couchsnapshot

0.5.7 • Public • Published

couchsnapshot

couchsnapshot is a suite of command-line utilities that allow a CouchDB database to be backed up as a series of timestamped snapshots.

couchsnapshot

Each coloured stripe in the above diagram is a snapshot of changes in a single CouchDB database since the last snapshot. The snapshot set can be queried to extract:

  • the history of a single document of a known _id.
  • to extract the entire database up to a known timestamp (with a resolution of the snapshot timestamp).
  • to extract a subset of the database up to a known timestamp, using a selector to filter the recovered document list.

The couchsnapshot tooling doesn't have the ability to write data back to CouchDB, but it puts the data in a form that can be conusmed by tools that can e.g. couchimport.

Installation

Install on your machine (Node.js & npm required):

$ npm install -g couchsnapshot

Running snapshots

You run couchsnapshot to backup a database orders like so:

$ couchsnapshot --db orders
snapshotting orders [==============================] 100% 0.0s
Written snapshot with 20001 changes to orders_2019-10-09T13:20:45.107Z

Note: the URL of your CouchDB service is assumed to be in an environment variable COUCH_URL or the URL can be supplied with an additional --url <url> command-line option.

The data is transferred from the CouchDB database and stored locally in a folder e.g.

orders_2019-10-09T13:20:45.107Z

Later you run couchsnapshot again:

$ couchsnapshot --db orders
Resuming from last known sequence 20001
snapshotting orders [==============================] 100% 0.0s
Written snapshot with 0 changes to orders_2019-10-09T13:21:13.571Z

This time it only fetches the data that has changed since the last snapshot, storing data in a new folder.

orders_2019-10-09T13:21:13.571Z

You can repeat this as much as you like. Each snapshot will only contain the data that has changed since the last snapshot taken.

Recovering a lost document

If you accidentally delete a single document from CouchDB and want to retrieve its history from your snapshot archive, then run couchrecoverid supplying the name of the database and the id of the document to recover:

$ couchrecoverid --db orders --id 0000vEYK2zb89n1QMdnr1MQ5Ax0wMaUa

From backup taken on  2019-10-09T13:20:45.107Z

{"_id":"0000vEYK2zb89n1QMdnr1MQ5Ax0wMaUa","_rev":"1-42a99d13a33e46b1f37f4f937d167458","type":"order","customerEmail":"jessi.payne@yahoo.com","saleDate":"2019-07-14","saleTime":"09:19:04","paymentRef":"PayPal6550849282680302","currency":"XOF","basket":[{"productId":"A402","productName":"cheese toe pushing","productVariant":"honolulu gaps"},{"productId":"A199","productName":"tablets melissa debug","productVariant":"hazards eh"}],"total":1713.5765,"status":"paid","dispatched":true,"dispatchAddress":{"street":"1553 Bark Street","town":"Gosport","zip":"BB9 5WF"},"dispatchCourierRef":"RoyalMail7732058936313772"}

By default, couchrecoverid will return the entire history of a single document (or at least the history recorded in your snapshot archive), or you can elect to see only the newest revision with --latest true.

Recovering a whole database from a known timestamp

To recover an entire database up to a known timestamp simply run:

$ couchrecoverdb --db orders --timestamp 2019-10-08T10:43:53.569Z

where 2019-10-08T10:43:53.569Z is a valid timestamp from one of your snapshots. This snapshot and the preceeding ones will be used to recreate the data up until that point.

The data is sent to stdout and can redirected to a file with:

$ couchrecoverdb --db orders --timestamp 2019-10-08T10:43:53.569Z > restore.txt

Reference

Environment variables:

  • COUCH_URL - the URL of your CouchDB service e.g. http://user:pass@myhost.com
  • COUCH_DATABASE - the name of the database to work with e.g. orders

couchsnapshot

Takes a snapshot of database. If previous snapshots are found, it resumes from the last known location.

Parameters:

  • --url/-u - the URL of your CouchDB service
  • --database/--db/-d - the database to snapshot
  • --verbose/-v - output progress meter - default: true

e.g.

# snapshot a single CouchDB database
$ couchsnapshot --db cities
Resuming from last known sequence 23557
snapshotting cities [==============================] 100% 0.0s
Written snapshot with 2 changes to cities_2019-10-08T14:25:01.065Z

couchrecoverid

Retrieves a single document from the snapshot archive. Outputs to stdout.

