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BORG-PATTERNS(1) borg backup tool BORG-PATTERNS(1)

NAME

borg-patterns - Details regarding patterns

DESCRIPTION

When specifying one or more file paths in a Borg command that supports patterns for the respective option or argument, you can apply the patterns described here to include only desired files and/or exclude unwanted ones. Patterns can be used

  • for --exclude option,
  • in the file given with --exclude-from option,
  • for --pattern option,
  • in the file given with --patterns-from option and
  • for PATH arguments that explicitly support them.

Borg always stores all file paths normalized and relative to the current recursion root. The recursion root is also named PATH in Borg commands like borg create that do a file discovery, so do not confuse the root with the PATH argument of e.g. borg extract.

Starting with Borg 1.2, paths that are matched against patterns always appear relative. If you give /absolute/ as root, the paths going into the matcher will look relative like absolute/.../file.ext. If you give ../some/path as root, the paths will look like some/path/.../file.ext.

File patterns support five different styles. If followed by a colon ':', the first two characters of a pattern are used as a style selector. Explicit style selection is necessary if a non-default style is desired or when the desired pattern starts with two alphanumeric characters followed by a colon (i.e. aa:something/*).

This is the default style for --exclude and --exclude-from. These patterns use a variant of shell pattern syntax, with '*' matching any number of characters, '?' matching any single character, '[...]' matching any single character specified, including ranges, and '[!...]' matching any character not specified. For the purpose of these patterns, the path separator (backslash for Windows and '/' on other systems) is not treated specially. Wrap meta-characters in brackets for a literal match (i.e. [?] to match the literal character '?'). For a path to match a pattern, the full path must match, or it must match from the start of the full path to just before a path separator. Except for the root path, paths will never end in the path separator when matching is attempted. Thus, if a given pattern ends in a path separator, a '*' is appended before matching is attempted. A leading path separator is always removed.
This is the default style for --pattern and --patterns-from. Like fnmatch patterns these are similar to shell patterns. The difference is that the pattern may include **/ for matching zero or more directory levels, * for matching zero or more arbitrary characters with the exception of any path separator. A leading path separator is always removed.
Unlike shell patterns, regular expressions are not required to match the full path and any substring match is sufficient. It is strongly recommended to anchor patterns to the start ('^'), to the end ('$') or both. Path separators (backslash for Windows and '/' on other systems) in paths are always normalized to a forward slash '/' before applying a pattern.
This pattern style is useful to match whole sub-directories. The pattern pp:root/somedir matches root/somedir and everything therein. A leading path separator is always removed.
This pattern style is (only) useful to match full paths. This is kind of a pseudo pattern as it can not have any variable or unspecified parts - the full path must be given. pf:root/file.ext matches root/file.ext only. A leading path separator is always removed.

Implementation note: this is implemented via very time-efficient O(1) hashtable lookups (this means you can have huge amounts of such patterns without impacting performance much). Due to that, this kind of pattern does not respect any context or order. If you use such a pattern to include a file, it will always be included (if the directory recursion encounters it). Other include/exclude patterns that would normally match will be ignored. Same logic applies for exclude.


NOTE:

re:, sh: and fm: patterns are all implemented on top of the Python SRE engine. It is very easy to formulate patterns for each of these types which requires an inordinate amount of time to match paths. If untrusted users are able to supply patterns, ensure they cannot supply re: patterns. Further, ensure that sh: and fm: patterns only contain a handful of wildcards at most.


Exclusions can be passed via the command line option --exclude. When used from within a shell, the patterns should be quoted to protect them from expansion.

The --exclude-from option permits loading exclusion patterns from a text file with one pattern per line. Lines empty or starting with the hash sign '#' after removing whitespace on both ends are ignored. The optional style selector prefix is also supported for patterns loaded from a file. Due to whitespace removal, paths with whitespace at the beginning or end can only be excluded using regular expressions.

To test your exclusion patterns without performing an actual backup you can run borg create --list --dry-run ....

