RT 5.0.6 Documentation

System administration/Database

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Backups

RT is often a critical piece of businesses and organizations. Backups are absolutely necessary to ensure you can recover quickly from an incident.

Make sure you take backups. Make sure they work.

There are many issues that can cause broken backups, such as...

Make sure your backup cronjobs notify someone if they fail instead of failing silently until you need them.

Test your backups regularly to discover any unknown problems before they become an issue. You don't want to discover problems with your backups while tensely restoring from them in a critical data loss situation.

Database

You should backup the entire RT database, although for improved speed and space you can ignore the data in the sessions table. Make sure you still get the sessions schema, however.

Database specific notes and example backup commands for each database are below. Adjust the commands as necessary for connection details such as database name (rt5 is the placeholder below), user, password, host, etc. You should put the example commands into a shell script for backup and setup a cronjob. Make sure output from cron goes to someone who reads mail! (Or into RT. :)

MySQL and MariaDB

    ( mysqldump --default-character-set=utf8mb4 rt5 --tables sessions --no-data --single-transaction; \
      mysqldump --default-character-set=utf8mb4 rt5 --ignore-table rt5.sessions --single-transaction ) \
        | gzip > rt-`date +%Y%m%d`.sql.gz

If the default character set for the entire database is not set to utf8mb4, it is especially important to set the character set in the mysqldump command to avoid corrupted backups. As always, it's important to test your backups to confirm they restore successfully.

The dump will be much faster if you can connect to the MySQL or MariaDB server over localhost. This will use a local socket instead of the network.

If you find your backups taking far far too long to complete (this point should take quite a long time to get to on an RT database), there are some alternate solutions. Percona maintains a highly regarded hot-backup tool for MySQL and MariaDB called XtraBackup. If you have more resources, you can also setup replication to a slave using binary logs and backup from there as necessary. This not only duplicates the data, but lets you take backups without putting load on your production server.

Restoring from backups

New Database Server (Catastrophic Failure)

If you are starting fresh with a new database server (because your old one no longer works or because you want to set up a dev machine to test on) you will need to create a fresh database and database user for RT to use. RT can do that for you using:

    /opt/rt5/sbin/rt-setup-database --action create,acl

By default, this will create an rt5 database and an rt_user user. If you've specified a custom password in RT_SiteConfig.pm, RT will use that. Once the database and user exist, you can restore from your backup using:

    gunzip -c rt-20141014.sql.gz | mysql -uroot -p rt5

Changing -uroot -p as needed to access the database as a user with enough rights to handle creating tables.

Restore over an existing database

If something terrible happened this morning and you want to roll back to your backups, or if you want to update a dev server using your backups, this is straightforward on MySQL and MariaDB.

    gunzip -c rt-20141014.sql.gz | mysql -uroot -p rt5

MySQL and MariaDB will drop any existing tables before recreating and repopulating them. It will leave the database and the rt_user untouched. This is not suitable for restoring on a fresh database install since there will be no rt5 database or rt_user user.

PostgreSQL

    ( pg_dump rt5 --table=sessions --schema-only; \
      pg_dump rt5 --exclude-table=sessions ) \
        | gzip > rt-`date +%Y%m%d`.sql.gz

Restoring from backups

New Database Server (Catastrophic Failure)

If you are starting fresh with a new database server (because your old one no longer works or because you want to set up a dev machine to test on) you will need to create a fresh database and database user for RT to use. RT can do part of that for you using:

    /opt/rt5/sbin/rt-setup-database --action create

You will need to create the rt_user separately.

    createuser -P rt_user

This will prompt you for a password. You should ensure that it is the same password you have configured in RT_SiteConfig.pm or RT_Config.pm using $DatabasePassword.

Once the database and user exist, you can restore from your backup which will create tables, insert data and configure rights for your rt_user user.

    gunzip -c rt-20141014.sql.gz | psql rt5

This may need to be run as the postgres user or some other admin level user who can create tables.

Restore over an existing database

If something terrible happened this morning and you want to roll back to your backups, or if you want to update a dev server using your backups, you will need to drop your database and recreate a fresh one to restore into. RT can drop and recreate the database for you using:

    /opt/rt5/sbin/rt-setup-database --action drop
    /opt/rt5/sbin/rt-setup-database --action create

Remember that this will completely destroy the existing data and create a fresh database. Your rt_user user will remain untouched. Once this is complete, you can restore from your backup which will create tables and insert data and configure rights for the rt_user.

    gunzip -c rt-20141014.sql.gz | psql rt5
After Restoring

Postgres will generally perform poorly after restoring from backups because it has outdated index statistics. You should run analyze after your restore is complete. If you'd like to watch the progress, you can run analyze verbose.

