Rest Server is a high performance HTTP server that implements restic's REST backend API. It provides secure and efficient way to backup data remotely, using restic backup client via the rest: URL.
Rest Server requires Go 1.7 or higher to build. The only tested compiler is the official Go compiler. Building server with gccgo may work, but is not supported.
The required version of restic backup client to use with Rest Server is v0.7.1 or higher.
make
or
go run build.go
If all goes well, you'll find the binary in the current directory.
Alternatively, you can compile and install it in your $GOBIN with a standard go install ./cmd/rest-server
. But, beware, you won't have version info built into binary when compiled that way!
make install
Installs the binary as /usr/local/bin/rest-server
.
Alternatively, you can install it manually anywhere you want. It's a single binary, there are no dependencies.
make docker_build
docker pull restic/rest-server
To learn how to use restic backup client with REST backend, please consult restic manual.
rest-server --help
Run a REST server for use with restic
Usage:
rest-server [flags]
Flags:
--append-only enable append only mode
--cpu-profile string write CPU profile to file
--debug output debug messages
-h, --help help for rest-server
--listen string listen address (default ":8000")
--log string log HTTP requests in the combined log format
--path string data directory (default "/tmp/restic")
--private-repos users can only access their private repo
--prometheus enable Prometheus metrics
--tls turn on TLS support
--tls-cert string TLS certificate path
--tls-key string TLS key path
By default the server persists backup data in /tmp/restic
. Start the server with a custom persistence directory:
rest-server --path /user/home/backup
The server uses an .htpasswd
file to specify users. You can create such a file at the root of the persistence directory by executing the following command. In order to append new user to the file, just omit the -c
argument. Only bcrypt and SHA encryption methods are supported, so use -B (very secure) or -s (insecure by today's standards) when adding/changing passwords.
htpasswd -B -c .htpasswd username
By default the server uses HTTP protocol. This is not very secure since with Basic Authentication, username and passwords will travel in cleartext in every request. In order to enable TLS support just add the --tls
argument and add a private and public key at the root of your persistence directory. You may also specify private and public keys by --tls-cert
and --tls-key
.
Signed certificate is required by the restic backend, but if you just want to test the feature you can generate unsigned keys with the following commands:
openssl genrsa -out private_key 2048
openssl req -new -x509 -key private_key -out public_key -days 365
The --append-only
mode allows creation of new backups but prevents deletion and modification of existing backups. This can be useful when backing up systems that have a potential of being hacked.
To prevent your users from accessing each others' repositories, you may use the --private-repos
flag which grants access only when a subdirectory with the same name as the user is specified in the repository URL. For example, user "foo" using the repository URLs rest:https://foo:pass@host:8000/foo
, rest:https://foo:pass@host:8000/foo/
or rest:https://foo:pass@host:8000/foo/bar
would be granted access, but the same user using repository URLs rest:https://foo:pass@host:8000/
or rest:https://foo:pass@host:8000/foobar/
would be denied access.
Rest Server uses exactly the same directory structure as local backend, so you should be able to access it both locally and via HTTP, even simultaneously.
There's an example systemd service file included with the source, so you can get Rest Server up & running as a proper Systemd service in no time. Before installing, adapt paths and options to your environment.
By default, image uses authentication. To turn it off, set environment variable DISABLE_AUTHENTICATION
to any value.
Persistent data volume is located to /data
.
docker run -p 8000:8000 -v /my/data:/data --name rest_server restic/rest-server
It's suggested to set a container name to more easily manage users (see next section).
You can set environment variable OPTIONS
to any extra flags you'd like to pass to rest-server.
docker exec -it rest_server create_user myuser
or
docker exec -it rest_server create_user myuser mypassword
docker exec -it rest_server delete_user myuser
The server can be started with --prometheus
to expose Prometheus metrics at /metrics
.
This repository contains an example full stack Docker Compose setup with a Grafana dashboard in examples/compose-with-grafana/.
Compared to the SFTP backend, the REST backend has better performance, especially so if you can skip additional crypto overhead by using plain HTTP transport (restic already properly encrypts all data it sends, so using HTTPS is mostly about authentication).
But, even if you use HTTPS transport, the REST protocol should be faster and more scalable, due to some inefficiencies of the SFTP protocol (everything needs to be transferred in chunks of 32 KiB at most, each packet needs to be acknowledged by the server).
Finally, the Rest Server implementation is really simple and as such could be used on the low-end devices, no problem. Also, in some cases, for example behind corporate firewalls, HTTP/S might be the only protocol allowed. Here too REST backend might be the perfect option for your backup needs.
Contributors are welcome, just open a new issue / pull request.
The BSD 2-Clause License
Copyright © 2015, Bertil Chapuis
Copyright © 2016, Zlatko Čalušić, Alexander Neumann
Copyright © 2017, The Rest Server Authors
All rights reserved.
Redistribution and use in source and binary forms, with or without
modification, are permitted provided that the following conditions are met:
* Redistributions of source code must retain the above copyright notice, this
list of conditions and the following disclaimer.
* Redistributions in binary form must reproduce the above copyright notice,
this list of conditions and the following disclaimer in the documentation
and/or other materials provided with the distribution.
THIS SOFTWARE IS PROVIDED BY THE COPYRIGHT HOLDERS AND CONTRIBUTORS "AS IS"
AND ANY EXPRESS OR IMPLIED WARRANTIES, INCLUDING, BUT NOT LIMITED TO, THE
IMPLIED WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTABILITY AND FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE ARE
DISCLAIMED. IN NO EVENT SHALL THE COPYRIGHT HOLDER OR CONTRIBUTORS BE LIABLE
FOR ANY DIRECT, INDIRECT, INCIDENTAL, SPECIAL, EXEMPLARY, OR CONSEQUENTIAL
DAMAGES (INCLUDING, BUT NOT LIMITED TO, PROCUREMENT OF SUBSTITUTE GOODS OR
SERVICES; LOSS OF USE, DATA, OR PROFITS; OR BUSINESS INTERRUPTION) HOWEVER
CAUSED AND ON ANY THEORY OF LIABILITY, WHETHER IN CONTRACT, STRICT LIABILITY,
OR TORT (INCLUDING NEGLIGENCE OR OTHERWISE) ARISING IN ANY WAY OUT OF THE USE
OF THIS SOFTWARE, EVEN IF ADVISED OF THE POSSIBILITY OF SUCH DAMAGE.