Metadata-Version: 2.1
Name: simbak
Version: 0.4.2
Summary: A simple backup solution that's light and portable
Home-page: https://github.com/mark-bromell/simbak
Author: Mark Bromell
Author-email: markbromell.business@gmail.com
License: UNKNOWN
Project-URL: Source Code, https://github.com/mark-bromell/simbak
Platform: UNKNOWN
Classifier: Programming Language :: Python :: 3
Classifier: License :: OSI Approved :: MIT License
Classifier: Operating System :: OS Independent
Requires-Python: >=3.6
Description-Content-Type: text/markdown
Requires-Dist: python-dotenv

# Simbak

For a detailed outline of simbak, visit the 
[wiki](https://github.com/mark-bromell/simbak/wiki).

Simbak is a simple backup solution that is aimed towards individuals who
just want a quick and easy way to backup their files. Backups are stored
as `tar.gz` files, so there is no dependence on any application to
restore your backups.

# Benefits of simbak

- Simbak uses tar and gzip in order to store the backups, so that
recovering the data in backups does not depend on simbak itself.
- Simbak is also very light, portable, and very easy to use, meaning
that there's no large application to install.
- It's free and open source, meaning anyone can contribute or change
simbak to meet their own needs.

# Getting started

## Installation
To install simbak you can simply use
[pip](https://pypi.org/project/pip/).

```bash
$ pip install simbak
```

## Using simbak

### Important things to know

In order to avoid any issues with backing up, you should manually
create your destination paths. This will ensure the confidence in the
backup working. The same goes for the logging path, if you want to save
the logs to a file, make sure the directory where the log file will be
stored in is already created.

### Terminal

You can use simbak in many ways, the fastest way would be to use the
`simbak` command in the terminal directly, this will perform a normal
backup, use `$ simbak --help` to see your options.

```bash
$ simbak [...]
```

You can also use the simbak module itself through the python executable.

```bash
$ python3 -m simbak [...]
```

### Python script

You can use simbak within your own python code, and you can make python
scripts to use simbak (a python script can be prettier than shell script).

```python
import simbak

# This will perform a normal backup.
simbak.backup(...)
```

If you want a quick way to enable file logging, you can set the 
directory for where the logs will be stored using the
`set_file_logger()` function. Alternatively you can use the 
[python logging library](https://docs.python.org/3/library/logging.html)
for complete custom control over logging, but it will require more
setup.

```python
import simbak
from simbak.logging import set_file_logger

# Will put the simbak logs into this directory.
set_file_logger('/home/logs/backup-logs/')
simbak.backup(...)
```

### Example usages

Each of these examples will achieve the same reults. They will create a
backup of `/home/projects/my_project/` and `/home/docs/important.txt`
and it will store the backup in `/remote/backups` and `/local/backups`.
The backup will be a `tar.gz` file and it will have the name of
`important--YYYY-MM-DD--hh-mm-ss`, the time is stamped at the end of the
backup to ensure the file is unique and not conflicting with other
backups.

#### Python script example

```python
# backup.py

import simbak

simbak.backup(
    sources=[
        "/home/projects/my_project/",
        "/home/docs/important.txt",
    ],
    destinations=[
        "/local/backups/",
        "/remote/backups/",
    ],
    name="important"
)
```

You can then run this script through the terminal using
`$ python3 backup.py`.

#### Bash script example

**Note**: I am using a backslash at the end of each line in order to
have a command spread across multiple lines, this helps readability.

```bash
# backup.bash

simbak \
    --source \
        "/home/projects/my_project/" \
        "/home/docs/important.txt" \
    --destination \
        "/local/backups/" \
        "/remote/backups/" \
    --name "important"
```

#### Terminal example

Using simbak directly in the terminal isn't recommended unless you are
backing up one directory or file to one location for a one time occurrence,
as you can see the lines can get quite long.

```bash
$ simbak -s "/home/projects/my_project/" "/home/docs/important.txt" \
> -d "/local/backups/" "/remote/backups/" \
> --name "important"
```


