Installation

There are different ways to install Borg:

  • Distribution Package - easy and fast if a package is available from your distribution.

  • Standalone Binary - easy and fast, we provide a ready-to-use binary file that comes bundled with all dependencies.

  • From Source, either:

    • Building a binary on Windows - builds a binary file for Windows using MSYS2.

    • Using pip - installing a source package with pip needs more installation steps and requires all dependencies with development headers and a compiler.

    • Using git - for developers and power users who want to have the latest code or use revision control (each release is tagged).

Distribution Package

Some distributions might offer a ready-to-use borgbackup package which can be installed with the package manager.

Important

Those packages may not be up to date with the latest Borg releases. Before submitting a bug report, check the package version and compare that to our latest release then review Important notes 2.x to see if the bug has been fixed. Report bugs to the package maintainer rather than directly to Borg if the package is out of date in the distribution.

Distribution

Source

Command

Alpine Linux

Alpine repository

apk add borgbackup

Arch Linux

[extra]

pacman -S borg

Debian

Debian packages

apt install borgbackup

Gentoo

ebuild

emerge borgbackup

GNU Guix

GNU Guix

guix package --install borg

Fedora/RHEL

Fedora official repository

dnf install borgbackup

FreeBSD

FreeBSD ports

cd /usr/ports/archivers/py-borgbackup && make install clean

macOS

Homebrew

brew install borgbackup (official formula, no FUSE support)
or
brew install --cask macfuse (private Tap, FUSE support)
brew install borgbackup/tap/borgbackup-fuse

Mageia

cauldron

urpmi borgbackup

NetBSD

pkgsrc

pkg_add py-borgbackup

NixOS

.nix file

nix-env -i borgbackup

OpenBSD

OpenBSD ports

pkg_add borgbackup

OpenIndiana

OpenIndiana hipster repository

pkg install borg

openSUSE

openSUSE official repository

zypper in borgbackup

Raspbian

Raspbian testing

apt install borgbackup

Ubuntu

Ubuntu packages, Ubuntu PPA

apt install borgbackup

Please ask package maintainers to build a package or, if you can package / submit it yourself, please help us with that! See #105 on github to followup on packaging efforts.

Current status of package in the repositories

Packaging status

Standalone Binary

Note

Releases are signed with an OpenPGP key, see Security for more instructions.

Borg x86/x64 amd/intel compatible binaries (generated with pyinstaller) are available on the releases page for the following platforms:

  • Linux: glibc >= 2.28 (ok for most supported Linux releases). Older glibc releases are untested and may not work.

  • MacOS: 10.12 or newer (To avoid signing issues download the file via command line or remove the quarantine attribute after downloading: $ xattr -dr com.apple.quarantine borg-macosx64.tgz)

  • FreeBSD: 12.1 (unknown whether it works for older releases)

ARM binaries are built by Johann Bauer, see: https://borg.bauerj.eu/

To install such a binary, just drop it into a directory in your PATH, make borg readable and executable for its users and then you can run borg:

sudo cp borg-linux64 /usr/local/bin/borg
sudo chown root:root /usr/local/bin/borg
sudo chmod 755 /usr/local/bin/borg

Optionally you can create a symlink to have borgfs available, which is an alias for borg mount:

ln -s /usr/local/bin/borg /usr/local/bin/borgfs

Note that the binary uses /tmp to unpack Borg with all dependencies. It will fail if /tmp has not enough free space or is mounted with the noexec option. You can change the temporary directory by setting the TEMP environment variable before running Borg.

If a new version is released, you will have to download it manually and replace the old version using the same steps as shown above.

From Source

Note

Some older Linux systems (like RHEL/CentOS 5) and Python interpreter binaries compiled to be able to run on such systems (like Python installed via Anaconda) might miss functions required by Borg.

This issue will be detected early and Borg will abort with a fatal error.

Dependencies

To install Borg from a source package (including pip), you have to install the following dependencies first:

  • Python 3 >= 3.9.0, plus development headers.

  • Libraries (library plus development headers):

  • pkg-config (cli tool) and pkgconfig python package (borg uses these to discover header and library location - if it can’t import pkgconfig and is not pointed to header/library locations via env vars [see setup.py], it will raise a fatal error). These must be present before invoking setup.py!

