backup_dumpinfo man page on Scientific

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BACKUP_DUMPINFO(8)	     AFS Command Reference	    BACKUP_DUMPINFO(8)

NAME
       backup_dumpinfo - Displays a dump record from the Backup Database

SYNOPSIS
       backup dumpinfo [-ndumps <number of dumps>]
	   [-id <dump id>] [-verbose] [-localauth]
	   [-cell <cell name>] [-help]

       backup dumpi [-n <no. of dumps>] [-i <dump id>] [-v]
	   [-l] [-c <cell name>] [-h]

DESCRIPTION
       The backup dumpinfo command formats and displays the Backup Database
       record for the specified dumps. To specify how many of the most recent
       dumps to display, starting with the newest one and going back in time,
       use the -ndumps argument. To display more detailed information about a
       single dump, use the -id argument. To display the records for the 10
       most recent dumps, omit both the -ndumps and -id arguments.

       The -verbose flag produces very detailed information that is useful
       mostly for debugging purposes. It can be combined only with the -id
       argument.

OPTIONS
       -ndumps <number of dumps>
	   Displays the Backup Database record for each of the specified
	   number of dumps that were most recently performed. If the database
	   contains fewer dumps than are requested, the output includes the
	   records for all existing dumps. Do not combine this argument with
	   the -id or -verbose options; omit all options to display the
	   records for the last 10 dumps.

       -id <dump id>
	   Specifies the dump ID number of a single dump for which to display
	   the Backup Database record. Precede the dump id value with the -id
	   switch; otherwise, the command interpreter interprets it as the
	   value of the -ndumps argument. Combine this argument with the
	   -verbose flag, but not with the -ndumps argument; omit all options
	   to display the records for the last 10 dumps.

       -verbose
	   Provides more detailed information about the dump specified with
	   the -id argument, which must be provided along with it. Do not
	   combine this flag with the -ndumps argument.

       -localauth
	   Constructs a server ticket using a key from the local
	   /usr/afs/etc/KeyFile file. The backup command interpreter presents
	   it to the Backup Server, Volume Server and VL Server during mutual
	   authentication. Do not combine this flag with the -cell argument.
	   For more details, see backup(8).

       -cell <cell name>
	   Names the cell in which to run the command. Do not combine this
	   argument with the -localauth flag. For more details, see backup(8).

       -help
	   Prints the online help for this command. All other valid options
	   are ignored.

OUTPUT
       If the -ndumps argument is provided, the output presents the following
       information in table form, with a separate line for each dump:

       dumpid
	   The dump ID number.

       parentid
	   The dump ID number of the dump's parent dump. A value of 0 (zero)
	   identifies a full dump.

       lv  The depth in the dump hierarchy of the dump level used to create
	   the dump. A value of 0 (zero) identifies a full dump, in which case
	   the value in the "parentid" field is also 0. A value of 1 or
	   greater indicates an incremental dump made at the corresponding
	   level in the dump hierarchy.

       created
	   The date and time at which the Backup System started the dump
	   operation that created the dump.

       nt  The number of tapes that contain the data in the dump. A value of 0
	   (zero) indicates that the dump operation was terminated or failed.
	   Use the backup deletedump command to remove such entries.

       nvols
	   The number of volumes from which the dump includes data. If a
	   volume spans tapes, it is counted twice. A value of 0 (zero)
	   indicates that the dump operation was terminated or failed; the
	   value in the "nt" field is also 0 in this case.

       dump name
	   The dump name in the form

	      <volume_set_name>.<dump_level_name> (<initial_dump_ID>)

	   where <volume_set_name> is the name of the volume set, and
	   <dump_level_name> is the last element in the dump level pathname at
	   which the volume set was dumped.

	   The <initial_dump_ID>, if displayed, is the dump ID of the initial
	   dump in the dump set to which this dump belongs. If there is no
	   value in parentheses, the dump is the initial dump in a dump set
	   that has no appended dumps.

