Provided by: borgbackup2_2.0.0b8-2build2_amd64 bug

NAME

       borg-serve - Start in server mode. This command is usually not used manually.

SYNOPSIS

       borg [common options] serve [options]

DESCRIPTION

       This command starts a repository server process.

       borg serve can currently support:

       • Getting automatically started via ssh when the borg client uses a ssh://...  remote repository. In this
         mode, borg serve will live until that ssh connection gets terminated.

       • Getting started by some other means (not by the borg client) as a long-running socket server to be used
         for borg clients using a socket://... repository (see the --socket option if you do not want to use the
         default path for the socket and pid file).

OPTIONS

       See borg-common(1) for common options of Borg commands.

   options
       --restrict-to-path PATH
              restrict  repository access to PATH. Can be specified multiple times to allow the client access to
              several directories. Access to all sub-directories is granted implicitly;  PATH  doesn't  need  to
              point directly to a repository.

       --restrict-to-repository PATH
              restrict  repository  access.  Only  the  repository  located  at  PATH  (no  sub-directories  are
              considered) is accessible. Can be specified multiple times to allow the client access  to  several
              repositories.  Unlike  --restrict-to-path  sub-directories are not accessible; PATH needs to point
              directly at a repository location. PATH may be an empty directory or the last element of PATH  may
              not exist, in which case the client may initialize a repository there.

       --append-only
              only  allow  appending  to  repository  segment  files.  Note that this only affects the low level
              structure  of  the  repository,  and  running  delete  or  prune  will  still  be   allowed.   See
              append_only_mode in Additional Notes for more details.

       --storage-quota QUOTA
              Override  storage  quota  of the repository (e.g. 5G, 1.5T). When a new repository is initialized,
              sets the storage quota on the new repository as well. Default: no quota.

EXAMPLES

       borg serve has special support for ssh forced  commands  (see  authorized_keys  example  below):  if  the
       environment  variable  SSH_ORIGINAL_COMMAND  is set it will ignore some options given on the command line
       and use the values from the variable instead. This only applies to a carefully  controlled  allowlist  of
       safe options. This list currently contains:

       • Options  that  control  the  log  level  and  debug  topics printed such as --verbose, --info, --debug,
         --debug-topic, etc.

       • --lock-wait to allow the client to control how long to wait before giving up and aborting the operation
         when another process is holding a lock.

       Environment variables (such as BORG_XXX) contained in the original command sent by  the  client  are  not
       interpreted,  but  ignored.  If BORG_XXX environment variables should be set on the borg serve side, then
       these must be set in system-specific locations like /etc/environment or  in  the  forced  command  itself
       (example below).

          # Allow an SSH keypair to run only borg, and only have access to /path/to/repo.
          # Use key options to disable unneeded and potentially dangerous SSH functionality.
          # This will help to secure an automated remote backup system.
          $ cat ~/.ssh/authorized_keys
          command="borg serve --restrict-to-path /path/to/repo",restrict ssh-rsa AAAAB3[...]

          # Set a BORG_XXX environment variable on the "borg serve" side
          $ cat ~/.ssh/authorized_keys
          command="export BORG_XXX=value; borg serve [...]",restrict ssh-rsa [...]

       NOTE:
          The  examples  above use the restrict directive. This does automatically block potential dangerous ssh
          features, even when they are added in a future update. Thus, this option should be preferred.

          If you're using openssh-server < 7.2, however, you have to specify  explicitly  the  ssh  features  to
          restrict  and cannot simply use the restrict option as it has been introduced in v7.2. We recommend to
          use no-port-forwarding,no-X11-forwarding,no-pty,no-agent-forwarding,no-user-rc in this case.

       Details about sshd usage: sshd(8)

   SSH Configuration
       borg serve's pipes (stdin/stdout/stderr) are connected to the sshd process on the  server  side.  In  the
       event  that the SSH connection between borg serve and the client is disconnected or stuck abnormally (for
       example, due to a network outage), it can take a long time for sshd to notice the client is disconnected.
       In the meantime, sshd continues running, and as a result so does the borg serve process holding the  lock
       on  the  repository.  This can cause subsequent borg operations on the remote repository to fail with the
       error: Failed to create/acquire the lock.

       In order to avoid this, it is recommended to perform the following additional SSH configuration:

       Either in the client side's ~/.ssh/config file, or in the client's /etc/ssh/ssh_config file:

          Host backupserver
                  ServerAliveInterval 10
                  ServerAliveCountMax 30

       Replacing backupserver with the hostname, FQDN or IP address of the borg server.

       This will cause the client to send a keepalive  to  the  server  every  10  seconds.  If  30  consecutive
       keepalives  are  sent  without  a  response  (a  time  of  300  seconds),  the ssh client process will be
       terminated, causing the borg process to terminate gracefully.

       On the server side's sshd configuration file (typically /etc/ssh/sshd_config):

          ClientAliveInterval 10
          ClientAliveCountMax 30

       This will cause the server to send a keep alive to  the  client  every  10  seconds.  If  30  consecutive
       keepalives  are  sent  without  a  response  (a  time  of 300 seconds), the server's sshd process will be
       terminated, causing the borg  serve  process  to  terminate  gracefully  and  release  the  lock  on  the
       repository.

       If  you  then  run  borg  commands  with  --lock-wait  600, this gives sufficient time for the borg serve
       processes to terminate after the SSH connection is torn down after the 300 second wait for the keepalives
       to fail.

       You may, of course, modify the timeout values demonstrated above to values that suit your environment and
       use case.

SEE ALSO

       borg-common(1)

AUTHOR

       The Borg Collective

                                                   2024-04-01                                      BORG-SERVE(1)