If I configure backups with OpsCenter will the agents continue to function, will the back up service still run, if OpsCenter goes down?
Or do I need to build redundancy/set up cron jobs to complete snap shots and incremental backups?
Backups will stop if you loose opscenterd. You may want to set up HA opscenter if you need guarantees that your backups will happen on opscenter downtime:
https://docs.datastax.com/en/opscenter/5.2/opsc/configure/configFailover.html
Note that Opscenter only provides node level snapshots and does not give you a cluster wide, consistent snapshot. This means, you may lose data if a Cassandra node goes down during a backup window. Any change in the cluster topology during the backup window may also result in some data loss. So you should be careful to schedule them appropriately.
If you need your backups to be resilient across Cassandra node failures and topology changes, you may want to checkout “DatosIO”.
There are a number of commercial and opensource solutions appearing in the market. Check out Priam and Talena if you interested in Cassandra backup. They provide the capabilities you are referring to.
Related
Since my Cassandra cluster is replicated across three availability zones, I would like to backup only one availability zone to lower the backup costs. I have also experimented restoring nodes in a single availability zone and got back most of my data in a test environment. I would like to know if there are any drawbacks to this approach before deploying this solution in production. Is anyone following this approach in your production clusters?
Note: As I backup at regular intervals, I know that I may loose updates happened to other two AZ nodes quorum at the time of snapshot but that's not a problem.
You can backup only specific dc, or even nodes.
AFAIK, the only drawback is does your data consistent/up-to-date, and since you can afford to lose some data it shouldn't be a problem. And if you, for example performing writes with ALL consistency level, the data should be up-to-date on all nodes.
BUT, you must be sure that your data is indeed replicated between multi a-z, by playing with rack/dc properties or using ec2 switch that supports multi a-z.
EDIT:
Global Snapshot
Running nodetool snapshot is only run on a single node at a time.
This only creates a partial backup of your entire data. You will want
to run nodetool snapshot on all of the nodes in your cluster. But
it’s best to run them at the exact same time, so that you don’t have
fragmented data from a time perspective. You can do this a couple of
different ways. The first, is to use a parallel ssh program to
execute the nodetool snapshot command at the same time. The second,
is to create a cron job on each of the nodes to run at the same time.
The second assumes that your nodes have clocks that are in sync, which
Cassandra relies on as well.
Link to the page:
http://datascale.io/backing-up-cassandra-data/
Offsite backups for Cassandra seem like a challenging thing. You basically have to make yet another copy of ALL your data, including the copies of data that exist due to the replication factor. Snapshots make backups easy when you don't mind storing it on the same disk that your node already uses. I'm curious - in the event of a catastrophic failure of this disk, is it possible to recover the node using the nodes that the data was replicated to?
Yes, you can restore data on crashed node using a procedure in documentation - Replacing a dead node or dead seed node. It's for Cassandra 3.x, please pick your Cassandra version from a drop-down menu on the top of the page.
But please note that you still need to do backups if your data is valuable. If you using AWS you can use this project to backup Cassandra to S3 storage.
If you are looking for offsite or off-host backups, you can also look at opscenter from Datastax or Talena software (my company). Both provide you the ability to backup your database locally or to S3. As you may expect, you also have the ability to restore data in case of hardware failures, user errors or logical corruptions which the replicas will not protect you against.
Yes, it is possible. Just execute in terminal "nodetool repair" on the node with missed data. It can take a lot of time. Also I would recommend execute repair operation on each node every month to keep your data always replicated because cassandra does not repairs data automatically (for example after node(s) falling).
We have set up a backup/restore procedure for our Cassandra production environment via snapshots. The snapshot files, schema and token ring information are copied to S3.
The production cluster is a 3-node-cluster with a replication factor of 3.
For development and test, I would like to restore the snapshots from production into separated clusters. To save money and to keep maintenance easy, it would be nice to restore only the snapshot from one production node. Since we are using a replication factor of 3 in a 3-node-cluster, each snapshot should have all rows. Consistency is also not important for our use-case.
Is it possible (and how) to restore only a single snapshot?
All of your data should exist on all 3 nodes so copying the sstables from any 1 node to your test cluster should be sufficient. Making sure theres a recent repair beforehand may be good idea if worried about consistency.
First create the same schema on the test cluster. Then you can simply take a snapshot with nodetool snapshot -t cloneme. Once complete, copy all the sstables from the folder that is created (cloneme) into the equivalent tables folder on your test cluster. Then run nodetool refresh.