       If the -id argument is provided alone, the first line of output begins
       with the string "Dump" and reports information for the entire dump in
       the following fields:

       id  The dump ID number.

       level
	   The depth in the dump hierarchy of the dump level used to create
	   the dump. A value of 0 (zero) identifies a full dump. A value of 1
	   (one) or greater indicates an incremental dump made at the
	   specified level in the dump hierarchy.

       volumes
	   The number of volumes for which the dump includes data.

       created
	   The date and time at which the dump operation began.

       If an XBSA server was the backup medium for the dump (rather than a
       tape device or backup data file), the following line appears next:

	  Backup Service: <XBSA_program>: Server: <hostname>

       where <XBSA_program> is the name of the XBSA-compliant program and
       <hostname> is the name of the machine on which the program runs.

       Next the output includes an entry for each tape that houses volume data
       from the dump. Following the string "Tape", the first two lines of each
       entry report information about that tape in the following fields:

       name
	   The tape's permanent name if it has one, or its AFS tape name
	   otherwise, and its tape ID number in parentheses.

       nVolumes
	   The number of volumes for which this tape includes dump data.

       created
	   The date and time at which the Tape Coordinator began writing data
	   to this tape.

       Following another blank line, the tape-specific information concludes
       with a table that includes a line for each volume dump on the tape. The
       information appears in columns with the following headings:

       Pos The relative position of each volume in this tape or file. On a
	   tape, the counter begins at position 2 (the tape label occupies
	   position 1), and increments by one for each volume. For volumes in
	   a backup data file, the position numbers start with 1 and do not
	   usually increment only by one, because each is the ordinal of the
	   16 KB offset in the file at which the volume's data begins. The
	   difference between the position numbers therefore indicates how
	   many 16 KB blocks each volume's data occupies. For example, if the
	   second volume is at position 5 and the third volume in the list is
	   at position 9, that means that the dump of the second volume
	   occupies 64 KB (four 16-KB blocks) of space in the file.

       Clone time
	   For a backup or read-only volume, the time at which it was cloned
	   from its read/write source. For a Read/Write volume, it is the same
	   as the dump creation date reported on the first line of the output.

       Nbytes
	   The number of bytes of data in the dump of the volume.

       Volume
	   The volume name, complete with ".backup" or ".readonly" extension
	   if appropriate.

       If both the -id and -verbose options are provided, the output is
       divided into several sections:

       ·   The first section, headed by the underlined string "Dump", includes
	   information about the entire dump. The fields labeled "id",
	   "level", "created", and "nVolumes" report the same values (though
	   in a different order) as appear on the first line of output when
	   the -id argument is provided by itself.  Other fields of potential
	   interest to the backup operator are:

	   Group id
	       The dump's group ID number, which is recorded in the dump's
	       Backup Database record if the "GROUPID" instruction appears in
	       the Tape Coordinator's /usr/afs/backup/CFG_tcid file when the
	       dump is created.

	   maxTapes
	       The number of tapes that contain the dump set to which this
	       dump belongs.

	   Start Tape Seq
	       The ordinal of the tape on which this dump begins in the set of
	       tapes that contain the dump set.

       ·   For each tape that contains data from this dump, there follows a
	   section headed by the underlined string "Tape". The fields labeled
	   "name", "written", and "nVolumes" report the same values (though in
	   a different order) as appear on the second and third lines of
	   output when the -id argument is provided by itself. Other fields of
	   potential interest to the backup operator are:

	   expires
	       The date and time when this tape can be recycled, because all
	       dumps it contains have expired.

	   nMBytes Data and nBytes Data
	       Summed together, these fields represent the total amount of
	       dumped data actually from volumes (as opposed to labels,
	       filemarks, and other markers).

	   KBytes Tape Used
	       The number of kilobytes of tape (or disk space, for a backup
	       data file) used to store the dump data. It is generally larger
	       than the sum of the values in the "nMBytes Data" and "nBytes
	       Data" fields, because it includes the space required for the
	       label, file marks and other markers, and because the Backup
	       System writes data at 16 KB offsets, even if the data in a
	       given block doesn't fill the entire 16 KB.