Examples:

# Exclude '/home/user/file.o' but not '/home/user/file.odt':
$ borg create -e '*.o' archive /
# Exclude '/home/user/junk' and '/home/user/subdir/junk' but
# not '/home/user/importantjunk' or '/etc/junk':
$ borg create -e 'home/*/junk' archive /
# Exclude the contents of '/home/user/cache' but not the directory itself:
$ borg create -e home/user/cache/ archive /
# The file '/home/user/cache/important' is *not* backed up:
$ borg create -e home/user/cache/ archive / /home/user/cache/important
# The contents of directories in '/home' are not backed up when their name
# ends in '.tmp'
$ borg create --exclude 're:^home/[^/]+\.tmp/' archive /
# Load exclusions from file
$ cat >exclude.txt <<EOF
# Comment line
home/*/junk
*.tmp
fm:aa:something/*
re:^home/[^/]+\.tmp/
sh:home/*/.thumbnails
# Example with spaces, no need to escape as it is processed by borg
some file with spaces.txt
EOF
$ borg create --exclude-from exclude.txt archive /


A more general and easier to use way to define filename matching patterns exists with the --pattern and --patterns-from options. Using these, you may specify the backup roots, default pattern styles and patterns for inclusion and exclusion.

A recursion root path starts with the prefix R, followed by a path (a plain path, not a file pattern). Use this prefix to have the root paths in the patterns file rather than as command line arguments.
To change the default pattern style, use the P prefix, followed by the pattern style abbreviation (fm, pf, pp, re, sh). All patterns following this line will use this style until another style is specified.
Use the prefix -, followed by a pattern, to define an exclusion. This has the same effect as the --exclude option.
Use the prefix !, followed by a pattern, to define an exclusion that does not recurse into subdirectories. This saves time, but prevents include patterns to match any files in subdirectories.
Use the prefix +, followed by a pattern, to define inclusions. This is useful to include paths that are covered in an exclude pattern and would otherwise not be backed up.

The first matching pattern is used, so if an include pattern matches before an exclude pattern, the file is backed up. Note that a no-recurse exclude stops examination of subdirectories so that potential includes will not match - use normal excludes for such use cases.

Tip: You can easily test your patterns with --dry-run and --list:

$ borg create --dry-run --list --patterns-from patterns.txt archive


This will list the considered files one per line, prefixed with a character that indicates the action (e.g. 'x' for excluding, see Item flags in borg create usage docs).

NOTE:

It's possible that a sub-directory/file is matched while parent directories are not. In that case, parent directories are not backed up and thus their user, group, permission, etc. cannot be restored.


Patterns (--pattern) and excludes (--exclude) from the command line are considered first (in the order of appearance). Then patterns from --patterns-from are added. Exclusion patterns from --exclude-from files are appended last.

Examples:

# backup pics, but not the ones from 2018, except the good ones:
# note: using = is essential to avoid cmdline argument parsing issues.
borg create --pattern=+pics/2018/good --pattern=-pics/2018 archive pics
# backup only JPG/JPEG files (case insensitive) in all home directories:
borg create --pattern '+ re:\.jpe?g(?i)$' archive /home
# backup homes, but exclude big downloads (like .ISO files) or hidden files:
borg create --exclude 're:\.iso(?i)$' --exclude 'sh:home/**/.*' archive /home
# use a file with patterns (recursion root '/' via command line):
borg create --patterns-from patterns.lst archive /


The patterns.lst file could look like that:

# "sh:" pattern style is the default
# exclude caches
- home/*/.cache
# include susans home
+ home/susan
# also back up this exact file
+ pf:home/bobby/specialfile.txt
# don't backup the other home directories
- home/*
# don't even look in /dev, /proc, /run, /sys, /tmp (note: would exclude files like /device, too)
! re:^(dev|proc|run|sys|tmp)


You can specify recursion roots either on the command line or in a patternfile:

# these two commands do the same thing
borg create --exclude home/bobby/junk archive /home/bobby /home/susan
borg create --patterns-from patternfile.lst archive


patternfile.lst:

# note that excludes use fm: by default and patternfiles use sh: by default.
# therefore, we need to specify fm: to have the same exact behavior.
P fm
R /home/bobby
R /home/susan
- home/bobby/junk


This allows you to share the same patterns between multiple repositories without needing to specify them on the command line.

AUTHOR

The Borg Collective

2023-01-18