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DAR_MANAGER(1)							DAR_MANAGER(1)

NAME
       dar_manager  - compiles several archives contents in a database to ease
       file restoration

SYNOPSIS
       dar_manager [-v] [-j] -C [<path>/]<database>

       dar_manager [-v] [-j] -B [<path>/]<database> -A [<path>/]<basename> [-;
       <min-digits>] [[<path>/]<archive_basename>]

       dar_manager [-v] [-j] -B [<path>/]<database> -l

       dar_manager [-v] [-j] -B [<path>/]<database> -D <number>[-<number>]

       dar_manager  [-v]  [-j]	-B  [<path>/]<database>	 -b  <number> <new_ar‐
       chive_basename>

       dar_manager [-v] [-j] -B [<path>/]<database> -p <number> <path>

       dar_manager [-v] [-j] -B [<path>/]<database> -o	[list  of  options  to
       pass to dar]

       dar_manager [-v] [-j] -B [<path>/]<database> -d [<path to dar command>]

       dar_manager  [-v] [-j] -B [<path>/]<database> [-N] [-k] [-w <date>] [-e
       "<extra options to dar>"] -r [list of files to restore]

       dar_manager [-v] [-j] -B [<path>/]<database> -u <number>

       dar_manager [-v] [-j] -B [<path>/]<database> -f file

       dar_manager [-v] [-j] -B [<path>/]<database> -s

       dar_manager [-v] [-j] -B [<path>/]<database> -m <number> <number>

       dar_manager [-v] [-j] -B [<path>/]<database> -c

       dar_manager [-v] [-j] -B [<path>/]<database> -i

       dar_manager [-v] [-j] -B [<path>/]<database> -@ { <filename> | "-" }

       dar_manager -h

       dar_manager -V


DESCRIPTION
       dar_manager is part of the Disk Archive suite. Its purpose is  to  sim‐
       plify  the  restoration	of  a set of few files present in many backup,
       full or differential. This is achieved by gathering  the	 catalogue  of
       each  archive  (this has to be done once). At any time you just have to
       give the relative path to the files you want  to	 restore,  dar_manager
       will  call  dar with the proper options and restore the last version of
       each file (or the last version before given date). Note	that  dar_man‐
       ager  is	 to  be	 used when you have remove some files by accident some
       time ago and wish to recover them. It thus not adapted to  restore  the
       state  a	 directory  tree  had at a given time, in particular when some
       files have to be removed. For that you must use dar directly  with  the
       corresponding  archive  to  the	date for which you wish to restore the
       state.

       you can restore any file by hand without dar_manager , but if you  make
       a  lot  of differential backup, you may spend many time to find the ar‐
       chive that contains the last version of your file, as dar will not save
       it  if  it has not changed since previous backup.  dar_manager simplify
       the process by looking in its internal  database,  built	 from  archive
       "catalogues".

OPTIONS
       -C, --create [<path>/]<database>
			   creates  an empty database that will collect infor‐
			   mation about several archives. The <database> is  a
			   filename that is required for -B option. To destroy
			   a <database> just remove the file.

       -B, --base [<path>/]<database>
			   specify the database to read or modify. The	<data‐
			   base>  file	must exist, and have a database struc‐
			   ture (see -C option).

       -i, --interactive   use a keyboard interactive text menu to  do	opera‐
			   tions on the given database. So you may avoid read‐
			   ing the other  options  described  in  this	manual
			   page,  if  you  wish,  and just use the interactive
			   option. You will however always have to  create  an
			   empty  database (-C option) and restore files manu‐
			   ally (-r option).

       -A, --add [<path>/]<basename> [ [<path>/]<archive_basename>]
			   add an archive to the database. An  isolated	 cata‐
			   logue can also be used only if it has been produced
			   by dar version 1.2.0 or above. Why  ?  Because,  an
			   isolated  catalogue	produced by older version will
			   always tell that no files are saved in the  archive
			   of  reference, in that case the solution is to pro‐
			   vide the archive itself as  argument.  An  optional
			   second  argument  is the basename of the archive if
			   it is different from the first argument  (need  for
			   extraction of files). For example you could have an
			   isolated catalogue in first argument and the	 base‐
			   name	 of  the original archive (where is stored the
			   data) as second argument. By default,

       -;, --min-digits <num>
			   the slice number zeroed padding to use to  get  the
			   slices  filename (for more details see dar man page
			   at this same option) dar_manager will look  for  an
			   archive  of	reference  in the command line used to
			   create each archive, but in some cases, it  may  be
			   necessary  to specify the archive name (for example
			   if you've changed its name).

