]> git.wh0rd.org - dump.git/blob - dump/dump.8.in
Correct the wording on the man page to make it clear that -F is not used for the...
[dump.git] / dump / dump.8.in
1 .\" Copyright (c) 1980, 1991, 1993
2 .\" Regents of the University of California.
3 .\" All rights reserved.
4 .\"
5 .\" Redistribution and use in source and binary forms, with or without
6 .\" modification, are permitted provided that the following conditions
7 .\" are met:
8 .\" 1. Redistributions of source code must retain the above copyright
9 .\" notice, this list of conditions and the following disclaimer.
10 .\" 2. Redistributions in binary form must reproduce the above copyright
11 .\" notice, this list of conditions and the following disclaimer in the
12 .\" documentation and/or other materials provided with the distribution.
13 .\" 3. All advertising materials mentioning features or use of this software
14 .\" must display the following acknowledgement:
15 .\" This product includes software developed by the University of
16 .\" California, Berkeley and its contributors.
17 .\" 4. Neither the name of the University nor the names of its contributors
18 .\" may be used to endorse or promote products derived from this software
19 .\" without specific prior written permission.
20 .\"
21 .\" THIS SOFTWARE IS PROVIDED BY THE REGENTS AND CONTRIBUTORS ``AS IS'' AND
22 .\" ANY EXPRESS OR IMPLIED WARRANTIES, INCLUDING, BUT NOT LIMITED TO, THE
23 .\" IMPLIED WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTABILITY AND FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE
24 .\" ARE DISCLAIMED. IN NO EVENT SHALL THE REGENTS OR CONTRIBUTORS BE LIABLE
25 .\" FOR ANY DIRECT, INDIRECT, INCIDENTAL, SPECIAL, EXEMPLARY, OR CONSEQUENTIAL
26 .\" DAMAGES (INCLUDING, BUT NOT LIMITED TO, PROCUREMENT OF SUBSTITUTE GOODS
27 .\" OR SERVICES; LOSS OF USE, DATA, OR PROFITS; OR BUSINESS INTERRUPTION)
28 .\" HOWEVER CAUSED AND ON ANY THEORY OF LIABILITY, WHETHER IN CONTRACT, STRICT
29 .\" LIABILITY, OR TORT (INCLUDING NEGLIGENCE OR OTHERWISE) ARISING IN ANY WAY
30 .\" OUT OF THE USE OF THIS SOFTWARE, EVEN IF ADVISED OF THE POSSIBILITY OF
31 .\" SUCH DAMAGE.
32 .\"
33 .\" $Id: dump.8.in,v 1.46 2002/11/12 13:05:31 stelian Exp $
34 .\"
35 .TH DUMP 8 "version __VERSION__ of __DATE__" BSD "System management commands"
36 .SH NAME
37 dump \- ext2/3 filesystem backup
38 .SH SYNOPSIS
39 .B dump
40 [\fB\-0123456789ackMnqSuv\fR]
41 [\fB\-A \fIfile\fR]
42 [\fB\-B \fIrecords\fR]
43 [\fB\-b \fIblocksize\fR]
44 [\fB\-d \fIdensity\fR]
45 [\fB\-e \fIinode numbers\fR]
46 [\fB\-E \fIfile\fR]
47 [\fB\-f \fIfile\fR]
48 [\fB\-F \fIscript\fR]
49 [\fB\-h \fIlevel\fR]
50 [\fB\-I \fInr errors\fR]
51 [\fB\-j\fIcompression level\fR]
52 [\fB\-L \fIlabel\fR]
53 [\fB\-Q \fIfile\fR]
54 [\fB\-s \fIfeet\fR]
55 [\fB\-T \fIdate\fR]
56 [\fB\-z\fIcompression level\fR]
57 .I files-to-dump
58 .PP
59 .B dump
60 [\fB\-W \fR| \fB\-w\fR]
61 .PP
62 (The 4.3BSD option syntax is implemented for backward compatibility but is not
63 documented here.)
64 .SH DESCRIPTION
65 .B Dump
66 examines files on an ext2/3 filesystem and determines which files need to be
67 backed up. These files are copied to the given disk, tape or other storage
68 medium for safe keeping (see the
69 .B \-f
70 option below for doing remote backups). A dump that is larger than the output
71 medium is broken into multiple volumes. On most media the size is determined by
72 writing until an end-of-media indication is returned.
