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# Borgend <a href="media/borgend.png"><img src="media/borgend.jpg" style="max-width: 100%" alt="Borgend screenshot"></a> Borgend is a retrying and queuing scheduler as well as a macOS tray icon for [Borg Backup][]. If you are not on macOS, no tray icon will be displayed, but you can still use Borgend as a scheduler. * Designed with laptops in mind, Borgend works in “dreamtime”: on macOS the scheduler discounts system sleep periods from the backup intervals. If you wish, you can also choose “realtime” scheduling. * You can have multiple backups to the same repository; for example, you may backup a small subset of your files every couple of hours, and everything once a day or once a week. Borgend will ensure that only one backup is launched at a time, and queue the other one until the repository is available. * If there was an error, such as when you are offline and backup to a remote `ssh` location, Borgend will also retry the backup at set shorter intervals. The lead author is Tuomo Valkonen (<tuomov@iki.fi>). [Borg Backup]: https://www.borgbackup.org/ ## Installation Borgend naturally requires [Borg Backup][] to be installed as well as a working [Python 3](https://www.python.org/) installation. Install both according to the instructions for your operating system. With this done, located in the top-level directory of the borgend source tree, you can install borgend pip3 install . This will also install some additional Python libraries ([keyring](https://pypi.python.org/pypi/keyring), [pyyaml](http://pyyaml.org/), [rumps](https://github.com/jaredks/rumps), and, if not on MacOS, [xdg](https://pypi.python.org/pypi/xdg/3.0.0)). Now you can start borgend with borgend Before this, you will probably, however, want to create a configuration file as detailed below. A standalone application, explained below, can be more convenient for access to passwords from the system keyring. If you do not wish to install borgend and would rather run it in-place, use python3 -m borgend in the toplevel directory of the borgend source tree. ## Usage and configuration ### Configuration file See the included `config.example.yaml`, which shoud be relatively self-explanatory. The lists `common_parameters`, `create_parameters`, and `prune_parameters` are simply Borg command line key–value parameters, passed to it after expansion of environment variables. Edit the sample configuration file and copy it to its proper location. On macOS this should be `~/Library/Application Support/borgend/config.yaml`, and on other systems this will usually be `~/.config/borgend/config.yaml`. You can find out the actual location by launching Borgend from the command line with the `--help` option. ### Passphrases Passphrases are stored in the OS X Keychain (or whatever the `keyring` package supports on other systems). In the Borgend configuration file, you only configure the ‘account’ of the of the password using `keychain_account` keyword of each backup set. The ‘service’ of the password has to be `borg-backup`. To add a password into the keychain for the `myrepo` ‘account’, you may use: security add-generic-password -a myrepo -s borg-backup -w [PASSWORD] To permanently authenticate Borgend to use the keychain, and therefore not have to enter the keychain password every time Borgend is launched, it is useful to encapculate it into a macOS app. This can be done with [py2app](https://py2app.readthedocs.io/en/latest/install.html). To create a standalone app that you can launch at startup and give permanent permissions to the keychain, use python3 setup.py py2app The app hould be placed under `dist/`. Copy it to your `Applications` directory, and set it up to launch on login. Py2app is _flaky_ to say the least. If the positions of sunspots so dictate, the above command may not create a working standalone application. If this is the case, you may attempt to add the `-A` option to the command. It will then create a non-standalone application. While not easily transferrable between different machines, it will still help with keychain permissions.