       -l, --list	   displays the information about  the	archives  com‐
			   piled  in  the database. In particular, a number is
			   given to each archive, which is  required  to  some
			   other  option to design a particular archive within
			   the database. Nothing avoids you to feed the	 data‐
			   base	 with  several	archive of the same basename !
			   You will just have to  guess	 which	one  is	 asked
			   under this name. :-)

       -D, --delete <number>[-<number>]
			   removes an archive (or a range of archive) from the
			   database. The number of the archive (or the min and
			   max	number	or the archive range) is correspond to
			   those given by the -l option. Note that all archive
			   number greater than the one(s) to be delete will be
			   decremented to keep continuous numbering of the ar‐
			   chive  inside  the  database. If a single number is
			   given (not a range), it may be also a negative num‐
			   ber,	 by  which it means counting from the end. For
			   example, -1 means the last archive of the base,  -2
			   the penultimate, etc.

       -b, --base <number> <new_archive_basename>
			   this	 option allows you to rename the archive base‐
			   name (used when restoring files from it). Here too,
			   the number may be also a negative number.

       -p, --path <number> <path>
			   this	 option allows you to change the location of a
			   given archive (used when restoring files from  it).
			   Here too, a negative number is allowed.

       -o, --options [list of option to pass to dar]
			   Specify  the	 option	 to use when calling dar. Each
			   call erases	the  previous  setting.	 Possible  dar
			   options are all the available ones except "-x"  and
			   simple arguments (the [list of path]) which will be
			   added by dar_manager itself.

       -d, --dar [<path>]  Set	the  path to dar. If no argument is given, dar
			   is expected to be located in the PATH

       -r, --restore [list of files or directories to restore]
			   dar_manager will restore all (an  only)  the	 given
			   files or directories, in their latest recorded sta‐
			   tus, or before the  date  give  thanks  to  the  -e
			   option.  If	a  directory is given all subfiles and
			   subdirectories are restored recursively in it.  You
			   can	filter	out  some  files  from	this recursion
			   thanks to dar usual filtering option (see  dar  man
			   page) you can provide beside -r using the -e option
			   (see below). Dar_manager lead  dar  to  remove  any
			   file, if a file is stored as having been removed at
			   date requested for restoration, it  is  simply  not
			   restored. Thus if you restore in an empty directory
			   you will get all the files and directories you pro‐
			   vided  to dar_manager in the state they have at the
			   date you asked. File that did not existed  at  that
			   time	 will not be restored. However you can restore
			   over an existing installation, dar will  then  warn
			   you before overwriting files (see -w and -n options
			   for dar) but will still not remove files that  were
			   recorded  removed from a previous archive of refer‐
			   ence.  Note that files listed after -r option, must
			   never  have an absolute path. They will be restored
			   under the directory specified with -R option of dar
			   (passed  to	dar  using  -o	or  -e options), or by
			   default, under the current directory.

       -w, --when <date>   alters the -r option behavior: still	 restores  the
			   files in the most recent version available but only
			   before the given  date  (versions  of  more	recent
			   dates  are  ignored).  The  <date> must respect the
			   following	       format		[	     [
			   [year/]month/]day-]hour:minute[:second].  For exam‐
			   ple "22:10" for 10 PM past 10 or the	 current  day,
			   "7-22:10"  for 10 PM past 10 the 7th of the current
			   month, "3/07-22:10" for the 7th of march  at	 22:10
			   of the current year, "2002/03/31-14:00:00" the date
			   of the first dar's release ;-). The given date must
			   be  in  the past, of course, and is compared to the
			   "last modification" date of the saved files and not
			   to  the date at which archives have been done. Thus
			   if a file has been changed long ago but saved in  a
			   recent  (full)  archive,  it	 will  be  elected for
			   restoration even for dates older than the  creation
			   of the archive. In the other way, a file saved long
			   time ago with a mtime that was set to a date in the
			   future  will	 not  be  elected for restoration when
			   giving the date at which was done the archive.

       -e, --extra <options>
			   pass some more options to dar. While the -o options
			   takes all that follows on the command line as argu‐
			   ment to pass to dar and write these	in  the	 data‐
			   base, the -e option does not alter the database and
			   has only one argument. In other words, if you  need
			   to  pass  several options to dar through the use of
			   the -e option,  you	need  to  use  quotes  (simple
			   quotes  '  or  double  quotes  ")  to enclose these
			   options. Example:

		     dar_manager -B database.dmd -e "-w -v -p -b -r -H	1"  -r
		     some/files

	      while using -o option you must not use quotes:

		     dar_manager -B database.dmd -o -w -v -p -b -r -H 1

       -u, --used <number> list	 the files that the given archive owns as last
			   version available. Thus when no file is listed, the
			   given  archive  is  no more useful in database, and
			   can be removed safely (-D option). If  <number>  is
			   zero,  all  available  file	are listed, the status
			   provided for each file present in the  database  is
			   the	most  recent  status.  A  negative  number  is
			   allowed  for	 this  option  (see  -D	  option   for
			   details).

       -f, --file <file>   displays  in which archive the given file is saved,
			   and what are	 the  modification  date  (mtime)  and
			   change date (ctime).

       -s, --stats	   show	 the  number  of most recent files by archive.
			   This helps to determine which archive can be safely
			   removed from the database.

