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

NAME

borg-prune - Prune repository archives according to specified rules

SYNOPSIS

borg [common options] prune [options]

DESCRIPTION

The prune command prunes a repository by deleting all archives not matching any of the specified retention options.

Important: Repository disk space is not freed until you run borg compact.

This command is normally used by automated backup scripts wanting to keep a certain number of historic backups. This retention policy is commonly referred to as GFS (Grandfather-father-son) backup rotation scheme.

Also, prune automatically removes checkpoint archives (incomplete archives left behind by interrupted backup runs) except if the checkpoint is the latest archive (and thus still needed). Checkpoint archives are not considered when comparing archive counts against the retention limits (--keep-X).

If you use --match-archives (-a), then only archives that match the pattern are considered for deletion and only those archives count towards the totals specified by the rules. Otherwise, all archives in the repository are candidates for deletion! There is no automatic distinction between archives representing different contents. These need to be distinguished by specifying matching globs.

If you have multiple sequences of archives with different data sets (e.g. from different machines) in one shared repository, use one prune call per data set that matches only the respective archives using the --match-archives (-a) option.

The --keep-within option takes an argument of the form "<int><char>", where char is "H", "d", "w", "m", "y". For example, --keep-within 2d means to keep all archives that were created within the past 48 hours. "1m" is taken to mean "31d". The archives kept with this option do not count towards the totals specified by any other options.

A good procedure is to thin out more and more the older your backups get. As an example, --keep-daily 7 means to keep the latest backup on each day, up to 7 most recent days with backups (days without backups do not count). The rules are applied from secondly to yearly, and backups selected by previous rules do not count towards those of later rules. The time that each backup starts is used for pruning purposes. Dates and times are interpreted in the local timezone, and weeks go from Monday to Sunday. Specifying a negative number of archives to keep means that there is no limit. As of borg 1.2.0, borg will retain the oldest archive if any of the secondly, minutely, hourly, daily, weekly, monthly, or yearly rules was not otherwise able to meet its retention target. This enables the first chronological archive to continue aging until it is replaced by a newer archive that meets the retention criteria.

The --keep-last N option is doing the same as --keep-secondly N (and it will keep the last N archives under the assumption that you do not create more than one backup archive in the same second).

When using --stats, you will get some statistics about how much data was deleted - the "Deleted data" deduplicated size there is most interesting as that is how much your repository will shrink. Please note that the "All archives" stats refer to the state after pruning.

OPTIONS

See borg-common(1) for common options of Borg commands.

options

do not change repository
force pruning of corrupted archives, use --force --force in case --force does not work.
print statistics for the deleted archive
output verbose list of archives it keeps/prunes
keep all archives within this time interval
number of secondly archives to keep
number of minutely archives to keep
number of hourly archives to keep
number of daily archives to keep
number of weekly archives to keep
number of monthly archives to keep
number of yearly archives to keep
work slower, but using less space
write checkpoint every SECONDS seconds (Default: 1800)

Archive filters

only consider archive names matching the pattern. see "borg help match-archives".

EXAMPLES

Be careful, prune is a potentially dangerous command, it will remove backup archives.

The default of prune is to apply to all archives in the repository unless you restrict its operation to a subset of the archives using -a / --glob-archives. When using -a, be careful to choose a good pattern - e.g. do not use a prefix "foo" if you do not also want to match "foobar".

It is strongly recommended to always run prune -v --list --dry-run ... first so you will see what it would do without it actually doing anything.

# Keep 7 end of day and 4 additional end of week archives.
# Do a dry-run without actually deleting anything.
$ borg prune -v --list --dry-run --keep-daily=7 --keep-weekly=4
# Same as above but only apply to archive names starting with the hostname
# of the machine followed by a "-" character:
$ borg prune -v --list --keep-daily=7 --keep-weekly=4 -a '{hostname}-*'
# actually free disk space:
$ borg compact
# Keep 7 end of day, 4 additional end of week archives,
# and an end of month archive for every month:
$ borg prune -v --list --keep-daily=7 --keep-weekly=4 --keep-monthly=-1
# Keep all backups in the last 10 days, 4 additional end of week archives,
# and an end of month archive for every month:
$ borg prune -v --list --keep-within=10d --keep-weekly=4 --keep-monthly=-1


There is also a visualized prune example in docs/misc/prune-example.txt.

SEE ALSO

borg-common(1), borg-compact(1)

AUTHOR

The Borg Collective

2023-01-18