amanda-match man page on DragonFly

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AMANDA-MATCH(7)			  Miscellanea		       AMANDA-MATCH(7)

NAME
       amanda-match - Common Amanda Match Expression

DESCRIPTION
       Several Amanda commands allow the user to specify dumps using "match
       expressions". This manual page describes the syntax of these
       expressions.

       In some places, only certain match expressions are allowed. However,
       several commands take a dump specification ("dumpspec") consisting of a
       sequence of several expressions intended to match particular dumps in
       the catalog. Other applications take a DLE specification which
       indicates a set of DLEs to be operated on. These formats are described
       below.

       An expression can be disabled be preceding it with the '=' character,
       in that case, an exact match is used.

       Many program have an '--exact-match' argument that disable expression
       and exact match are used.

HOST & DISK EXPRESSIONS
       The hosts and disks match by word. Each word is a glob expression, and
       words are separated by the character '.' for host expressions and '/'
       for disk expressions. You can anchor the expression on the left with a
       '^' or on the right with a '$'. The matcher is case insensitive for
       hosts but case sensitive for disks. A match succeeds if all words in
       the expression match contiguous words in the host or disk.

       If the disk is a UNC ("\\windows\share") then all '\' are converted to
       '/' before the match. Using '\' is complicated because of the extra
       quoting required by the shell and amanda. It's easier to use '/'
       because it requires less quoting ("//windows/share")

       The special characters follow. Note that the shell interprets some of
       these characters, so when used on the command line, they must be
       escaped appropriately for the shell.

       dot (.)
	   word separator for a host

       /
	   word separator for a disk

       \
	   word separator for a UNC disk

       ^
	   anchor at left of word

       $
	   anchor at right of word

       ?
	   match exactly one character except the separator

       *
	   match zero or more characters except the separator

       **
	   match zero or more characters including the separator

       [...]
	   match exactly one of the characters enclosed by the brackets.

       [!...]
	   match exactly one character that is not enclosed by the brackets.

   Examples
       hosta
	   Will match hosta, foo.hosta.org, and hoSTA.dOMAIna.ORG but not
	   hostb.

       host
	   Will match host but not hosta.

       host?
	   Will match hosta and hostb, but not host or hostabc.

       ho*na
	   Will match hoina but not ho.aina.org.

       ho**na
	   Will match hoina and ho.aina.org.

       ^hosta
	   Will match hosta but not foo.hosta.org.

       sda*
	   Will match /dev/sda1 and /dev/sda12.

       /opt
	   Will match the disk opt but not the host opt.

       (note dots:) .opt.
	   Will match the host opt but not the disk opt.

       /
	   Will match the disk / but no other disk.

       /usr
	   Will match the disks /usr and /usr/local.

       /usr$
	   Will match the disks /usr but not /usr/local.

       share
	   Will match the disks \\windows1\share and \\windows2\share.

       share*
	   Will match the disks \\windows\share1 and \\windows\share2.

       //windows/share
	   Will match the disk \\windows\share.

DATESTAMP EXPRESSIONS
       A datestamp expression is either a prefix of the datestamp, or a range
       expression (separated by '-') matching several prefixes. A leading ^ is
       removed, while arailing $ will force an exact match.

   Examples
       20001212-14
	   match all dates beginning with 20001212, 20001213 or 20001214

       20001212-4
	   same as previous

       20001212-24
	   match all dates between 20001212 and 20001224

       2000121
	   match all dates that start with 2000121 (20001210-20001219)

       2
	   match all dates that start with 2 (20000101-29991231)

       2000-10
	   match all dates between 20000101-20101231

       200010$
	   match only 200010

LEVEL EXPRESSIONS
       Level expressions are either prefix matches e.g., "1", which matches
       "1", "10", and "123", absolute matches e.g., "3$" which only matches
       "3", or a range e.g., "3-5" which only matches levels 3, 4, and 5.

DUMP SPECIFICATIONS
       A dump specification is used to select one or more dumps from the
       catalog. It consists of a sequence of match expressions in the order
       host, disk, datestamp, and level. Note that some commands do not take a
       level argument, out of historical accident. Note, too, that the
       datestamp expression matches the time that the dump was made on the
       Amanda client, rather than the date it was moved to tape.

   Examples
       amtool MyConfig ^vpdesktop$
	   all dumps of host "vpdesktop"

       amtool MyConfig '*' /var/stage
	   All dumps of /var/stage on any host

       amtool MyConfig www1 /var/www '*' www2 /var/www '*'
	   All dumps of /var/www on www1 and www2 (assuming amtool does not
	   require a level argument)

DLE SPECIFICATIONS
       A DLE specification is used to select one or more DLEs. It consists of
       a sequence of match expressions. The first must be a host, and
       subsequent expressions will be experimentally matched against both
       hosts and disks in the disklist(5), preferring hosts. This dynamic
       matching process can lead to odd behavior in extreme cases (e.g., where
       a disk and a host have the same name), but for most uses does exactly
       what is expected.

   Examples
       amtool MyConfig vpdesktop /home/anderson
	   /home/anderson on host vpdesktop

       amtool MyConfig '*' ^/etc '*' ^/var
	   All DLEs matching ^/var or ^/etc on any host

       amtool MyConfig web1 www web2 www
	   If no host matches "www", all DLEs matching www on hosts web1 and
	   web2. If a host matches "www", then all DLEs on hosts www, web1,
	   and web2.

SEE ALSO
       amanda(8), amanda(8), amfetchdump(8), amrestore(8), amadmin(8),
       amvault(8), amflush(8), amdump(8)

       The Amanda Wiki: : http://wiki.zmanda.com/

AUTHOR
       Dustin J. Mitchell <dustin@zmanda.com>
	   Zmanda, Inc. (http://www.zmanda.com)

Amanda 3.3.6			  07/09/2014		       AMANDA-MATCH(7)
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