Dec 08, 2020 05:41 AM
I’ve analysed and made the below “State of the Art” regarding the “Backup & Restoration” topic.
This analysis has been done on December 8, 2020.
I’ve also defined what are the “key points” that matters to me, for a reliable Backup & Restoration system. (You might have a different opinion/priorities)
I’ve summarized my findings through an Executive Summary below, and then analysed all tools I could find that might help regarding either “Backup” or “Restoration”, and summarized their limitations.
Also, I created a poll below regarding what you need/expect from such a tool. :bar_chart:
I realized such analysis for my company’s interests first (Unly), but thought it could be useful to the Airtable community.
We might release our internal CLI “Restore backup” tool as open-source tool, because I couldn’t come across any similar available tooling, despite its current limitations.
I’m also considering creating an Airtable App dedicated to “backup/restoration”, maybe open source, maybe paid.
I’d love to get your feedback about how you’d like to use a backup/restoration tool, what are your use-cases, to help me design such a tool. Please share your inputs as comments! :pray:
There exist no tool that allows to perform backup/restoration reliably at this time (December, 2020).
There is no solution that allows to make a full database export (schema + data) and then restore it later on.
All potential solutions fall short and are limited. Some solution only back up the data, some only back up the attachments. Some create CSV backups that cannot be used reliably. Some create JSON backups that don’t contains the data structure of the database (because Airtable doesn’t allow developers to fetch this information through the current API).
The native Airtable Snapshot seems to be the most powerful for a “full recovery”, but is too limited, and we lack control over when it performs said snapshots, which is very likely to lead to data loss. Also, it’s a “black box” that cannot be accessed by any “in-house” recovery tools.
External paid tools (Zapier, MiniExtensions) don’t allow to recreate a base from scratch, but only to restore data into an existing one.
External Open-Source tools (Unly:airtable-backups-boilerplate), even though free, require advanced technical skills (AWS) and aren’t usable by everyone.
It is also unclear what the community really needs regarding Backups & Restoration.
0 voters
Many tools and quirks have been created to help about Airtable base backups and restoration. Here is a list of those that we could find.
TL;DR; - My personal opinion/recommandation
- The easiest way for a full backup system of all your Airtable bases is to use Pro Backup paid 3rd party service (see 9).
- Alternatively, if you don’t want to allow any 3rd party to access your data, and have advanced technical skills, you can use the free and open-source Airtable Backups Boilerplate (see 7)
- Disclaimer: I’m the author- In any case, whether you use an extra layer of protection, you can rely on the tools Airtable offers:
- Base Snapshots being the most useful of them for disaster-recovery. (recovers a full snapshot into a new base)
- Undo/redo for common mistakes that can be reverted immediately.
- The trash, up to 7 days after deleting a Base/Table/Field/Records.
Documentation: How to set up automatic external backups for Airtable in 20 minutes
Release date: October 2018
Cost: ~$50/month (pricing might have changed since then)
Analysis:
Documentation: https://miniextensions.com/airtable-dropbox-csvs/
Release date: March 2020
Cost: $39/month (package containing all mini-extensions, see https://miniextensions.com/pricing/)
Analysis:
Documentation: https://miniextensions.com/airtable-dropbox-folder/
Release date: May 2020
Cost: $39/month (package containing all mini-extensions, see https://miniextensions.com/pricing/)
Analysis:
This solution is interesting because it could act as a “support” way to perform automated backups for Airtable Attachments. It’s not a backup solution, but could be used alongside one.
Documentation: https://miniextensions.com/bulk-download-attachments/
Release date: January 2020
Cost: $39/month (package containing all mini-extensions, see https://miniextensions.com/pricing/)
Analysis:
Similar to the previous solution, it can be used as a “support” way to perform manual backups for Airtable Attachments. It’s not a backup solution, but could be used alongside one.
Documentation: https://miniextensions.com/airtable-import-csv/
Release date: April 2020
Cost: $39/month (package containing all mini-extensions, see https://miniextensions.com/pricing/)
Analysis:
Similar to the previous solution, it can be used as a “support” way to perform automated restoration of data.
It’s not a backup solution at all, but could be used alongside one. (i.e: one tool that performs the backup as CSV and this tool that performs the restoration)
Documentation: https://support.airtable.com/hc/en-us/articles/202584799-Taking-and-restoring-base-snapshots
Release date: Unknown (2019 ?)
Pricing: Included in your Airtable plan. Features depend on the plan.
Known limitations:
Analysis:
It’s the only known way to completely restore a Base, but it does so with such limitations that it cannot be considered as “reliable” at all. You don’t have any control over when it triggers , nor when it expires .