  • some other Python dependencies, pip will automatically install them for you.

  • optionally, if you wish to mount an archive as a FUSE filesystem, you need a FUSE implementation for Python:

    • Either pyfuse3 (preferably, newer) or llfuse (older). See also the BORG_FUSE_IMPL env variable.

    • See pyproject.toml about the version requirements.

If you have troubles finding the right package names, have a look at the distribution specific sections below or the Vagrantfile in the git repository, which contains installation scripts for a number of operating systems.

In the following, the steps needed to install the dependencies are listed for a selection of platforms. If your distribution is not covered by these instructions, try to use your package manager to install the dependencies. On FreeBSD, you may need to get a recent enough OpenSSL version from FreeBSD ports.

After you have installed the dependencies, you can proceed with steps outlined under Using pip.

Debian / Ubuntu

Install the dependencies with development headers:

sudo apt-get install python3 python3-dev python3-pip python3-virtualenv \
libacl1-dev libacl1 \
libssl-dev \
liblz4-dev libzstd-dev libxxhash-dev \
build-essential \
pkg-config python3-pkgconfig
sudo apt-get install libfuse-dev fuse    # needed for llfuse
sudo apt-get install libfuse3-dev fuse3  # needed for pyfuse3

In case you get complaints about permission denied on /etc/fuse.conf: on Ubuntu this means your user is not in the fuse group. Add yourself to that group, log out and log in again.

Fedora

Install the dependencies with development headers:

sudo dnf install python3 python3-devel python3-pip python3-virtualenv \
libacl-devel libacl \
openssl-devel \
lz4-devel libzstd-devel xxhash-devel \
pkgconf python3-pkgconfig
sudo dnf install gcc gcc-c++ redhat-rpm-config
sudo dnf install fuse-devel fuse         # needed for llfuse
sudo dnf install fuse3-devel fuse3       # needed for pyfuse3

openSUSE Tumbleweed / Leap

Install the dependencies automatically using zypper:

sudo zypper source-install --build-deps-only borgbackup

Alternatively, you can enumerate all build dependencies in the command line:

sudo zypper install python3 python3-devel \
libacl-devel openssl-devel xxhash-devel libzstd-devel liblz4-devel \
python3-Cython python3-Sphinx python3-msgpack-python python3-pkgconfig pkgconf \
python3-pytest python3-setuptools python3-setuptools_scm \
python3-sphinx_rtd_theme gcc gcc-c++
sudo zypper install python3-llfuse  # llfuse

macOS

When installing borgbackup via Homebrew, the basic dependencies are installed automatically.

For FUSE support to mount the backup archives, you need macFUSE, which is available via github, or Homebrew:

brew install --cask macfuse

When installing Borg via pip, be sure to install the llfuse extra, since macFUSE only supports FUSE API v2. Also, since Homebrew won’t link the installed openssl formula, point pkg-config to the correct path:

PKG_CONFIG_PATH="/usr/local/opt/openssl@1.1/lib/pkgconfig" pip install borgbackup[llfuse]

When working from a borg git repo workdir, you can install dependencies using the Brewfile:

brew install python@3.11  # can be any supported python3 version
brew bundle install  # install requirements from borg repo's ./Brewfile
pip3 install virtualenv pkgconfig

Be aware that for all recent macOS releases you must authorize full disk access. It is no longer sufficient to run borg backups as root. If you have not yet granted full disk access, and you run Borg backup from cron, you will see messages such as:

/Users/you/Pictures/Photos Library.photoslibrary: scandir: [Errno 1] Operation not permitted:

To fix this problem, you should grant full disk access to cron, and to your Terminal application. More information can be found here.

FreeBSD

Listed below are packages you will need to install Borg, its dependencies, and commands to make FUSE work for using the mount command.

pkg install -y python3 pkgconf
pkg install openssl
pkg install liblz4 zstd xxhash
pkg install fusefs-libs  # needed for llfuse
pkg install -y git
python3 -m ensurepip # to install pip for Python3
To use the mount command:
echo 'fuse_load="YES"' >> /boot/loader.conf
echo 'vfs.usermount=1' >> /etc/sysctl.conf
kldload fuse
sysctl vfs.usermount=1

Windows

Note

Running under Windows is experimental.

