Rediger

Del via


Enable backup for Azure Stack Hub from the administrator portal

You can enable the Infrastructure Backup Service from the administrator portal so that Azure Stack Hub can generate infrastructure backups. The hardware partner can use these backups to restore your environment using cloud recovery in the event of a catastrophic failure. The purpose of cloud recovery is to ensure that your operators and users can log back into the portal after recovery is complete. Users will have their subscriptions restored, including:

  • Role-based access permissions and roles.
  • Original plans and offers.
  • Previously defined compute, storage, and network quotas.
  • Key Vault secrets.

However, the Infrastructure Backup Service doesn't back up IaaS VMs, network configurations, and storage resources such as storage accounts, blobs, tables, and so on. Users logging in after cloud recovery won't see any of these previously existing resources. Platform as a Service (PaaS) resources and data are also not backed up by the service.

Admins and users are responsible for backing up and restoring IaaS and PaaS resources separately from the infrastructure backup processes. For info on backing up IaaS and PaaS resources, see the following links:

Enable or reconfigure backup

  1. Open the Azure Stack Hub administrator portal.

  2. Select All services, and then under the ADMINISTRATION category select Infrastructure backup. Choose Configuration in the Infrastructure backup blade.

  3. Type the path to the Backup storage location. Use a Universal Naming Convention (UNC) string for the path to a file share hosted on a separate device. A UNC string specifies the location of resources such as shared files or devices. For the service, you can use an IP address. To ensure availability of the backup data after a disaster, the device should be in a separate location.

    Note

    If your environment supports name resolution from the Azure Stack Hub infrastructure network to your enterprise environment, you can use a Fully Qualified Domain Name (FQDN) rather than the IP.

  4. Type the Username using the domain and username with sufficient access to read and write files. For example, Contoso\backupshareuser.

  5. Type the Password for the user.

  6. Type the password again to Confirm Password.

  7. The frequency in hours determines how often backups are created. The default value is 12. Scheduler supports a maximum of 12 and a minimum of 4.

  8. The retention period in days determines how many days of backups are preserved on the external location. The default value is 7. Scheduler supports a maximum of 14 and a minimum of 2. Backups older than the retention period are automatically deleted from the external location.

    Note

    If you want to archive backups older than the retention period, make sure to back up the files before the scheduler deletes the backups. If you reduce the backup retention period (e.g. from 7 days to 5 days), the scheduler will delete all backups older than the new retention period. Make sure you're OK with the backups getting deleted before you update this value.

  9. In Encryption Settings, provide a certificate in the Certificate .cer file box. The certificate key length must be 2048 bytes. Backup files are encrypted using this public key in the certificate. Provide a certificate that only contains the public key portion when you configure backup settings. Once you set this certificate for the first time or rotate the certificate in the future, you can only view the thumbprint of the certificate. You can't download or view the uploaded certificate file. To create the certificate file, run the following PowerShell command to create a self-signed certificate with the public and private keys and export a certificate with only the public key portion. You can save the certificate anywhere that can be accessed from admin portal.

    
        $cert = New-SelfSignedCertificate `
            -DnsName "www.contoso.com" `
            -CertStoreLocation "cert:\LocalMachine\My"
    
        New-Item -Path "C:\" -Name "Certs" -ItemType "Directory" 
        Export-Certificate `
            -Cert $cert `
            -FilePath c:\certs\AzSIBCCert.cer 
    

    Note

    Azure Stack Hub accepts a certificate to encrypt infrastructure backup data. Make sure to store the certificate with the public and private key in a secure location. For security reasons, it's not recommended that you use the certificate with the public and private keys to configure backup settings. For more info on how to manage the lifecycle of this certificate, see Infrastructure Backup Service best practices.

  10. Select OK to save your backup controller settings.

Azure Stack Hub - Backup controller settings

Start backup

To start a backup, click on Backup now to start an on-demand backup. An on-demand backup won't modify the time for the next scheduled backup. After the task completes, you can confirm the settings in Essentials:

Screenshot that shows how to start an on-demand backup.

You can also run the PowerShell cmdlet Start-AzsBackup on your Azure Stack Hub admin computer. For more info, see Back up Azure Stack Hub.

Enable or disable automatic backups

Backups are automatically scheduled when you enable backup. You can check the next schedule backup time in Essentials.

Azure Stack Hub - on-demand backup

If you need to disable future scheduled backups, click on Disable Automatic Backups. Disabling automatic backups keeps backup settings configured and retains the backup schedule. This action simply tells the scheduler to skip future backups.

Azure Stack Hub - disable scheduled backups

Confirm that future scheduled backups have been disabled in Essentials:

Azure Stack Hub - confirm backups have been disabled

Click on Enable Automatic Backups to inform the scheduler to start future backups at the scheduled time.

Azure Stack Hub - enable scheduled backups

Note

If you configured infrastructure backup before updating to 1807, automatic backups will be disabled. This way the backups started by Azure Stack Hub don't conflict with backups started by an external task scheduling engine. Once you disable any external task scheduler, click on Enable Automatic Backups.

Update backup settings

As of 1901, support for encryption key is deprecated. If you're configuring backup for the first time in 1901, you must use a certificate. Azure Stack Hub supports encryption key only if the key is configured before updating to 1901. Backward compatibility mode will continue for three releases. After that, encryption keys will no longer be supported.

Default mode

In encryption settings, if you're configuring infrastructure backup for the first time after installing or updating to 1901, you must configure backup with a certificate. Using an encryption key is no longer supported.

To update the certificate used to encrypt backup data, upload a new .CER file with the public key portion and select OK to save settings.

New backups will start to use the public key in the new certificate. There's no impact to all existing backups created with the previous certificate. Make sure to keep the older certificate around in a secure location in case you need it for cloud recovery.

Azure Stack Hub - view certificate thumbprint

Backwards compatibility mode

If you configured backup before updating to 1901, the settings are carried over with no change in behavior. In this case, the encryption key is supported for backwards compatibility. You can update the encryption key or switch to use a certificate. You have at least three releases to continue updating the encryption key. Use this time to transition to a certificate. To create a new encryption key, use New-AzsEncryptionKeyBase64.

Azure Stack Hub - use encryption key in backward compatibility mode

Note

Updating from encryption key to certificate is a one-way operation. After making this change, you can't switch back to encryption key. All existing backups will remain encrypted with the previous encryption key.

Azure Stack Hub - use encryption certificate in backward compatibility mode

Next steps

Learn to run a backup. See Back up Azure Stack Hub.

Learn to verify that your backup ran. See Confirm backup completed in administrator portal.