this post was submitted on 01 Aug 2024
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It's fairly obvious why stopping a service while backing it up makes sense. Imagine backing up Immich while it's running. You start the backup, db is backed up, now image assets are being copied. That could take an hour. While the assets are being backed up, a new image is uploaded. The live database knows about it but the one you've backed up doesn't. Then your backup process reaches the new image asset and it copies it. If you restore this backup, Immich will contain an asset that isn't known by the database. In order to avoid scenarios like this, you'd stop Immich while the backup is running.

Now consider a system that can do instant snapshots like ZFS or LVM. Immich is running, you stop it, take a snapshot, then restart it. Then you backup Immich from the snapshot while Immich is running. This should reduce the downtime needed to the time it takes to do the snapshot. The state of Immich data in the snapshot should be equivalent to backing up a stopped Immich instance.

Now consider a case like above without stopping Immich while taking the snapshot. In theory the data you're backing up should represent the complete state of Immich at a point in time eliminating the possibility of divergent data between databases and assets. It would however represent the state of a live Immich instance. E.g. lock files, etc. Wouldn't restoring from such a backup be equivalent to kill -9 or pulling the cable and restarting the service? If a service can recover from a cable pull, is it reasonable to consider it should recover from restoring from a snapshot taken while live? If so, is there much point to stopping services during snapshots?

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[–] ptz@dubvee.org 3 points 3 months ago* (last edited 3 months ago) (7 children)

Wouldn't restoring from such a backup be equivalent to kill -9 or pulling the cable and restarting the service?

Disclaimer: Not familiar with Immich, but this is what I've experienced generally.

AFAIK, effectively yes. The only thing you might lose is anything in memory that hasn't been written to disk at the time the snapshot was taken (which is still effectively equivalent to kill -9).

At work, we use Veeam which is snapshot based, and database server restores (or spinning up a test DB based off of production) work just fine. That said, we still take scheduled dumps/backups of the database servers just to have known-good states to roll back to if ever the need arises.

[–] avidamoeba@lemmy.ca 2 points 3 months ago* (last edited 3 months ago) (4 children)

Thanks for validating my reasoning. And yeah, this isn't Immich-specific, it would be valid for any process and its data.

[–] BCsven@lemmy.ca 2 points 3 months ago (1 children)

What i have seen for corporate server is when backup is started the database goes into a different mode, and a temp writable partition is used while readonly database is backed up, at end of backup that blob created is also stored.

[–] avidamoeba@lemmy.ca 1 points 3 months ago* (last edited 3 months ago) (1 children)

Yeah if you're making a backup using the database system itself, then it would make sense for it do something like that if it stays live while backing up. If you think about it, it's kinda similar to taking a snapshot of the volume where an app's data files are while it still runs. It keeps writing as normally while you copy the data from the snapshot, which is read-only. Of course there's no built-in way to get the newly written data without stopping the process. But you could get the downtime to a small number. 😄

[–] gedhrel@lemmy.world 2 points 3 months ago (1 children)

The other thing to watch out for is if you're splitting state between volumes, but i think you've already ruled that out.

[–] avidamoeba@lemmy.ca 1 points 3 months ago* (last edited 3 months ago)

Oh yeah, that would be a disaster. If not handled correctly.

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