       -m, --move <number> <number>
			   changes  the order of archives in the database. The
			   first number is the number of the archive to	 move,
			   while  the  second  is  the	place where it must be
			   shifted to.

			   Archive order is important:	An  old	 archive  must
			   have	 a smaller index than a recent archive. If you
			   add archive to a database in the  order  they  have
			   been created all should be fine. Else if a file has
			   a more recent version in an archive which index  is
			   smaller,  a	warning	 will  be  issued  (unless -ai
			   option is used). This can occur if by  mistake  you
			   added an archive to the database in the wrong order
			   (old archive added after a  recent  one),  in  that
			   case	 simply	 using	the -m option will let you fix
			   this mistake. If instead the problem is relative to
			   a  single file (or a small set of file), you should
			   wonder why this  file  has  its  modification  date
			   altered  in a way that it pretends to be older than
			   its really is. Checking for the signs of a  rootkit
			   may be a good idea.

       -c, --check	   check  the  database consistency, in particular the
			   date ordering is verified and  warning  are	issued
			   for each file having more recent version located in
			   an archive with a smaller index  inside  the	 data‐
			   base. -ai option makes -c option useless.

       -N, --ignore-options-in-base
			   Do  not  use	 the  options  stored in database when
			   calling dar for restoration. This  option  is  only
			   useful  while  restoring  files  from  dar_manager,
			   either directly (-r option) or using a  batch  file
			   (-@ option, see below).

       -k, --ignore-when-removed
			   By default, dar_manager does not ask dar to restore
			   file that have been removed at the  requested  date
			   (or	in the latest state available). This is useful
			   for example to restore a directory in the state  it
			   has	at  a  given  date (only files that existed at
			   that time are restored). However when you  want  to
			   restore a file that has been destroyed by accident,
			   you need to use -k option  so  you  don't  have  to
			   determine  at which date that file existed to be be
			   able to ask dar_manager to restore that file in the
			   state  it  had before that date. In other words, -k
			   option gives a  behavior  of	 dar_manager  backward
			   compatible with dar_manager released beside version
			   2.3.x of dar.

       -ai, --alter=ignore-order
			   avoid dar_manager to issue a warning for each  file
			   not following a chronological order of modification
			   date when the archive number	 in  the  database  is
			   growing.

       -@, --batch <filename>
			   allows  you	to  do	several	 operations on a given
			   database. All operations are defined	 in  the  pro‐
			   vided  <filename> and refer to the same database as
			   defined by the -B  switch  on  command  line.  This
			   batch  file,	 must thus not contain neither -B, -C,
			   -i, -j or -ai option (-j and -ai are global to  the
			   batch operation). The batch file expected layout is
			   one command per line, thus several arguments	 (like
			   -l  -v  for example) may take place on a given line
			   of the file (-v can be found both on	 command  line
			   for verbose output about the batch operation steps,
			   as well as inside the batch file for verbose output
			   of  a  particular  batched  command). Arguments are
			   separated by spaces or tabs, other  characters  are
			   passed  as-is. In consequence, you should only need
			   to use quotes (using " or ') if you intend  to  use
			   an argument containing space. Last, comments may be
			   placed on any line beginning by  a  hash  character
			   (#).

       -Q		   Do  not  display  any  message  on  stderr when not
			   launched from a terminal (for example when launched
			   from	 an at job or crontab). Remains that any ques‐
			   tion to the user will be  assumed  a	 'no'  answer,
			   which most of the time will abort the program.

       -j, --jog	   when	 virtual  memory is exhausted, as user to make
			   room before trying to continue.  By	default,  when
			   memory is exhausted dar aborts.

       -v, --verbose	   displays  additional	 information  about what it is
			   doing.

       -h, --help	   display help usage

       -V, --version	   display software version

EXIT CODES
       dar_manager exits with the following code:

       0	 Operation successful.

       1	 see dar manual page for signification

       2	 see dar manual page for signification

       3	 see dar manual page for signification

       5	 see dar manual page for signification

       7	 see dar manual page for signification

       8	 see dar manual page for signification

       11 and above
		 dar
		  called from dar_manager has exited  with  non	 zero  status.
		 Subtract 10 to this exit code to get dar's exit code.

SIGNALS
       dar_manager  acts like dar (see dar man page for list of signals), upon
       certain signal reception dar aborts cleanly

SEE ALSO
       dar(1), dar_xform(1), dar_slave(1), dar_cp(1)

LIMITATIONS
       at most 65534 archives can be  compiled	in  a  given  database,	 which
       should be enough for most users. Dar_manager does not support encrypted
       archives for now and archive cannot neither be encrypted. See  the  FAQ
       for a workaround.

KNOWN BUGS
       none actually

AUTHOR
       http://dar.linux.free.fr/
       Denis Corbin
       France
       Europe

3rd Berkeley Distribution	March 3rd, 2012			DAR_MANAGER(1)
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