#!/bin/sh
# Make sure to:
# 1) Name this file `backup.sh` and place it in /home/ubuntu
# 2) Run sudo apt-get install awscli to install the AWSCLI
# 3) Run aws configure (enter s3-authorized IAM user and specify region)
# 4) Fill in DB host + name
# 5) Create S3 bucket for the backups and fill it in below (set a lifecycle rule to expire files older than X days in the bucket)
# 6) Run chmod +x backup.sh
# 7) Test it out via ./backup.sh
# 8) Set up a daily backup at midnight via `crontab -e`:
# 0 0 * * * /home/ubuntu/backup.sh > /home/ubuntu/backup.log
# DB host (secondary preferred as to avoid impacting primary performance)
HOST=db.example.com
# DB name
DBNAME=my-db
# S3 bucket name
BUCKET=s3-bucket-name
# Linux user account
USER=ubuntu
# Current time
TIME=`/bin/date +%d-%m-%Y-%T`
# Backup directory
DEST=/home/$USER/tmp
# Tar file of backup directory
TAR=$DEST/../$TIME.tar
# Create backup dir (-p to avoid warning if already exists)
/bin/mkdir -p $DEST
# Log
echo "Backing up $HOST/$DBNAME to s3://$BUCKET/ on $TIME";
# Dump from mongodb host into backup directory
/usr/bin/mongodump -h $HOST -d $DBNAME -o $DEST
# Create tar of backup directory
/bin/tar cvf $TAR -C $DEST .
# Upload tar to s3
/usr/bin/aws s3 cp $TAR s3://$BUCKET/
# Remove tar file locally
/bin/rm -f $TAR
# Remove backup directory
/bin/rm -rf $DEST
# All done
echo "Backup available at https://s3.amazonaws.com/$BUCKET/$TIME.tar"