For any service provider it is important to maintain a reliable backup policy as it enables prompt services restoration after any force majeure event. Although the design of Sipwise C5 implies data duplication and high availability of services, we still strongly suggest you to configure a backup procedure. The Sipwise C5 has a built-in solution that can help you back up the most crucial data. Alternatively, it can be integrated with any Debian compatible backup software.
This is the most important data in the system. All subscriber and billing information, CDRs, user preferences, etc. are stored in the MySQL server. It is strongly recommended to have up-to-date dumps of all the databases on corresponding Sipwise C5 nodes.
The system configuration files such as /etc/mysql/sipwise.cnf and the /etc/ngcp-config/ directory should be included in the backup as well. We suggest backing up the whole /etc folder.
The /home/jail/home/cdrexport directory contains the exported CDRs. It depends on your call data retention policy whether or not to remove these files after exporting them to an external system.
The Sipwise C5 comes with an easy-to-use solution that creates everyday backups of the most important data:
This functionality is disabled by default and can be enabled and configured in the backuptools subsection in the config.yml file. Please, refer to the “C.1.3 backup tools” section of the “Sipwise C5 configs overview” chapter for the backup configuration options.
Once you set the required configuration options, apply the changes:
ngcpcfg apply 'enable the backup feature' ngcpcfg push all
Once you activate the feature, Sipwise C5 will create backups in the off-peak time on the standby nodes and put them to the /ngcp-data/backup/ngcp_backup directory. You can copy these files to your backup server using scp or ftp.
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make sure that you have enough free disk space to store the backups for the specified number of days. |
In the worst case scenario, when the system needs to be recovered from a total loss, you only need 4 steps to get the services back online:
ngcpcfg apply 'restored the system from the backup' ngcpcfg push all
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All existing data will be wiped out! Use this script only if you want to clear all previously configured services and start configuration from scratch. |
To reset database to its original state you can use a script provided by CE: * Execute ngcp-reset-db. It will assign new unique passwords for Sipwise C5 services and reset all services. The script will also create dumps for all Sipwise C5 databases.
Sipwise Sipwise C5 offers an easy way to cleanup, backup or archive old accounting
data — i.e. CDRs — that is not necessary for further processing any more, or must
be deleted according to the law. There are some Sipwise C5 components designed for this
purpose and they are commonly called cleanuptools. These are basically configurable
scripts that interact with NGCP’s accounting
and kamailio
databases, or remove
exported CDR files in order to clean or archive the unnecessary data.
The configuration parameters of cleanuptools are located in the main Sipwise C5 configuration
file: /etc/ngcp-config/config.yml
. Please refer to the config.yml
file description:
Cleanuptools Configuration Data
Section 1.8, “cleanuptools” for configuration parameter
details.
In case the system administrator needs to modify some configuration value, the new configuration must be activated in the usual way, by running the following commands:
> ngcpcfg apply 'Modified cleanuptools config' > ngcpcfg push all
As a result new configuration files will be generated for the accounting database and the exported CDR cleanup tools. Please read detailed description of those tools in subsequent sections of the handbook.
The Sipwise C5 system administrator can also select the time when cleanup scripts are
run, by modifying the schedule here: /etc/cron.d/cleanup-tools
The script responsible for cleaning up the database is: /usr/sbin/acc-cleanup.pl
The configuration file used by the script is: /etc/ngcp-cleanup-tools/acc-cleanup.conf
An extract from a sample configuration file is provided here:
############ batch = 10000 archive-target = /ngcp-data/backup/cdr compress = gzip username = dbcleaner password = rcKamRdHhx7saYRbkJfP host = localhost connect accounting time-column = from_unixtime(start_time) backup-months = 2 backup-retro = 2 backup cdr connect accounting archive-months = 2 archive cdr connect kamailio time-column = time cleanup-days = 90 cleanup acc # Clean up after mediator by deleting old leftover acc entries and deleting # old entries out of acc_trash and acc_backup connect kamailio time-column = time cleanup-days = 30 cleanup acc_trash cleanup acc_backup
The configuration file itself contains a detailed description of how database cleanup script works. It consists of a series of statements, one per line, which are going to be executed in sequence. A statement can either just set a variable to some value, or perform an action.