73 .PP
74 On media that cannot reliably return an end-of-media indication (such as some
75 cartridge tape drives), each volume is of a fixed size; the actual size is
76 determined by specifying cartridge media, or via the tape size, density and/or
77 block count options below. By default, the same output file name is used for
78 each volume after prompting the operator to change media.
79 .PP
80 .I files-to-dump
81 is either a mountpoint of a filesystem or a list of files and directories to be
82 backed up as a subset of a filesystem. In the former case, either the path to a
83 mounted filesystem or the device of an unmounted filesystem can be used. In the
84 latter case, certain restrictions are placed on the backup:
85 .B \-u
86 is not allowed, the only dump level that is supported is
87 .B 0
88 and all the files and directories must reside on the same filesystem.
89 .SH OPTIONS
90 The following options are supported by
91 .B dump:
92 .TP
93 .BI \-0\-9
94 Dump levels. A level 0, full backup, guarantees the entire file system is
95 copied (but see also the
96 .B \-h
97 option below). A level number above 0, incremental backup, tells
98 .B dump
99 to
100 copy all files new or modified since the last dump of a lower level. The
101 default level is 9.
102 .TP
103 .BI \-a
104 \*(lqauto-size\*(rq. Bypass all tape length calculations, and write until an
105 end-of-media indication is returned. This works best for most modern tape
106 drives, and is the default. Use of this option is particularly recommended when
107 appending to an existing tape, or using a tape drive with hardware compression
108 (where you can never be sure about the compression ratio).
109 .TP
110 .BI \-A " archive_file"
111 Archive a dump table-of-contents in the specified
112 .I archive_file
113 to be used by
114 .BR restore (8)
115 to determine whether a file is in the dump file that is being restored.
116 .TP
117 .BI \-b " blocksize"
118 The number of kilobytes per dump record. The default blocksize is 10
119 and the maximal value is 1024.
120 Note however that, since the IO system slices all requests into chunks
121 of
122 .B MAXBSIZE
123 (which can be as low as 64kB), you can experience problems with
124 .BR dump (8)
125 and
126 .BR restore (8)
127 when using a higher value, depending on your kernel and/or libC versions.
128 .TP
129 .BI \-B " records"
130 The number of 1 kB blocks per volume. Not normally required, as
131 .B dump
132 can detect end-of-media. When the specified size is reached,
133 .B dump
134 waits for you to change the volume. This option overrides the calculation of
135 tape size based on length and density. If compression is on this limits the
136 size of the compressed output per volume.
137 .TP
138 .BI \-c
139 Change the defaults for use with a cartridge tape drive, with a density of 8000
140 bpi, and a length of 1700 feet. Specifying a cartridge drive overrides the
141 end-of-media detection.
142 .TP
143 .BI \-d " density"
144 Set tape density to
145 .IR density .
146 The default is 1600BPI. Specifying a tape density overrides the end-of-media
147 detection.
148 .TP
149 .BI \-e " inodes"
150 Exclude
151 .I inodes
152 from the dump. The
153 .I inodes
154 parameter is a comma separated list of inode numbers (you can use
155 .BR stat (1)
156 to find the inode number for a file or directory).
157 .TP
158 .BI \-E " file"
159 Read list of inodes to be excluded from the dump from the text file
160 .IR file .
161 The file
162 .I file
163 should be an ordinary file containing inode numbers separated by newlines.
164 .TP
165 .BI \-f " file"
166 Write the backup to
167 .IR file ;
168 .I file
169 may be a special device file like
170 .I /dev/st0
171 (a tape drive),
172 .I /dev/rsd1c
173 (a floppy disk drive), an ordinary file, or
174 .I \-
175 (the standard output). Multiple file names may be given as a single argument
176 separated by commas. Each file will be used for one dump volume in the order
177 listed; if the dump requires more volumes than the number of names given,
178 the last file name will used for all remaining volumes after prompting for
179 media changes. If the name of the file is of the form
180 .I host:file
181 or
182 .I user@host:file
183 .B dump
184 writes to the named file on the remote host using
185 .BR rmt (8).
186 The default path name of the remote
187 .BR rmt (8)
188 program is
189 .IR /etc/rmt ;
190 this can be overridden by the environment variable
191 .BR RMT .
192 .TP
193 .BI \-F " script"
194 Run script at the end of each tape (except for the last one).
195 The device name and the current volume number are passed on the
196 command line. The script must return 0 if
197 .B dump
198 should continue without asking the user to change the tape, 1 if
199 .B dump
200 should continue but ask the user to change the tape. Any other exit code will
201 cause
202 .B dump
203 to abort. For security reasons,
204 .B dump
205 reverts back to the real user ID and the real group ID before running the
206 script.
