backup man page on IRIX

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BACKUP(1M)							    BACKUP(1M)

NAME
     backup - backup files and directories now, later, or recurring

SYNOPSIS
     /usr/sysadm/privbin/backup -f device -n [ options ]
     /usr/sysadm/privbin/backup -f device -l time [ options ]
     /usr/sysadm/privbin/backup -f device -d time [ options ]
     /usr/sysadm/privbin/backup -f device -w day:time [ options ]

DESCRIPTION
     backup is a privileged command that performs a backup of the entire
     system or of a selected list of files.  The backup can be performed now,
     once at a later date, or recurring either daily or weekly.

     backup uses cpio(1) to write its output.  device would typically be a
     tape device, but can also be a file for backing up to disk.

     -n is used to specify that a backup occur now, -l is for backups which
     are occur once at a later date, -d is for daily backups, and -w is for
     weekly backups.  Backups that occur once at a later date are scheduled
     using at(1), and recurring backups are scheduled using cron(1).

     After scheduling a later or recurring backup, backup prints to its output
     a string which uniquely identifies this backup to the system.  This
     string can be used to unschedule the backup using unschedBackup(1M).

     backup can be run by ordinary users without going through runpriv(1M).
     Ordinary users cannot do full system backups, and backups made by
     ordinary users will not be able to back up files that the user does not
     have permission to read.

     When doing a full system backup, backup does not back up nfs mounted
     files.  When backing up a selected list of files, backup does back up nfs
     mounted files.

OPTIONS
     -f device Specifies where the backup is to be written.  Typically this
	       would be a tape device such as /dev/tape or
	       user@remotehost:/dev/tape, but can also be a file for backup to
	       disk.

     -n	       Specifies that the backup is to occur now.

     -l time   Specifies that the backup is to occur at time.  time is in
	       seconds since midnight Jan 1, 1970.

     -d time   Specifies that the backup is to occur daily.  time is the
	       number of seconds after midnight to start the backup.

     -w day:time
	       Specifies that the backup is to occur weekly.  day is the
	       number of days after after Sunday to start the backup, and time

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BACKUP(1M)							    BACKUP(1M)

	       is the number of seconds after midnight to start the backup.

     -i indentifier
	       identifier is to be associated with this backup.	 identifier is
	       displayed in the BackupAndRestoreManager(1M) along with the
	       icon for this backup.

     -v	       Output of the backup is to be verbose.  Specifying -v to backup
	       causes v to be included as an option to cpio(1).

     -m email-address
	       For later and recurring backups, send a backup report to
	       email-address.  If -v was specified, this will include a list
	       of the files which were backed up.  If this option is not
	       specified, the user that scheduled the backup will receive mail
	       from cron.

     -s source source is a file containing a list of files to be backed up,
	       one per line.  These can either be full paths, or can be
	       relative to the root specified with the -r option.  If the -s
	       option is not specified, this will be a full system backup.

     -r root   Specify that the backup should be relative to root.  This has
	       no effect unless the paths in source are relative, and never
	       has an effect on full backups.

FILES
     /var/sysadm/backups/*    File lists for later and recurring backups
			      scheduled by root.
     $HOME/.saBackupLists/*   File lists for later and recurring backups
			      scheduled by non-root users.
     $HOME/.saBackupSched/*   Information about later backups for the
			      BackupAndRestoreManager(1M).  This duplicates
			      information stored by at(1) which is not
			      readable by non-root users and difficult to
			      parse.  Information about recurring backups is
			      retrieved using crontab(1).

SEE ALSO
     cpio(1), cpio(1), cron(1), at(1), crontab(1), sysmgr(1M),
     BackupAndRestoreManager(1M), restore(1M), unschedBackup(1M).

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