Warning

This script needs to be run in the UCRT64 environment in MSYS2.

Install the dependencies with the provided script:

./scripts/msys2-install-deps

Windows 10’s Linux Subsystem

Note

Running under Windows 10’s Linux Subsystem is experimental and has not been tested much yet.

Just follow the Ubuntu Linux installation steps. You can omit the FUSE stuff, it won’t work anyway.

Cygwin

Note

Running under Cygwin is experimental and has not been tested much yet.

Use the Cygwin installer to install the dependencies:

python39 python39-devel python39-pkgconfig
python39-setuptools python39-pip python39-wheel python39-virtualenv
libssl-devel libxxhash-devel liblz4-devel libzstd-devel
binutils gcc-g++ git make openssh

Make sure to use a virtual environment to avoid confusions with any Python installed on Windows.

Building a binary on Windows

Note

This is experimental.

Warning

This needs to be run in the UCRT64 environment in MSYS2.

Ensure to install the dependencies as described within Dependencies: Windows.

# Needed for setuptools < 70.2.0 to work - https://www.msys2.org/docs/python/#known-issues
# export SETUPTOOLS_USE_DISTUTILS=stdlib
pip install -e .
pyinstaller -y scripts/borg.exe.spec

A standalone executable will be created in dist/borg.exe.

Using pip

Virtualenv can be used to build and install Borg without affecting the system Python or requiring root access. Using a virtual environment is optional, but recommended except for the most simple use cases.

Ensure to install the dependencies as described within From Source.

Note

If you install into a virtual environment, you need to activate it first (source borg-env/bin/activate), before running borg. Alternatively, symlink borg-env/bin/borg into some directory that is in your PATH so you can run borg.

This will use pip to install the latest release from PyPi:

virtualenv --python=python3 borg-env
source borg-env/bin/activate

# might be required if your tools are outdated
pip install -U pip setuptools wheel

# pkgconfig MUST be available before borg is installed!
pip install pkgconfig

# install Borg + Python dependencies into virtualenv
pip install borgbackup
# or alternatively (if you want FUSE support):
pip install borgbackup[llfuse]  # to use llfuse
pip install borgbackup[pyfuse3]  # to use pyfuse3

To upgrade Borg to a new version later, run the following after activating your virtual environment:

pip install -U borgbackup  # or ... borgbackup[llfuse/pyfuse3]

When doing manual pip installation, man pages are not automatically installed. You can run these commands to install the man pages locally:

# get borg from github
git clone https://github.com/borgbackup/borg.git borg

# Install the files with proper permissions
install -D -m 0644 borg/docs/man/borg*.1* $HOME/.local/share/man/man1/borg.1

# Update the man page cache
mandb

Using git

This uses latest, unreleased development code from git. While we try not to break master, there are no guarantees on anything.

Ensure to install the dependencies as described within From Source.

# get borg from github
git clone https://github.com/borgbackup/borg.git

# create a virtual environment
virtualenv --python=$(which python3) borg-env
source borg-env/bin/activate   # always before using!

# install borg + dependencies into virtualenv
cd borg
pip install -r requirements.d/development.txt
pip install -r requirements.d/docs.txt  # optional, to build the docs

pip install -e .           # in-place editable mode
or
pip install -e .[pyfuse3]  # in-place editable mode, use pyfuse3
or
pip install -e .[llfuse]   # in-place editable mode, use llfuse

# optional: run all the tests, on all installed Python versions
# requires fakeroot, available through your package manager
fakeroot -u tox --skip-missing-interpreters

By default the system installation of python will be used. If you need to use a different version of Python you can install this using pyenv:

...
# create a virtual environment
pyenv install 3.9.0  # minimum, preferably use something more recent!
pyenv global 3.9.0
pyenv local 3.9.0
virtualenv --python=${pyenv which python} borg-env
source borg-env/bin/activate   # always before using!
...

Note

As a developer or power user, you should always use a virtual environment.