207 .TP
208 .BI \-h " level"
209 Honor the user
210 .B nodump
211 flag
212 .B UF_NODUMP
213 only for dumps at or above the given
214 .IR level .
215 The default honor level is 1, so that incremental backups omit such files but
216 full backups retain them.
217 .TP
218 .BI \-I " nr errors"
219 By default,
220 .B dump
221 will ignore the first 32 read errors on the file system before asking for
222 operator intervention. You can change this using this flag to any value. This
223 is useful when running
224 .B dump
225 on an active filesystem where read errors simply indicate an inconsistency
226 between the mapping and dumping passes.
227 .TP
228 .BI \-j "compression level"
229 Compress every block to be written on the tape using bzlib library. This option
230 will work only when dumping to a file or pipe or, when dumping to a tape drive,
231 if the tape drive is capable of writing variable length blocks. You will need
232 at least the 0.4b24 version of
233 .B restore
234 in order to extract compressed tapes. Tapes written using compression will not
235 be compatible with the BSD tape format. The (optional) parameter specifies the
236 compression level bzlib will use. The default compression level is 2. If the
237 optional parameter is specified, there should be no white space between the
238 option letter and the parameter.
239 .TP
240 .BI \-k
241 Use Kerberos authentication to talk to remote tape servers. (Only available if
242 this option was enabled when
243 .B dump
244 was compiled.)
245 .TP
246 .BI \-L " label"
247 The user-supplied text string
248 .I label
249 is placed into the dump header, where tools like
250 .BR restore (8)
251 and
252 .BR file (8)
253 can access it. Note that this label is limited to be at most
254 .B LBLSIZE
255 (currently 16) characters, which must include the terminating \e0.
256 .TP
257 .BI \-m
258 If this flag is specified,
259 .B dump
260 will optimise the output for inodes having been changed but not modified since
261 the last dump ('changed' and 'modified' have the meaning defined in
262 .BR stat (2)
263 ). For those inodes,
264 .B dump
265 will save only the metadata, instead of saving the entire inode contents.
266 Inodes which are either directories or have been modified since the last dump
267 are saved in a regular way. Uses of this flag must be consistent, meaning that
268 either every dump in an incremental dump set have the flag, or no one has it.
269 .IP
270 Tapes written using such 'metadata only' inodes will not be compatible with the
271 BSD tape format or older versions of
272 .B restore.
273 .TP
274 .BI \-M
275 Enable the multi-volume feature. The name specified with
276 .B f
277 is treated as a prefix and
278 .B dump
279 writes in sequence to
280 .I <prefix>001, <prefix>002
281 etc. This can be useful when dumping to files on an ext2 partition, in order to
282 bypass the 2GB file size limitation.
283 .TP
284 .BI \-n
285 Whenever
286 .B dump
287 requires operator attention, notify all operators in the group
288 .B operator
289 by means similar to a
290 .BR wall (1).
291 .TP
292 .BI \-q
293 Make
294 .B dump
295 abort immediately whenever operator attention is required, without prompting in
296 case of write errors, tape changes etc.
297 .TP
298 .BI \-Q " file"
299 Enable the Quick File Access support. Tape positions for each inode are stored
300 into the file
301 .I file
302 which is used by
303 .B restore
304 (if called with parameter
305 .B \-Q
306 and the filename) to directly position the tape at the file
307 .B restore
308 is currently working on. This saves hours when restoring single files from
309 large backups, saves the tapes and the drive's head.
310 .IP
311 It is recommended to set up the st driver to return logical tape positions
312 rather than physical before calling
313 .B dump/restore
314 with parameter
315 .BR \-Q .
316 Since not all tape devices support physical tape positions those tape devices
317 return an error during
318 .B dump/restore
319 when the st driver is set to the default physical setting. Please see the
320 .BR st (4)
321 man page, option
322 .B MTSETDRVBUFFER
323 , or the
324 .BR mt (1)
325 man page, on how to set the driver to return logical tape positions.
326 .IP
327 Before calling
328 .B restore
329 with parameter
330 .BR \-Q ,
331 always make sure the st driver is set to return the same type of tape position
332 used during the call to
333 .BR dump .
334 Otherwise
335 .B restore
336 may be confused.
337 .IP
338 This option can be used when dumping to local tapes (see above) or to local
339 files.
