1.8 KiB
Hooks
If you want to perform some commands before and/or after a backup, you can use hooks.
They consist of a list of commands that will be executed in the same directory as the target from
.
The following hooks groups are supported, none are required:
before
after
failure
success
locations:
my-location:
from: /data
to: my-backend
hooks:
before:
- echo "One"
- echo "Two"
- echo "Three"
after:
- echo "Byte"
failure:
- echo "Something went wrong"
success:
- echo "Well done!"
Flowchart
before
hook- Run backup
after
hook-
success
hook if no errors were foundfailure
hook if at least one error was encountered
If the before
hook encounters errors the backup and after
hooks will be skipped and only the failed
hooks will run.
Environment variables
All hooks are exposed to the AUTORESTIC_LOCATION
environment variable, which contains the location name.
The after
and success
hooks have access to additional information with the following syntax:
AUTORESTIC_[TYPE]_[I]
AUTORESTIC_[TYPE]_[BACKEND_NAME]
Every type of metadata is appended with both the name of the backend associated with and the number in which the backends where executed.
Available Metadata Types
SNAPSHOT_ID
PARENT_SNAPSHOT_ID
FILES_ADDED
FILES_CHANGED
FILES_UNMODIFIED
DIRS_ADDED
DIRS_CHANGED
DIRS_UNMODIFIED
ADDED_SIZE
PROCESSED_FILES
PROCESSED_SIZE
PROCESSED_DURATION
Example
Assuming you have a location bar
that backs up to a single backend named foo
you could expect the following env variables:
AUTORESTIC_LOCATION=bar
AUTORESTIC_FILES_ADDED_0=42
AUTORESTIC_FILES_ADDED_FOO=42
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