Manual

Usage help

Usage help is available:

$ ./restic --help
restic is a backup program which allows saving multiple revisions of files and
directories in an encrypted repository stored on different backends.

Usage:
  restic [command]

Available Commands:
  backup        Create a new backup of files and/or directories
  cat           Print internal objects to stdout
  check         Check the repository for errors
  dump          Print a backed-up file to stdout
  find          Find a file or directory
  forget        Remove snapshots from the repository
  generate      Generate manual pages and auto-completion files (bash, zsh)
  help          Help about any command
  init          Initialize a new repository
  key           Manage keys (passwords)
  list          List objects in the repository
  ls            List files in a snapshot
  migrate       Apply migrations
  mount         Mount the repository
  prune         Remove unneeded data from the repository
  rebuild-index Build a new index file
  restore       Extract the data from a snapshot
  snapshots     List all snapshots
  tag           Modify tags on snapshots
  unlock        Remove locks other processes created
  version       Print version information

Flags:
      --cacert stringSlice      path to load root certificates from (default: use system certificates)
      --cache-dir string        set the cache directory
  -h, --help                    help for restic
      --json                    set output mode to JSON for commands that support it
      --limit-download int      limits downloads to a maximum rate in KiB/s. (default: unlimited)
      --limit-upload int        limits uploads to a maximum rate in KiB/s. (default: unlimited)
      --no-cache                do not use a local cache
      --no-lock                 do not lock the repo, this allows some operations on read-only repos
  -o, --option key=value        set extended option (key=value, can be specified multiple times)
  -p, --password-file string    read the repository password from a file (default: $RESTIC_PASSWORD_FILE)
  -q, --quiet                   do not output comprehensive progress report
  -r, --repo string             repository to backup to or restore from (default: $RESTIC_REPOSITORY)
      --tls-client-cert string   path to a file containing PEM encoded TLS client certificate and private key


Use "restic [command] --help" for more information about a command.

Similar to programs such as git, restic has a number of sub-commands. You can see these commands in the listing above. Each sub-command may have own command-line options, and there is a help option for each command which lists them, e.g. for the backup command:

$ ./restic backup --help
The "backup" command creates a new snapshot and saves the files and directories
given as the arguments.

Usage:
  restic backup [flags] FILE/DIR [FILE/DIR] ...

Flags:
  -e, --exclude pattern                  exclude a pattern (can be specified multiple times)
      --exclude-caches                   excludes cache directories that are marked with a CACHEDIR.TAG file
      --exclude-file file                read exclude patterns from a file (can be specified multiple times)
      --exclude-if-present stringArray   takes filename[:header], exclude contents of directories containing filename (except filename itself) if header of that file is as provided (can be specified multiple times)
      --files-from string                read the files to backup from file (can be combined with file args)
  -f, --force                            force re-reading the target files/directories (overrides the "parent" flag)
  -h, --help                             help for backup
      --hostname hostname                set the hostname for the snapshot manually. To prevent an expensive rescan use the "parent" flag
  -x, --one-file-system                  exclude other file systems
      --parent string                    use this parent snapshot (default: last snapshot in the repo that has the same target files/directories)
      --stdin                            read backup from stdin
      --stdin-filename string            file name to use when reading from stdin (default "stdin")
      --tag tag                          add a tag for the new snapshot (can be specified multiple times)
      --time string                      time of the backup (ex. '2012-11-01 22:08:41') (default: now)

Global Flags:
      --cacert stringSlice      path to load root certificates from (default: use system certificates)
      --cache-dir string        set the cache directory
      --json                    set output mode to JSON for commands that support it
      --limit-download int      limits downloads to a maximum rate in KiB/s. (default: unlimited)
      --limit-upload int        limits uploads to a maximum rate in KiB/s. (default: unlimited)
      --no-cache                do not use a local cache
      --no-lock                 do not lock the repo, this allows some operations on read-only repos
  -o, --option key=value        set extended option (key=value, can be specified multiple times)
  -p, --password-file string    read the repository password from a file (default: $RESTIC_PASSWORD_FILE)
  -q, --quiet                   do not output comprehensive progress report
  -r, --repo string             repository to backup to or restore from (default: $RESTIC_REPOSITORY)
      --tls-client-cert string  path to a TLS client certificate
      --tls-client-key string   path to a TLS client certificate key

Subcommand that support showing progress information such as backup, check and prune will do so unless the quiet flag -q or --quiet is set. When running from a non-interactive console progress reporting will be limited to once every 10 seconds to not fill your logs.

Additionally on Unix systems if restic receives a SIGUSR1 signal the current progress will written to the standard output so you can check up on the status at will.

Manage tags

Managing tags on snapshots is done with the tag command. The existing set of tags can be replaced completely, tags can be added to removed. The result is directly visible in the snapshots command.

Let’s say we want to tag snapshot 590c8fc8 with the tags NL and CH and remove all other tags that may be present, the following command does that:

$ restic -r /tmp/backup tag --set NL --set CH 590c8fc8
create exclusive lock for repository
modified tags on 1 snapshots

Note the snapshot ID has changed, so between each change we need to look up the new ID of the snapshot. But there is an even better way, the tag command accepts --tag for a filter, so we can filter snapshots based on the tag we just added.