340 .TP
341 .BI \-s " feet"
342 Attempt to calculate the amount of tape needed at a particular density. If this
343 amount is exceeded,
344 .B dump
345 prompts for a new tape. It is recommended to be a bit conservative on this
346 option. The default tape length is 2300 feet. Specifying the tape size
347 overrides end-of-media detection.
348 .TP
349 .BI \-S
350 Size estimate. Determine the amount of space that is needed to perform the dump
351 without actually doing it, and display the estimated number of bytes it will
352 take. This is useful with incremental dumps to determine how many volumes of
353 media will be needed.
354 .TP
355 .BI \-T " date"
356 Use the specified date as the starting time for the dump instead of the time
357 determined from looking in
358 .I __DUMPDATES__ .
359 The format of
360 .I date
361 is the same as that of
362 .BR ctime (3).
363 This option is useful for automated dump scripts that wish to dump over a
364 specific period of time. The
365 .B \-T
366 option is mutually exclusive from the
367 .B \-u
368 option.
369 .TP
370 .BI \-u
371 Update the file
372 .I __DUMPDATES__
373 after a successful dump. The format of
374 .I __DUMPDATES__
375 is readable by people, consisting of one free format record per line:
376 filesystem name, increment level and
377 .BR ctime (3)
378 format dump date. There may be only one entry per filesystem at each level. The
379 file
380 .I __DUMPDATES__
381 may be edited to change any of the fields, if necessary.
382 .TP
383 .BI \-v
384 The
385 .B \-v
386 (verbose) makes
387 .B dump
388 to print extra information which could be helpful in debug sessions.
389 .TP
390 .BI \-W
391 .B Dump
392 tells the operator what file systems need to be dumped. This information is
393 gleaned from the files
394 .I __DUMPDATES__
395 and
396 .IR /etc/fstab .
397 The
398 .B \-W
399 option causes
400 .B dump
401 to print out, for all file systems in
402 .I __DUMPDATES__ ,
403 and regognized file systems in
404 .IR /etc/fstab .
405 the most recent dump date and level, and highlights those that should be
406 dumped. If the
407 .B \-W
408 option is set, all other options are ignored, and
409 .B dump
410 exits immediately.
411 .TP
412 .BI \-w
413 Is like
414 .BR \-W ,
415 but prints only recognized filesystems in
416 .I /etc/fstab
417 which need to be dumped.
418 .TP
419 .BI \-z "compression level"
420 Compress every block to be written on the tape using zlib library. This option
421 will work only when dumping to a file or pipe or, when dumping to a tape drive,
422 if the tape drive is capable of writing variable length blocks. You will need
423 at least the 0.4b22 version of
424 .B restore
425 in order to extract compressed tapes. Tapes written using compression will not
426 be compatible with the BSD tape format. The (optional) parameter specifies the
427 compression level zlib will use. The default compression level is 2. If the
428 optional parameter is specified, there should be no white space between the
429 option letter and the parameter.
430 .PP
431 .B Dump
432 requires operator intervention on these conditions: end of tape, end of dump,
433 tape write error, tape open error or disk read error (if there is more than a
434 threshold of nr errors). In addition to alerting all operators implied by the
435 .B \-n
436 key,
437 .B dump
438 interacts with the operator on dump's control terminal at times when
439 .B dump
440 can no longer proceed, or if something is grossly wrong. All questions
441 .B dump
442 poses
443 .I must
444 be answered by typing \*(lqyes\*(rq or \*(lqno\*(rq, appropriately.
445 .PP
446 Since making a dump involves a lot of time and effort for full dumps,
447 .B dump
448 checkpoints itself at the start of each tape volume. If writing that volume
449 fails for some reason,
450 .B dump
451 will, with operator permission, restart itself from the checkpoint after the
452 old tape has been rewound and removed, and a new tape has been mounted.
453 .PP
454 .B Dump
455 tells the operator what is going on at periodic intervals, including usually
456 low estimates of the number of blocks to write, the number of tapes it will
457 take, the time to completion, and the time to the tape change. The output is
458 verbose, so that others know that the terminal controlling
459 .B dump
460 is busy, and will be for some time.
461 .PP
462 In the event of a catastrophic disk event, the time required to restore all the
463 necessary backup tapes or files to disk can be kept to a minimum by staggering
464 the incremental dumps. An efficient method of staggering incremental dumps to
465 minimize the number of tapes follows:
466 .IP \(em
467 Always start with a level 0 backup, for example:
468 .RS 14
469 .B /sbin/dump -0u -f /dev/st0 /usr/src
470 .RE
471 .IP
472 This should be done at set intervals, say once a month or once every two months,
473 and on a set of fresh tapes that is saved forever.