Filesystem

Although this section is mostly about database backups, there are other files on the filesystem you should back up to capture the state of your RT. You will want to back up, at the very least, the following directories and files:

/opt/rt5

RT's source code, configuration, GPG data, and plugins. Your install location may be different, of course.

You can omit var/mason_data and var/session_data if you'd like since those are temporary caches. Don't omit all of var/ however as it may contain important GPG data.

Webserver configuration

Often /etc/httpd or /etc/apache2. This will depend on your OS, web server, and internal configuration standards.

/etc/aliases

Your incoming mail aliases mapping addresses to queues.

Mail server configuration

If you're running an MTA like Postfix, Exim, SendMail, or qmail, you'll want to backup their configuration files to minimize restore time. "Lightweight" mail handling programs like fetchmail, msmtp, and ssmtp will also have configuration files, although usually not as many nor as complex. You'll still want to back them up.

The location of these files is highly dependent on what software you're using.

Crontab containing RT's cronjobs

This may be /etc/crontab, /etc/cron.d/rt, a user-specific crontab file (crontab -l $USER), or some other file altogether. Even if you only have the default cronjobs in place, it's one less piece to forget during a restore. If you have custom rt-crontool invocations, you don't want to have to recreate those.

External storage

If you use RT::ExternalStorage, you will want to backup the attachments in your chosen storage engine.

If you're using RT::ExternalStorage::Disk, then you need only back up the files under the Path option under %ExternalStorage in your RT_SiteConfig.pm.

If you're using a cloud storage engine like RT::ExternalStorage::AmazonS3, consult that service's documentation regarding backups.

Simply saving a tarball should be sufficient, with something like:

    tar czvpf rt-backup-`date +%Y%m%d`.tar.gz /opt/rt5 /etc/aliases /etc/httpd ...

Be sure to include all the directories and files you enumerated above!

Migrating to a Different Database

RT supports many different databases, including MySQL, MariaDB, PostgreSQL, and Oracle. Each of these databases is different and if you want to switch from one type to another, you can't just take a backup in one and try to restore it to another. One exception is MySQL and MariaDB, which are currently compatible and don't require the extra steps discussed here.

RT provides tools that allow you to export your RT database to the filesystem and then import it back into another database through RT. The tools are rt-serializer and rt-importer and the general process for migrating from one database to another is described below.

Plan to do a full test of this process and thoroughly check the data in a test version of the new database before performing a final conversion on your production system.

The serializer and importer tools can also be used to move only part of your RT database, like an individual queue. The process is similar to the steps described here, but the options will be different.

You do not need to perform these steps when upgrading RT on the same database. See the README for upgrade instructions.

Export from Current Database

First run the rt-serializer tool to export your database to the filesystem. Note that this will require space similar to the size of your database, so plan accordingly. If your database is very large, it can take some time. The documentation contains additional information on available flags. It's also a good idea to run the rt-validator tool to detect and resolve any errors in your database before starting:

    /opt/rt5/sbin/rt-validator --check (and maybe --resolve)
    /opt/rt5/sbin/rt-serializer --clone --directory /path/to/serialized/data
Setup New Database

After the database serializes cleanly, you can then begin to set up your new database. As you are working from some existing data, you do not need the initial RT data inserted into the databases, but you will need the tables created. When you use the rt-importer tool, the data will fill the corresponding tables.

RT's rt-setup-database tool can set the database up for you. If you are running the import in the same RT installation, you will need to update your database options in RT_SiteConfig.pm to point to the new database before running this step.

    /opt/rt5/sbin/rt-setup-database --action create,schema,acl
Import Data

Once you have your new database set up, you can then use rt-importer to insert the serialized data:

    /opt/rt5/sbin/rt-importer /path/to/serialized/data

As with the serializer step, this will take time proportionate to the size of your database.

Reset Sequences

Some databases, like Postgres, use sequences for RT table values like ids. For these database types, you need to reset the sequences from 1, set in the newly created database, to the next available id for each table. The reset-sequences script will reset these for you:

    /opt/rt5/etc/upgrade/reset-sequences
Test

Test your new system and confirm all of the expected data is available. Your RT system should look exactly the same as before, but the backend is on an entirely new database.

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