Manage a Backup Schedule

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You can create schedules in CockroachDB for periodic backups. Once a backup schedule is created, you can do the following:

Supported products

The feature described on this page is available in CockroachDB Dedicated, CockroachDB Serverless, and CockroachDB Self-Hosted clusters when you are running customer-owned backups. For a full list of features, refer to Backup and restore product support.

Considerations

Scheduled backups ensure that the data to be backed up is protected from garbage collection until it has been successfully backed up. This active management of protected timestamps means that you can run scheduled backups at a cadence independent from the GC TTL of the data. This is unlike non-scheduled backups that are tightly coupled to the GC TTL. See Garbage collection and backups for more detail.

The data being backed up will not be eligible for garbage collection until a successful backup completes. At this point, the schedule will release the existing protected timestamp record and write a new one to protect data for the next backup that is scheduled to run. It is important to consider that when a scheduled backup fails there will be an accumulation of data until the next successful backup. Resolving the backup failure or dropping the backup schedule will make the data eligible for garbage collection once again.

You can also use the exclude_data_from_backup option with a scheduled backup as a way to prevent protected timestamps from prolonging garbage collection on a table. See the example Exclude a table's data from backups for usage information.

Create a new backup schedule

To create a new backup schedule, use the CREATE SCHEDULE FOR BACKUP statement. For example:

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> CREATE SCHEDULE schedule_label
  FOR BACKUP INTO 's3://test/backups/test_schedule_1?AWS_ACCESS_KEY_ID={KEY ID}&AWS_SECRET_ACCESS_KEY={SECRET ACCESS KEY}'
    WITH revision_history
    RECURRING '@daily'
    WITH SCHEDULE OPTIONS first_run = 'now';

In this example, a schedule labeled schedule_label is created to take daily (incremental) backups with revision history in AWS S3, with the first backup being taken now. A second schedule for weekly full backups is also created by default. Both schedules have the same label (i.e., schedule_label).

For more information about the different options available when creating a backup schedule, see CREATE SCHEDULE FOR BACKUP.

Note:

Further guidance on connecting to Amazon S3, Google Cloud Storage, Azure Storage, and other storage options is outlined in Use Cloud Storage.

Set up monitoring for the backup schedule

We recommend that you monitor your backup schedule with Prometheus, and alert when there are anomalies such as backups that have failed or no backups succeeding over a certain amount of time—at which point, you can inspect schedules by running SHOW SCHEDULES.

Metrics for scheduled backups fall into two categories:

  • Backup schedule-specific metrics, aggregated across all schedules:

    • schedules.BACKUP.started: The total number of backups started by a schedule.
    • schedules.BACKUP.succeeded: The number of backups started by a schedule that succeeded.
    • schedules.BACKUP.failed: The number of backups started by a schedule that failed.

      When schedules.BACKUP.failed increments, run SHOW SCHEDULES to check which schedule is affected and to inspect the error in the status column. If a backup job encounters too many retryable errors, it will enter a failed state with the most recent error, which allows subsequent backups the chance to succeed. Refer to the Backup and Restore Monitoring page for metrics to track backup failures.

    • schedules.BACKUP.protected_age_sec: The age of the oldest protected timestamp record protected by backup schedules.

    • schedules.BACKUP.protected_record_count: The number of protected timestamp records held by backup schedules.

  • Scheduler-specific metrics:

    • schedules.round.reschedule-wait: The number of schedules that were rescheduled due to a currently running job. A value greater than 0 indicates that a previous backup was still running when a new scheduled backup was supposed to start. This corresponds to the on_previous_running=wait schedule option.
    • schedules.round.reschedule-skip: The number of schedules that were skipped due to a currently running job. A value greater than 0 indicates that a previous backup was still running when a new scheduled backup was supposed to start. This corresponds to the on_previous_running=skip schedule option.
Note:

schedules.round.reschedule-wait and schedules.round.reschedule-skip are gauge metrics and can be graphed. A continual positive value for either of these metrics may indicate a misconfigured backup cadence, and you should consider adjusting the cadence to avoid waiting for or skipping the next backup.

For a tutorial on how to use Prometheus to set up monitoring and alerting, see Monitor CockroachDB with Prometheus.

View scheduled backup details

When a backup is created by a schedule, it is stored within a collection of backups in the given location. To view details for a backup created by a schedule, you can use the following:

For more details, see SHOW BACKUP.

View and control the backup schedule

Once a backup schedule is successfully created, you can view the schedule, pause the schedule, resume the schedule, or drop the schedule.

View the schedule

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> SHOW SCHEDULES FOR BACKUP;

For more information, see SHOW SCHEDULES.

Pause the schedule

To pause a schedule, you can either specify the schedule's id:

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> PAUSE SCHEDULE 589963390487363585;

Or nest a SELECT clause that retrieves id(s) inside the PAUSE SCHEDULES statement:

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> PAUSE SCHEDULES WITH x AS (SHOW SCHEDULES) SELECT id FROM x WHERE label = 'schedule_database';

For more information, see PAUSE SCHEDULES.

Resume the schedule

To resume a paused schedule, you can either specify the schedule's id:

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> RESUME SCHEDULE 589963390487363585;

Or nest a SELECT clause that retrieves id(s) inside the RESUME SCHEDULES statement:

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> RESUME SCHEDULES WITH x AS (SHOW SCHEDULES) SELECT id FROM x WHERE label = 'schedule_database';

For more information, see RESUME SCHEDULES.

Drop the schedule

To drop a schedule, you can either specify the schedule's id:

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> DROP SCHEDULE 589963390487363585;

Or nest a SELECT clause that retrieves id(s) inside the DROP SCHEDULES statement:

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> DROP SCHEDULES WITH x AS (SHOW SCHEDULES) SELECT id FROM x WHERE label = 'schedule_database';

When DROP SCHEDULES removes a full backup schedule, it removes the associated incremental backup schedule, if it exists. For more information, see DROP SCHEDULES.