474 .IP \(em
475 After a level 0, dumps of active file systems are taken on a daily basis, using
476 a modified Tower of Hanoi algorithm, with this sequence of dump levels:
477 .RS 14
478 .B 3 2 5 4 7 6 9 8 9 9 ...
479 .RE
480 .IP
481 For the daily dumps, it should be possible to use a fixed number of tapes for
482 each day, used on a weekly basis. Each week, a level 1 dump is taken, and the
483 daily Hanoi sequence repeats beginning with 3. For weekly dumps, another fixed
484 set of tapes per dumped file system is used, also on a cyclical basis.
485 .PP
486 After several months or so, the daily and weekly tapes should get rotated out
487 of the dump cycle and fresh tapes brought in.
488 .SH ENVIRONMENT
489 .TP
490 .B TAPE
491 If no
492 .B \-f
493 option was specified,
494 .B dump
495 will use the device specified via
496 .B TAPE
497 as the dump device.
498 .B TAPE
499 may be of the form
500 .IR tapename ,
501 .IR host:tapename ,
502 or
503 .IR user@host:tapename .
504 .TP
505 .B RMT
506 The environment variable
507 .B RMT
508 will be used to determine the pathname of the remote
509 .BR rmt (8)
510 program.
511 .TP
512 .B RSH
513 .B Dump
514 uses the contents of this variable to determine the name of the remote shell
515 command to use when doing remote backups (rsh, ssh etc.). If this variable is
516 not set,
517 .BR rcmd (3)
518 will be used, but only root will be able to do remote backups.
519 .SH FILES
520 .TP
521 .I /dev/st0
522 default tape unit to dump to
523 .TP
524 .I __DUMPDATES__
525 dump date records
526 .TP
527 .I /etc/fstab
528 dump table: file systems and frequency
529 .TP
530 .I /etc/group
531 to find group
532 .I operator
533 .SH SEE ALSO
534 .BR fstab (5),
535 .BR restore (8),
536 .BR rmt (8)
537 .SH DIAGNOSTICS
538 Many, and verbose.
539 .SH EXIT STATUS
540 .B Dump
541 exits with zero status on success. Startup errors are indicated with an exit
542 code of 1; abnormal termination is indicated with an exit code of 3.
543 .SH BUGS
544 It might be considered a bug that this version of dump can only handle ext2/3
545 filesystems. Specifically, it does not work with FAT filesystems.
546 .PP
547 Fewer than 32 read errors (change this with
548 .BR \-I )
549 on the filesystem are ignored. If noticing read errors is important, the output
550 from dump can be parsed to look for lines that contain the text 'read error'.
551 .PP
552 When a read error occurs,
553 .B dump
554 prints out the corresponding physical disk block and sector number and the
555 ext2/3 logical block number. It doesn't print out the corresponing file name or
556 even the inode number. The user has to use
557 .BR debugfs (8),
558 commands
559 .B ncheck
560 and
561 .B icheck
562 to translate the
563 .B ext2blk
564 number printed out by
565 .B dump
566 into an inode number, then into a file name.
567 .PP
568 Each reel requires a new process, so parent processes for reels already written
569 just hang around until the entire tape is written.
570 .PP
571 The estimated number of tapes is not correct if compression is on.
572 .PP
573 It would be nice if
574 .B dump
575 knew about the dump sequence, kept track of the tapes scribbled on, told the
576 operator which tape to mount when, and provided more assistance for the
577 operator running
578 .BR restore .
579 .PP
580 .B Dump
581 cannot do remote backups without being run as root, due to its security history.
582 Presently, it works if you set it setuid (like it used to be), but this might
583 constitute a security risk. Note that you can set
584 .B RSH
585 to use a remote shell program instead.
586 .SH AUTHOR
587 The
588 .B dump/restore
589 backup suite was ported to Linux's Second Extended File System by Remy Card
590 <card@Linux.EU.Org>. He maintained the initial versions of
591 .B dump
592 (up and including 0.4b4, released in january 1997).
593 .PP
594 Starting with 0.4b5, the new maintainer is Stelian Pop <stelian@popies.net>.
595 .SH AVAILABILITY
596 The
597 .B dump/restore
598 backup suite is available from <http://dump.sourceforge.net>
599 .SH HISTORY
600 A
601 .B dump
602 command appeared in
603 .B Version 6 AT&T UNIX.