There are 3 types of actions the database cleanup script can take:
These actions are discussed in following sections.
A generic action is connecting to the proper database: connect <database name>
The database cleanup tool can create monthly backups of CDRs in the accounting
database and store those data records in separate tables named: cdr_YYYYMM
.
The instruction in the configuration file looks like: backup <table name>
,
by default and typically it is: backup cdr
Configuration values that govern the backup procedure are:
time-column
: Which column in cdr table shows the month which a CDR belongs to.
batch
: How many records to process within a single SQL statement. If unset,
less than or equals 0, all of them are processed at once.
backup-months
: How many months worth of records to keep in the cdr table — where current CDRs are stored — and not move into the monthly backup tables.
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Months are always processed as a whole, thus the value specifies how many months to keep AT MOST. In other words, if the script is started on December 15th and this value is set to "2", then all of December and November is kept, and all of October will be backed up. |
backup-retro
: How many months to process for backups, going backwards in time.
Using the example above, with this value set to "3", the months October, September
and August would be backed up, while any older records would be left untouched.
The database cleanup tool can archive (dump) old monthly backup tables. The statement
used for this purpose is: archive <table name>
, by default and typically it is:
archive cdr
This creates an SQL dump out of too old tables created by the backup
statement
and drop them afterwards from database. Archiving uses the following configuration
values:
archive-months
: Uses the same logic as the backup-months
variable above.
If set to "12" and the script was started on December 15th, it will start archiving
with the December table of the previous year.
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Note that the sum of |
archive-target
: Target directory for writing the SQL dump files into. If explicitly
specified as "/dev/null", then no actual archiving will be performed, but instead
the tables will only be dropped from database.
compress
: If set to "gzip", then gzip the dump files after creation. If unset,
do not compress.
host, username
and password
: As dumping is performed by an external command,
those variables are reused from the connect
statement.
The database cleanup tool may do database table cleanup without performing backup.
In order to do that, the statement: cleanup <table name>
is used. Typically this
has to be done in kamailio
database, examples:
cleanup acc
cleanup acc_trash
cleanup acc_backup
Basically the cleanup
statement works just like the backup
statement, but doesn’t
actually backup anything, but rather just deletes old records. Configuration values
used by the procedure:
time-column
: Gives the database column name that shows the time of CDR creation.
batch
: The same as with backup
statement.
cleanup-days
: Any record older than this many days will be deleted.
The script responsible for cleaning up exported CDR files is: /usr/sbin/cleanup-old-cdr-files.pl
The configuration file used by exported CDR cleanup script is: /etc/ngcp-cleanup-tools/cdr-files-cleanup.yml
A sample configuration file is provided here:
enable: no max_age_days: 30 paths: - path: /home/jail/home/*/20[0-9][0-9][0-9][0-9]/[0-9][0-9] wildcard: yes remove_empty_directories: yes max_age_days: ~ - path: /home/jail/home/cdrexport/resellers/*/20[0-9][0-9][0-9][0-9]/[0-9][0-9] wildcard: yes remove_empty_directories: yes max_age_days: ~ - path: /home/jail/home/cdrexport/system/20[0-9][0-9][0-9][0-9]/[0-9][0-9] wildcard: yes remove_empty_directories: yes max_age_days: ~
The exported CDR cleanup tool simply deletes CDR files in the directories provided in the configuration file, if those have already expired.
Configuration values that define the files to be deleted:
enable
: Enable (yes
) or disable (no
) exported CDR cleanup.
max_age_days
: Gives the expiration time of the exported CDR files in days.
There is a general value which may be overridden by a local value provided at a
specific path. The local value is valid for the particular path only.
paths
: an array of path definitions
path
: a path where CDR files are to be found and deleted; this may contain wildcard
characters
wildcard
: Enable (yes
) or disable (no
) using wildcards in the path
remove_empty_directories
: Enable (yes
) or disable (no
) removing empty
directories if those are found in the given path
max_age_days
: the local expiration time value for files in the particular path