Warning:

DROP SCHEDULE does not cancel any in-progress jobs started by the schedule. Before you drop a schedule, cancel any in-progress jobs first, as you will not be able to look up the job ID once the schedule is dropped.

View and control a backup initiated by a schedule

After CockroachDB successfully initiates a scheduled backup, it registers the backup as a job. You can view, pause, resume, or cancel each individual backup job.

View the backup job

To view jobs for a specific backup schedule, use the schedule's id:

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> SHOW JOBS FOR SCHEDULE 590204387299262465;
        job_id       | job_type |                                                                                                             description                                                                                   | statement | user_name | status  | running_status |             created              | started | finished |             modified             | fraction_completed | error | coordinator_id
---------------------+----------+-----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------+-----------+-----------+---------+----------------+----------------------------------+---------+----------+----------------------------------+--------------------+-------+-----------------
  590205481558802434 | BACKUP   | BACKUP INTO '/2020/09/15-161444.99' IN 's3://test/scheduled-backup-0915?AWS_ACCESS_KEY_ID=x&AWS_SECRET_ACCESS_KEY=redacted' AS OF SYSTEM TIME '2020-09-15 16:20:00+00:00' WITH revision_history, detached |           | root      | running | NULL           | 2020-09-15 16:20:18.347383+00:00 | NULL    | NULL     | 2020-09-15 16:20:18.347383+00:00 |                  0 |       |              0
(1 row)

You can also view multiple schedules by nesting a SELECT clause that retrieves id(s) inside the SHOW JOBS statement:

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> SHOW JOBS FOR SCHEDULES WITH x AS (SHOW SCHEDULES) SELECT id FROM x WHERE label = 'test_schedule';
        job_id       | job_type |                                                                                                                 description                                                                                      | statement | user_name |  status   | running_status |             created              | started |             finished             |             modified             | fraction_completed | error | coordinator_id
---------------------+----------+------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------+-----------+-----------+-----------+----------------+----------------------------------+---------+----------------------------------+----------------------------------+--------------------+-------+-----------------
  590204496007299074 | BACKUP   | BACKUP INTO '/2020/09/15-161444.99' IN 's3://test/scheduled-backup-0915?AWS_ACCESS_KEY_ID=x&AWS_SECRET_ACCESS_KEY=redacted' AS OF SYSTEM TIME '2020-09-15 16:14:44.991631+00:00' WITH revision_history, detached |           | root      | succeeded | NULL           | 2020-09-15 16:15:17.720725+00:00 | NULL    | 2020-09-15 16:15:20.913789+00:00 | 2020-09-15 16:15:20.910594+00:00 |                  1 |       |              0
  590205481558802434 | BACKUP   | BACKUP INTO '/2020/09/15-161444.99' IN 's3://test/scheduled-backup-0915?AWS_ACCESS_KEY_ID=x&AWS_SECRET_ACCESS_KEY=redacted' AS OF SYSTEM TIME '2020-09-15 16:20:00+00:00' WITH revision_history, detached        |           | root      | succeeded | NULL           | 2020-09-15 16:20:18.347383+00:00 | NULL    | 2020-09-15 16:20:48.37873+00:00  | 2020-09-15 16:20:48.374256+00:00 |                  1 |       |              0
(2 rows)

For more information, see SHOW JOBS.

Pause the backup job

To pause jobs for a specific backup schedule, use the schedule's id:

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> PAUSE JOBS FOR SCHEDULE 590204387299262465;
PAUSE JOBS FOR SCHEDULES 1

You can also pause multiple schedules by nesting a SELECT clause that retrieves id(s) inside the PAUSE JOBS statement:

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> PAUSE JOBS FOR SCHEDULES WITH x AS (SHOW SCHEDULES) SELECT id FROM x WHERE label = 'test_schedule';
PAUSE JOBS FOR SCHEDULES 2

For more information, see PAUSE JOB.

Resume the backup job

To resume jobs for a specific backup schedule, use the schedule's id:

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> RESUME JOBS FOR SCHEDULE 590204387299262465;
RESUME JOBS FOR SCHEDULES 1

You can also resume multiple schedules by nesting a SELECT clause that retrieves id(s) inside the PAUSE JOBS statement:

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> RESUME JOBS FOR SCHEDULES WITH x AS (SHOW SCHEDULES) SELECT id FROM x WHERE label = 'test_schedule';
RESUME JOBS FOR SCHEDULES 2

For more information, see RESUME JOB.

Cancel the backup job

To cancel jobs for a specific backup schedule, use the schedule's id:

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> CANCEL JOBS FOR SCHEDULE 590204387299262465;
CANCEL JOBS FOR SCHEDULES 1

You can also CANCEL multiple schedules by nesting a SELECT clause that retrieves id(s) inside the CANCEL JOBS statement:

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> CANCEL JOBS FOR SCHEDULES WITH x AS (SHOW SCHEDULES) SELECT id FROM x WHERE label = 'test_schedule';
CANCEL JOBS FOR SCHEDULES 2

For more information, see CANCEL JOB.

Restore from a scheduled backup

To restore from a scheduled backup, use the RESTORE statement:

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> RESTORE
    FROM '2020/08/19-035600.00' IN 's3://test/backups/test_schedule_1?AWS_ACCESS_KEY_ID={KEY ID}&AWS_SECRET_ACCESS_KEY={SECRET ACCESS KEY}'
    AS OF SYSTEM TIME '2020-08-19 03:50:00+00:00';

To view the backups stored within a collection, use the SHOW BACKUP statement.

See also


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