       ·   For each volume on a given tape, there follows a section headed by
	   the underlined string "Volume". The fields labeled "name",
	   "position", "clone", and "nBytes" report the same values (though in
	   a different order) as appear in the table that lists the volumes in
	   each tape when the -id argument is provided by itself. Other fields
	   of potential interest to the backup operator are:

	   id  The volume ID.

	   tape
	       The name of the tape containing this volume data.

EXAMPLES
       The following example displays information about the last five dumps:

	  % backup dumpinfo -ndumps 5
	     dumpid   parentid lv created	   nt nvols dump name
	  924424000	     0 0  04/18/1999 04:26  1	 22 usr.sun (924424000)
	  924685000  924424000 1  04/21/1999 04:56  1	 62 usr.wed (924424000)
	  924773000  924424000 1  04/22/1999 05:23  1	 46 usr.thu (924424000)
	  924860000  924424000 1  04/23/1999 05:33  1	 58 usr.fri (924424000)
	  925033000	     0 0  04/25/1999 05:36  2	 73 sys.week

       The following example displays a more detailed record for a single
       dump.

	  % backup dumpinfo -id 922097346
	  Dump: id 922097346, level 0, volumes 1, created Mon Mar 22 05:09:06 1999
	  Tape: name monday.user.backup (922097346)
	  nVolumes 1, created 03/22/1999 05:09
	   Pos	     Clone time	  Nbytes Volume
	     1 03/22/1999 04:43 27787914 user.pat.backup

       The following example displays even more detailed information about the
       dump displayed in the previous example (dump ID 922097346). This
       example includes only one exemplar of each type of section ("Dump",
       "Tape", and "Volume"):

	  % backup dumpinfo -id 922097346 -verbose
	  Dump
	  ----
	  id = 922097346
	  Initial id = 0
	  Appended id = 922099568
	  parent = 0
	  level = 0
	  flags = 0x0
	  volumeSet = user
	  dump path = /monday1
	  name = user.monday1
	  created = Mon Mar 22 05:09:06 1999
	  nVolumes = 1
	  id  = 0
	  tapeServer =
	  format= user.monday1.%d
	  maxTapes = 1
	  Start Tape Seq = 1
	  name = pat
	  instance =
	  cell =
	  Tape
	  ----
	  tape name = monday.user.backup
	  AFS tape name = user.monday1.1
	  flags = 0x20
	  written = Mon Mar 22 05:09:06 1999
	  expires = NEVER
	  kBytes Tape Used = 121
	  nMBytes Data = 0
	  nBytes  Data = 19092
	  nFiles = 0
	  nVolumes = 1
	  seq = 1
	  tapeid = 0
	  useCount = 1
	  dump = 922097346
	  Volume
	  ------
	  name = user.pat.backup
	  flags = 0x18
	  id = 536871640
	  server =
	  partition = 0
	  nFrags = 1
	  position = 2
	  clone = Mon Mar 22 04:43:06 1999
	  startByte = 0
	  nBytes = 19092
	  seq = 0
	  dump = 922097346
	  tape = user.monday1.1

PRIVILEGE REQUIRED
       The issuer must be listed in the /usr/afs/etc/UserList file on every
       machine where the Backup Server is running, or must be logged onto a
       server machine as the local superuser "root" if the -localauth flag is
       included.

SEE ALSO
       butc(5), backup(8), backup_deletedump(8)

COPYRIGHT
       IBM Corporation 2000. <http://www.ibm.com/> All Rights Reserved.

       This documentation is covered by the IBM Public License Version 1.0.
       It was converted from HTML to POD by software written by Chas Williams
       and Russ Allbery, based on work by Alf Wachsmann and Elizabeth Cassell.

OpenAFS				  2013-10-09		    BACKUP_DUMPINFO(8)
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