  • --database/--db/-d - the database snapshot archive to inspect.
  • --id - the document id to recover.
  • --latest/-l - only retrieve one document revision (the newest one) - default: false.
  • --ignoredeletions/-i - if true, ignores documents that are deleted i.e. allows you to recover that latest undeleted revision of a document.
  • --verbose/-v - output progress meter - default: true

e.g.

# recover a single document by its id
$ couchrecoverid --database cities --id 125242 --latest true

From backup taken on  2019-10-08T13:25:56.541Z 

{"_id":"100425","_rev":"3-c296e253d9dd65cc04afd1ebd336d31b","name":"Yanbu","latitude":24.08912,"longitude":38.06376,"country":"SA","population":200161,"timezone":"Asia/Riyadh"}

couchrecoverdb

Retrieves an entire database from the snapshot archive. Outputs to stdout. The utility ensures that each document id is only written once.

  • --database/--db/-d - the database snapshot archive to inspect.
  • --timestamp/-t - the timestamp to recover to. (optional). If supplied only snapshots equal to and before the supplied timestamp will be used. Must exactly match an existing snapshot's timestamp.
  • --selector/-s - the Mango selector definining the sub-set of data to recover.
  • --ignoredeletions/-i - if true, ignores documents that are deleted i.e. allows you to recover that latest undeleted revision of each document.
  • --dedupe - de-duplicate output so that an _id only appears once - default true

e.g.

# recover a database to a text file from a known timestamp
$ couchrecoverdb --db cities --timestamp 2019-10-08T13:25:56.541Z > out.txt

or

# recover a database to a text file using all the snapshots
$ couchrecoverdb --db cities > out.txt

The file out.txt then contains one JSON document per line. This can be imported into CouchDB using the couchimport utility:

$ cat out.txt | couchimport --type jsonl --db cities2

Note: couchimport version 1.3.0 or above is required to import JSON documents including their revision token.

where cities2 is pre-existing, empty database.

To recover a sub-set of data, supply a --selector/-s parameter with a JSON Mango selector e.g.:

# recover only British cities
couchrecoverdb --db cities --selector '{"country":"GB"}' > britishcities.txt
# recover only cities with a population over 1m
couchrecoverdb --db cities --selector '{"population":{"$gt":1000000}}' > bigcities.txt

couchrollupdb

Rolls up a set of snapshots into one:

  • --database/--db/-d - the database snapshot archive to inspect.
  • --timestamp/-t - the timestamp to recover to. (optional). If supplied only snapshots equal to and before the supplied timestamp will be used. Must exactly match an existing snapshot's timestamp.

e.g.

# rollup the backups
$ couchrollupdb --db cities --timestamp 2019-10-08T13:25:56.541Z

or

# rollup the backups
$ couchrecoverdb --db cities > out.txt

Rolling up means deduping the data set so that there is only one copy of each non-deleted document. Many snapshots can be combined into one and the originals deleted.

How does it work?

The couchsnapshot utility simply takes a copy of the winning revisions of each document in a database by consuming a databases's changes feed. The data is stored in a local LevelDB database - one LevelDB database per snapshot, where each key/value pair represents a document. Additional data such as the last sequence number and timestamp is added to each database.

LevelDB was chosen because it is fast enough to keep up with the CouchDB changes feed and the data is compressed at rest making the snapshots nice and small. The LevelDB database is optimised for retrieval of documents by id, nothing else.

To recover a document by id, the LevelDB snapshot databases are interrogated in turn for a matching document (there may be several versions of the same document across the snapshots reflecting different document revisions over time). The snapshots are interrogated in newest-to-oldest order.

To recover an entire database, the snapshots are interrogated in reverse (so newest to oldest) outputing each document but taking care to ensure that each document only appears once. A temporary LevelDB database is used to keep track of document ids already processed.

Limitations

  • This tooling doesn't necessarily backup every revision of every document - revisions that occurred between snapshots are ignored.
  • Only winning revisions make it the snapshot archive. If a document is conflicted, non-winning revisions are ignored.
  • CouchDB attachments are not fetched. Only JSON document bodies.
  • Index data (such as MapReduce indexes) are not backed up, but the index definitions (stored in Design Documents) do make it to the snapshot archive.

It is not possible to "roll back" a CouchDB database to a point in time. This utility allows a new, empty database to be populated so that it looks like the snapshotted database did at the time it was snapshotted.

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