that space when needed, without manual intervention. > > How can I achieve this ? > > Thanks. > > > _______________________________________________ > Bacula-users mailing list > Bacula-users@lists.sourceforge.net > https://lists.sourceforge.net/lists/listinfo/bacula-users >
_______________________________________________ Bacula-users mailing list Bacula-users@lists.sourceforge.net https://lists.sourceforge.net/lists/listinfo/bacula-users