It gets much more complicated if you have a different topology (more nodes, different RF) but since your going with "every node has all the data" its pretty trivial.
Worth mentioning that OpsCenter has a feature to automate the copying of a backup to other clusters.
I have read about Cassandra backup & recovery here, and have a few questions:
Do the native Cassandra CLI commands suffice? I see a lot of people writing scripts and custom-making their own solutions.
What other tools out there would you recommend for Cassandra backup and recovery? I am looking for something that can help me manage the backup images (e.g. with point-in-time)
Do I need to invest significantly more into storage if I opt to backup my Cassandra tables?
Any insights would be appreciated.
Please try to limit your questions to one actual question.
Do the native Cassandra CLI commands suffice?
I assume that you mean nodetool snapshot, so for the most-part, "yes." In addition, many users choose to also enable incremental backups. With a combination of using snapshots and incremental backups (from the linked doc) "provides a dependable, up-to-date backup mechanism."
I see a lot of people writing scripts and custom-making their own solutions.
I have a backup script that runs on my nodes nightly. There are two reasons for this.
I don't want to have to manually take a snapshot for each keyspace every week, so I have the script do it.
Snapshot and incremental backup files don't remove themselves, so I have the script do that after a certain time threshold.
What other tools out there would you recommend for Cassandra backup and recovery?
DataStax OpsCenter allows you to schedule backups, but I believe that is only a valid option in the Enterprise edition. You could also look at Netflix's Cassandra backup/recovery tool called Priam. There's also a company called Talena which claims to provide an extensive enterprise-grade backup solution for Cassandra (I don't know anyone who uses them, but they hit me with a marketing email recently so I thought I'd mention it).
Do I need to invest significantly more into storage if I opt to backup my Cassandra tables?
Incremental backups and snapshots can take up a great deal of space if you don't stay on top of them (deleting and/or archiving them). I would try them both out, and keep an eye on your disk usage while you do. If your business requirements have a statement on terms of service (how far back you would need to be able to restore to), you should be able to figure out how many days-worth of backups it makes sense for you to keep around. That should tell you whether or not you need more disk to fulfill those obligations.
Edit 20181205
Do you run nodetool snapshot on each node? What would be the approach if there are three nodes with 100% replication.
Typically yes, nodetool snapshot needs to be run on each node. This helps to ensure backup coverage, as not all of the nodes may be responsible for all of the data.
However, if your cluster runs in a configuration where number of nodes equals your RF, then each node has a complete copy of the data. In that case, you would need to run nodetool snapshot on only one node; as long as you are confident that repairs are running regularly and your data is consistent.
With regards to point-in-time backup and recovery of Cassandra, there are a few aspects that you need to consider depending on what your needs and limitations are:
Storage Footprint
All the solutions available today will put a big strain on your infrastructure as they would require you to store 3x the data that you absolutely need to, assuming you have a replication factor of 3.
I agree with #Aaron, you need to manage the snapshots yourself because the tools will not do “garbage collection” for you :)
Failure resiliency
All the solutions out there, opscenter and others, provide limited failure resiliency. You will lose data if a Cassandra node goes down during a backup window.
This situation is exasperated when you have incremental backups and node failure happens during an incremental
Recovery time/speed
Note that you may have to go through a “repair” process during recovery. This is needed because the node level snapshots that the native tools provide are not consistent across the cluster.
Depending on your RTO/RPO needs, this may not be adequate. I suggest you test both the backup and recovery times for your operations before you arrive at any solution.
If you are looking for enterprise grade solution for backup and recovery of Cassandra, you may want to check out the solution offered by “Datos IO”. It reduces your storage footprint by 3x while also providing failure resiliency and cluster consistency.
I am trying to backup the whole cluster consistently. What are different ways to backup and restore Cassandra cluster?
If you are using the DataStax Enterprise version, then the easiest way is to perform the backups and restore using OpsCenter.
If you are using the DataStax Community or open-sourced version of Cassandra, then use nodetool snapshot to create backups of tables and/or keyspaces.
Please bear in mind that SSTables are immutable, i.e. they never change once they are written to disk. So unlike RDBMS data files, SSTables are not updated.
To perform a snapshot cluster-wide, use SSH tools such as pssh to perform parallel snapshots on all nodes.
More information on the snapshot utility is available here.
There are several ways to restore from snapshots. One way is to re-load the data using the sstableloader tool where the data is read back into the cluster. Another way is by copying the SSTable directory from snapshot and running nodetool refresh. Finally, you can replace the existing data with the snapshot and restarting the node.
More information on backups and restores are available here.