But, it’s the only solution that allows you to create a new base based on an existing backup , while keeping all the base’s configuration intact. ( :warning: not tested! I expect it keeps Formulas, etc. but probably not Apps and other advanced stuff “airtable-related”)
Documentation:
Release date: January 2020
Cost: Free, as long as you don’t go over the AWS limits (which are quite large).
:warning: Unlike other above-mentioned solution, this one is probably the most technical , and will need to be configured by someone familiar with AWS. (Engineer-ish)
On the other hand, you’re in complete control over your backups, and everything is done through your own services. No 3rd parties involved. (GDPR-friendly)
Analysis:
Documentation: None public, private doc
Release date: No public release date
Cost: Free (doesn’t cost anything to run)
:warning: Unlike other above-mentioned solution, this one is both very technical and hasn’t been publicly released yet.
It basically allows to restore a backup into an empty clone of your Base. (Duplicate Base > Disable “Duplicate records”)
Documentation: https://probackup.io/backup/airtable
Release date: End of 2020
Cost: Depends on plan, 15-99$/month, 15 days free trial
This is a paid 3rd party solution, which I analyze thoroughly on the technical, security and legal/compliance levels.
Disclaimer: While I’m a not affiliated with them, I might benefit from their referral program if you subscribe using the above link.
:tada: : Unlike any solution above, this one backs up all your bases automatically. It doesn’t need to know about which bases and which tables you want to back up. It’s the most automated tool there is, and it can be used by about anyone, there is no technical entry barrier. Also, their backup contains the most metadata about your base schema. It’s the only solution which also backs-up your Airtable Formulas (the formula itself, alongside the calculated value).
:warning: Even though they don’t provide a way to restore a full backup, at this time (e.g: Re-create a base from scratch and generate all tables/fields/views/etc. automatically), ProBackup is the only tool that might be able to do so in the future. Also, it’s on their product roadmap.
The company behind this is B4B IT BV, which is specialized in backup systems (Airtable, Asana, Podio, Monday).
The backups are stored into their AWS Account (S3), and located in Ireland (Dublin). (I believe they might also provide US-located backups storage)
They allow you to sync those backups with your own Google Drive, where backups are stored as Google Sheet files (Data + Fields + Views)
:balance_scale: They’re GDPR compliant and provide a DPA. https://b4bit.be/role-statement.html
They ask you to install a Chrome Extension and that’s about it. The Chrome extension is used to access your Airtable account and the sync will work as long as you’re logged in onto Airtable.
The sync will stop as soon as you log out, or uninstall the chrome extension.
Analysis:
Additional resources:
Dec 08, 2020 07:42 AM
Hi TFP, thanks for the clear & elaborate overview! I just wanted to let you know that my team has been working hard on a dedicated backup tool for Airtable, called [Pro Backup](https://probackup.io/backup/airtable)
, that might cover some of your needs. It is currently still in early phase, but it offers the following:
Feel free to DM me if you would like to have more info on this. Else visit https://probackup.io/backup/airtable and reach out to our Support team.
Dec 09, 2020 06:53 AM
After analysing the various causes and scenarios that might lead to data loss, I wrote another piece of knowledge at Analysis of causes and scenarios leading to data loss, and what "Backup & Restoration strategy" migh...
My personal opinion is that having our own “full backup recovery system (schema + data)” is not an absolute necessity . After analysing all potential risks, we figured most of the risks we idenfied can be resolved easily enough by using the tools provided by airtable (undo, trash and snapshot).
Even though, we will keep making our own backups , through our open-source tool https://github.com/UnlyEd/airtable-backups-boilerplate, because we feel necessary to have a backup of the data, at the very least. But this backup will not allow us to make a full recovery, and it’s not its purpose.
Building a “full backup recovery system” is quite a gigantic task, and we’re not up to it. The tools provided by Airtable are good enough for most cases. I would still recommend any professional to make their own backups is a way that can be scripted, to ensure they can use their backups to recover from disasters. (or rely on a professional 3rd party that does exactly that)
Dec 11, 2020 05:04 AM
After a thorough analysis of the paid 3rd party Pro Backup, I edited the above post (see 9).
Also, I added a TL;DR; section for people who want to go straight to a recommended and opinionated solution.
@Bill.French I believe the Pro Backup will eventually offer a professional and full backup recovery solution that might suit the needs you’ve expressed multiple times in this Community forum, those past years. I’d love your opinion on the subject! :slightly_smiling_face:
Dec 11, 2020 05:46 AM
I agree. I think this product - of all approaches and tactics - is best positioned to but a very big dent in the backup/restoration challenge for any firm who has invested in Airtable solutions.