--- title: How to add preparation and cleanup steps to backups eleventyNavigation: key: 🧹 Add preparation and cleanup steps parent: How-to guides order: 9 --- ## Preparation and cleanup hooks If you find yourself performing preparation tasks before your backup runs, or cleanup work afterwards, borgmatic hooks may be of interest. Hooks are shell commands that borgmatic executes for you at various points as it runs, and they're configured in the `hooks` section of your configuration file. But if you're looking to backup a database, it's probably easier to use the [database backup feature](https://torsion.org/borgmatic/docs/how-to/backup-your-databases/) instead. You can specify `before_backup` hooks to perform preparation steps before running backups, and specify `after_backup` hooks to perform cleanup steps afterwards. Here's an example: ```yaml hooks: before_backup: - mount /some/filesystem after_backup: - umount /some/filesystem ``` New in version 1.6.0 The `before_backup` and `after_backup` hooks each run once per repository in a configuration file. `before_backup` hooks runs right before the `create` action for a particular repository, and `after_backup` hooks run afterwards, but not if an error occurs in a previous hook or in the backups themselves. (Prior to borgmatic 1.6.0, these hooks instead ran once per configuration file rather than once per repository.) There are additional hooks that run before/after other actions as well. For instance, `before_prune` runs before a `prune` action for a repository, while `after_prune` runs after it. ## Variable interpolation The before and after action hooks support interpolating particular runtime variables into the hook command. Here's an example that assumes you provide a separate shell script: ```yaml hooks: after_prune: - record-prune.sh "{configuration_filename}" "{repository}" ``` In this example, when the hook is triggered, borgmatic interpolates runtime values into the hook command: the borgmatic configuration filename and the paths of the current Borg repository. Here's the full set of supported variables you can use here: * `configuration_filename`: borgmatic configuration filename in which the hook was defined * `repository`: path of the current repository as configured in the current borgmatic configuration file Note that you can also interpolate in [arbitrary environment variables](https://torsion.org/borgmatic/docs/how-to/provide-your-passwords/). ## Global hooks You can also use `before_everything` and `after_everything` hooks to perform global setup or cleanup: ```yaml hooks: before_everything: - set-up-stuff-globally after_everything: - clean-up-stuff-globally ``` `before_everything` hooks collected from all borgmatic configuration files run once before all configuration files (prior to all actions), but only if there is a `create` action. An error encountered during a `before_everything` hook causes borgmatic to exit without creating backups. `after_everything` hooks run once after all configuration files and actions, but only if there is a `create` action. It runs even if an error occurs during a backup or a backup hook, but not if an error occurs during a `before_everything` hook. ## Error hooks borgmatic also runs `on_error` hooks if an error occurs, either when creating a backup or running a backup hook. See the [monitoring and alerting documentation](https://torsion.org/borgmatic/docs/how-to/monitor-your-backups/) for more information. ## Hook output Any output produced by your hooks shows up both at the console and in syslog (when run in a non-interactive console). For more information, read about inspecting your backups. ## Security An important security note about hooks: borgmatic executes all hook commands with the user permissions of borgmatic itself. So to prevent potential shell injection or privilege escalation, do not forget to set secure permissions on borgmatic configuration files (`chmod 0600`) and scripts (`chmod 0700`) invoked by hooks.