So we can add and remove tags incrementally like this:

$ restic -r /tmp/backup tag --tag NL --remove CH
create exclusive lock for repository
modified tags on 1 snapshots

$ restic -r /tmp/backup tag --tag NL --add UK
create exclusive lock for repository
modified tags on 1 snapshots

$ restic -r /tmp/backup tag --tag NL --remove NL
create exclusive lock for repository
modified tags on 1 snapshots

$ restic -r /tmp/backup tag --tag NL --add SOMETHING
no snapshots were modified

Under the hood

Browse repository objects

Internally, a repository stores data of several different types described in the design documentation. You can list objects such as blobs, packs, index, snapshots, keys or locks with the following command:

$ restic -r /tmp/backup list snapshots
d369ccc7d126594950bf74f0a348d5d98d9e99f3215082eb69bf02dc9b3e464c

The find command searches for a given pattern in the repository.

$ restic -r backup find test.txt
debug log file restic.log
debug enabled
enter password for repository:
found 1 matching entries in snapshot 196bc5760c909a7681647949e80e5448e276521489558525680acf1bd428af36
  -rw-r--r--   501    20      5 2015-08-26 14:09:57 +0200 CEST path/to/test.txt

The cat command allows you to display the JSON representation of the objects or its raw content.

$ restic -r /tmp/backup cat snapshot d369ccc7d126594950bf74f0a348d5d98d9e99f3215082eb69bf02dc9b3e464c
enter password for repository:
{
  "time": "2015-08-12T12:52:44.091448856+02:00",
  "tree": "05cec17e8d3349f402576d02576a2971fc0d9f9776ce2f441c7010849c4ff5af",
  "paths": [
    "/home/user/work"
  ],
  "hostname": "kasimir",
  "username": "username",
  "uid": 501,
  "gid": 20
}

Metadata handling

Restic saves and restores most default attributes, including extended attributes like ACLs. Sparse files are not handled in a special way yet, and aren’t restored.

The following metadata is handled by restic:

  • Name
  • Type
  • Mode
  • ModTime
  • AccessTime
  • ChangeTime
  • UID
  • GID
  • User
  • Group
  • Inode
  • Size
  • Links
  • LinkTarget
  • Device
  • Content
  • Subtree
  • ExtendedAttributes

Scripting

Restic supports the output of some commands in JSON format, the JSON data can then be processed by other programs (e.g. jq). The following example lists all snapshots as JSON and uses jq to pretty-print the result:

$ restic -r /tmp/backup snapshots --json | jq .
[
  {
    "time": "2017-03-11T09:57:43.26630619+01:00",
    "tree": "bf25241679533df554fc0fd0ae6dbb9dcf1859a13f2bc9dd4543c354eff6c464",
    "paths": [
      "/home/work/doc"
    ],
    "hostname": "kasimir",
    "username": "fd0",
    "uid": 1000,
    "gid": 100,
    "id": "bbeed6d28159aa384d1ccc6fa0b540644b1b9599b162d2972acda86b1b80f89e"
  },
  {
    "time": "2017-03-11T09:58:57.541446938+01:00",
    "tree": "7f8c95d3420baaac28dc51609796ae0e0ecfb4862b609a9f38ffaf7ae2d758da",
    "paths": [
      "/home/user/shared"
    ],
    "hostname": "kasimir",
    "username": "fd0",
    "uid": 1000,
    "gid": 100,
    "id": "b157d91c16f0ba56801ece3a708dfc53791fe2a97e827090d6ed9a69a6ebdca0"
  }
]

Temporary files

During some operations (e.g. backup and prune) restic uses temporary files to store data. These files will, by default, be saved to the system’s temporary directory, on Linux this is usually located in /tmp/. The environment variable TMPDIR can be used to specify a different directory, e.g. to use the directory /var/tmp/restic-tmp instead of the default, set the environment variable like this:

$ export TMPDIR=/var/tmp/restic-tmp
$ restic -r /tmp/backup backup ~/work

Caching

Restic keeps a cache with some files from the repository on the local machine. This allows faster operations, since meta data does not need to be loaded from a remote repository. The cache is automatically created, usually in an OS-specific cache folder:

  • Linux/other: ~/.cache/restic (or $XDG_CACHE_HOME/restic)
  • macOS: ~/Library/Caches/restic
  • Windows: %LOCALAPPDATA%/restic

The command line parameter --cache-dir can each be used to override the default cache location. The parameter --no-cache disables the cache entirely. In this case, all data is loaded from the repo.

The cache is ephemeral: When a file cannot be read from the cache, it is loaded from the repository.

Within the cache directory, there’s a sub directory for each repository the cache was used with. Restic updates the timestamps of a repo directory each time it is used, so by looking at the timestamps of the sub directories of the cache directory it can decide which sub directories are old and probably not needed any more. You can either remove these directories manually, or run a restic command with the --cleanup-cache flag.