Mirror Your Web Site With rsync

This tutorial shows how you can mirror your web site from your main web server to a backup server that can take over if the main server fails. We use the tool rsync for this, and we make it run through a cron job that checks every x minutes if there is something to update on the mirror. Thus your backup server should usually be up to date if it has to take over.

rsync updates only files that have changed, so you do not need to transfer 5 GB of data whenever you run rsync. It only mirrors new/changed files, and it can also delete files from the mirror that have been deleted on the main server. In addition to that it can preserve permissions and ownerships of mirrored files and directories; to preserve the ownerships, we need to run rsync as root which is what we do here. If permissions and/or ownerships change on the main server, rsync will also change them on the backup server.

In this tutorial we will tunnel rsync through SSH which is more secure; it also means you do not have to open another port in your firewall for rsync - it is enough if port 22 (SSH) is open. The problem is that SSH requires a password for logging in which is not good if you want to run rsync as a cron job. The need for a password requires human interaction which is not what we want.

But fortunately there is a solution: the use of public keys. We create a pair of keys (on our backup server mirror.example.com), one of which is saved in a file on the remote system (server1.example.com). Afterwards we will not be prompted for a password anymore when we run rsync. This also includes cron jobs which is exactly what we want.

As you might have guessed already from what I have written so far, the concept is that we initiate the mirroring of server1.example.com directly from mirror.example.com; server1.example.com does not have to do anything to get mirrored.

I will use the following setup here:

Main server: server1.example.com ( server1 ) - IP address: 192.168.0.100

( ) - IP address: Mirror/backup server: mirror.example.com ( mirror ) - IP address: 192.168.0.175

( ) - IP address: The web site that is to be mirrored is in /var/www on server1.example.com.

rsync is for mirroring files and directories only; if you want to mirror your MySQL database, then use MySQL mirroring/replication instead.

I want to say first that this is not the only way of setting up such a system. There are many ways of achieving this goal but this is the way I take.

1 Install rsync

First, we have to install rsync on both server1.example.com and mirror.example.com. For Debian and Ubuntu systems, this looks like this:

server1/mirror:

(We do this as root!)

apt-get install rsync

On other Linux distributions, you would use yum (Fedora/CentOS) or yast (SuSE) to install rsync.

2 Create An Unprivileged User On server1.example.com

Now we create an unprivileged user called someuser on server1.example.com that will be used by rsync on mirror.example.com to mirror the directory /var/www (of course, someuser must have read permissions on /var/www on server1.example.com).

server1:

(We do this as root!)

useradd -d /home/someuser -m -s /bin/bash someuser

This will create the user someuser with the home directory /home/someuser and the login shell /bin/bash (it is important that someuser has a valid login shell - something like /bin/false does not work!). Now give someuser a password:

passwd someuser

3 Test rsync

Next, we test rsync on mirror.example.com. As root we do this:

mirror:

You should see something like this. Answer with yes:

The authenticity of host 'server1.example.com (192.168.0.100)' can't be established.

RSA key fingerprint is 32:e5:79:8e:5f:5a:25:a9:f1:0d:ef:be:5b:a6:a6:23.

Are you sure you want to continue connecting (yes/no)?

<-- yes

Then enter someuser's password, and you should see that server1.example.com's /var/www directory is mirrored to /var/www on mirror.example.com.Advertisement

You can check that like this on both servers:

server1/mirror:

ls -la /var/www

You should see that all files and directories have been mirrored to mirror.example.com, and the files and directories should have the same permissions/ownerships as on server1.example.com.

4 Create The Keys On mirror.example.com

Now we create the private/public key pair on mirror.example.com:

mirror:Advertisement

(We do this as root!)

mkdir /root/rsync

ssh-keygen -t dsa -b 1024 -f /root/rsync/mirror-rsync-key

You will see something like this:

Generating public/private dsa key pair.

Enter passphrase (empty for no passphrase): [press enter here]

Enter same passphrase again: [press enter here]

Your identification has been saved in /root/cron/mirror-rsync-key.

Your public key has been saved in /root/cron/mirror-rsync-key.pub.

The key fingerprint is:

68:95:35:44:91:f1:45:a4:af:3f:69:2a:ea:c5:4e:d7 [email protected]

It is important that you do not enter a passphrase otherwise the mirroring will not work without human interaction so simply hit enter!

Next, we copy our public key to server1.example.com:

mirror:

(Still, we do this as root.)

The public key mirror-rsync-key.pub should now be available in /home/someuser on server1.example.com.

5 Configure server1.example.com

Now log in through SSH on server1.example.com as someuser (not root!) and do this:

server1:

(Please do this as someuser!)Advertisement

mkdir ~/.ssh

chmod 700 ~/.ssh

mv ~/mirror-rsync-key.pub ~/.ssh/

cd ~/.ssh

touch authorized_keys

chmod 600 authorized_keys

cat mirror-rsync-key.pub >> authorized_keys

By doing this, we have appended the contents of mirror-rsync-key.pub to the file /home/someuser/.ssh/authorized_keys. /home/someuser/.ssh/authorized_keys should look similar to this:

server1:

(Still as someuser!)

vi /home/someuser/.ssh/authorized_keys

Now we want to allow connections only from mirror.example.com, and the connecting user should be allowed to use only rsync, so we add

command="/home/someuser/rsync/checkrsync",from="mirror.example.com",no-port-forwarding,no-X11-forwarding,no-pty

right at the beginning of /home/someuser/.ssh/authorized_keys:

server1:

(Still as someuser!)

vi /home/someuser/.ssh/authorized_keys

It is important that you use a FQDN like mirror.example.com instead of an IP address after from=, otherwise the automated mirroring will not work!

Now we create the script /home/someuser/rsync/checkrsync that rejects all commands except rsync.

server1:

(We still do this as someuser!)

mkdir ~/rsync

vi ~/rsync/checkrsync

#!/bin/sh



case "$SSH_ORIGINAL_COMMAND" in

*\&*)

echo "Rejected"

;;

*\(*)

echo "Rejected"

;;

*\{*)

echo "Rejected"

;;

*\;*)

echo "Rejected"

;;

*\<*)

echo "Rejected"

;;

*\`*)

echo "Rejected"

;;

rsync\ --server*)

$SSH_ORIGINAL_COMMAND

;;

*)

echo "Rejected"

;;

esac

chmod 700 ~/rsync/checkrsync

6 Test rsync On mirror.example.com

Now we must test on mirror.example.com if we can mirror server1.example.com without being prompted for someuser's password. We do this:

mirror:

(We do this as root!)

(The --delete option means that files that have been deleted on server1.example.com should also be deleted on mirror.example.com. The --exclude option means that these files/directories should not be mirrored; e.g. --exclude=**/error means "do not mirror /var/www/error". You can use multiple --exclude options. I have listed these options as examples; you can adjust the command to your needs. Have a look at

man rsync

for more information.)

You should now see that the mirroring takes place:

receiving file list ... done



sent 71 bytes received 643 bytes 476.00 bytes/sec

total size is 64657 speedup is 90.56

without being prompted for a password! This is what we wanted.

7 Create A Cron Job

We want to automate the mirroring, that is why we create a cron job for it on mirror.example.com. Run crontab -e as root:

mirror:

(We do this as root!)

crontab -e

and create a cron job like this:Advertisement

This would run rsync every 5 minutes; adjust it to your needs (see

man 5 crontab

). I use the full path to rsync here (/usr/bin/rsync) just to go sure that cron knows where to find rsync. Your rsync location might differ. Run

mirror:

(We do this as root!)

which rsync

to find out where yours is.