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RESTORE(8)							    RESTORE(8)

NAME
       restore - incremental file system restore

SYNOPSIS
       /usr/etc/restore key [ name ... ]

DESCRIPTION
       Restore	reads  tapes dumped with the dump(8) command.  Its actions are
       controlled by the key argument.	The key	 is  a	string	of  characters
       containing  at  most  one  function  letter  and	 possibly  one or more
       function modifiers.   Other  arguments  to  the	command	 are  file  or
       directory  names	 specifying the files that are to be restored.	Unless
       the h key is specified (see below), the appearance of a directory  name
       refers to the files and (recursively) subdirectories of that directory.

       The  function  portion  of the key is specified by one of the following
       letters:

       r    The tape is read and loaded	 into  the  current  directory.	  This
	    should  not	 be  done  lightly;  the  r key should only be used to
	    restore a complete dump tape  onto	a  clear  file	system	or  to
	    restore  an incremental dump tape after a full level zero restore.
	    Thus

		 /usr/etc/newfs /dev/rrp0g eagle
		 /usr/etc/mount /dev/rp0g /mnt
		 cd /mnt
		 restore r

	    is a typical sequence to restore a complete dump.  Another restore
	    can	 be  done  to get an incremental dump in on top of this.  Note
	    that restore leaves a file restoresymtab in the root directory  to
	    pass  information  between	incremental restore passes.  This file
	    should  be	removed	 when  the  last  incremental  tape  has  been
	    restored.
	    A  dump(8)	followed by a newfs(8) and a restore is used to change
	    the size of a file system.

       R    Restore requests a particular tape of a multi volume set on	 which
	    to	restart	 a  full  restore  (see the r key above).  This allows
	    restore to be interrupted and then restarted.

       x    The named files are extracted from the tape.  If  the  named  file
	    matches a directory whose contents had been written onto the tape,
	    and the h key is  not  specified,  the  directory  is  recursively
	    extracted.	 The  owner,  modification time, and mode are restored
	    (if possible).  If no  file	 argument  is  given,  then  the  root
	    directory is extracted, which results in the entire content of the
	    tape being extracted, unless the h key has been specified.

       t    The names of the specified files are listed if they occur  on  the
	    tape.   If	no  file argument is given, then the root directory is
	    listed, which results in the entire	 content  of  the  tape	 being
	    listed,  unless the h key has been specified.  Note that the t key
	    replaces the function of the old dumpdir program.

       j    This is required when  restoring  from  ejectable  media  such  as
	    floppy or optical disk.

       i    This  mode	allows	interactive  restoration  of files from a dump
	    tape.  After reading in the directory information from  the	 tape,
	    restore  provides  a  shell like interface that allows the user to
	    move around the directory tree selecting files  to	be  extracted.
	    The	 available  commands  are given below; for those commands that
	    require an argument, the default is the current directory.

	    ls [arg] - List the current or specified directory.	 Entries  that
		 are directories are appended with a ``/''.  Entries that have
		 been marked for extraction are prepended with	a  ``*''.   If
		 the verbose key is set the inode number of each entry is also
		 listed.

	    cd arg - Change the current working	 directory  to	the  specified
		 argument.

	    pwd - Print the full pathname of the current working directory.

	    add	 [arg]	- The current directory or specified argument is added
		 to the list of files to be  extracted.	  If  a	 directory  is
		 specified,  then  it and all its descendents are added to the
		 extraction list (unless the h key is specified on the command
		 line).	  Files	 that are on the extraction list are prepended
		 with a ``*'' when they are listed by ls.

	    delete [arg] - The current	directory  or  specified  argument  is
		 deleted  from	the  list  of  files  to  be  extracted.  If a
		 directory is specified, then it and all its  descendents  are
		 deleted  from	the  extraction	 list  (unless	the  h	key is
		 specified on the command line).  The most  expedient  way  to
		 extract  most	of  the	 files	from a directory is to add the
		 directory to the extraction list and then delete those	 files
		 that are not needed.

	    extract  -	All  the  files	 that  are  on the extraction list are
		 extracted from the dump tape.	Restore will ask which	volume
		 the  user  wishes to mount.  The fastest way to extract a few
		 files is to start with the last volume, and work towards  the
		 first volume.

	    setmodes  -	 All  the  directories	that  have  been  added to the
		 extraction list have  their  owner,  modes,  and  times  set;
		 nothing  is  extracted	 from  the  tape.   This is useful for
		 cleaning up after a restore has been prematurely aborted.

	    verbose - The sense of the	v  key	is  toggled.   When  set,  the
		 verbose  key  causes the ls command to list the inode numbers
		 of  all  entries.   It	 also  causes  restore	to  print  out
		 information about each file as it is extracted.

	    help - List a summary of the available commands.

	    quit  -  Restore immediately exits, even if the extraction list is
		 not empty.

       The following characters may be used in addition	 to  the  letter  that
       selects the function desired.

       b    The next argument to restore is used as the block size of the tape
	    (in kilobytes).  If the -b option is not specified, restore	 tries
	    to determine the tape block size dynamically.

       f    The	 next  argument	 to restore is used as the name of the archive
	    instead of /dev/rmt?.  If the name of the file is  ``-'',  restore
	    reads  from standard input.	 Thus, dump(8) and restore can be used
	    in a pipeline to dump and restore a file system with the command

		 dump 0f - /usr | (cd /mnt; restore xf -)

       v    Normally restore does its work  silently.	The  v	(verbose)  key
	    causes  it to type the name of each file it treats preceded by its
	    file type.

       y    Restore will not ask whether it should abort the restore if gets a
	    tape error.	 It will always try to skip over the bad tape block(s)
	    and continue as best it can.

       m    Restore will extract by inode numbers rather than  by  file	 name.
	    This  is  useful  if only a few files are being extracted, and one
	    wants to avoid regenerating the complete pathname to the file.

       h    Restore extracts the actual directory, rather than the files  that
	    it references.  This prevents hierarchical restoration of complete
	    subtrees from the tape.

       s    The next argument to restore is a number which selects the file on
	    a multi-file dump tape.  File numbering starts at 1.

DIAGNOSTICS
       Complaints about bad key characters.

       Complaints  if  it  gets a read error.  If y has been specified, or the
       user responds ``y'', restore will attempt to continue the restore.

       If the dump extends over more than one tape, restore will ask the  user
       to  change  tapes.   If the x or i key has been specified, restore will
       also ask which volume the user wishes to mount.	 The  fastest  way  to
       extract	a few files is to start with the last volume, and work towards
       the first volume.

       There are numerous consistency checks that can be  listed  by  restore.
       Most  checks  are  self-explanatory  or	can  ``never happen''.	Common
       errors are given below.

       Converting to new file system format.
	    A dump tape created from the old file system has been loaded.   It
	    is automatically converted to the new file system format.

       <filename>: not found on tape
	    The	 specified file name was listed in the tape directory, but was
	    not found on the tape.  This is caused by tape read	 errors	 while
	    looking  for  the  file,  and from using a dump tape created on an
	    active file system.

       expected next file <inumber>, got <inumber>
	    A file that was not listed in the directory showed up.   This  can
	    occur when using a dump tape created on an active file system.

       Incremental tape too low
	    When doing incremental restore, a tape that was written before the
	    previous incremental tape, or that	has  too  low  an  incremental
	    level has been loaded.

       Incremental tape too high
	    When  doing	 incremental  restore,	a tape that does not begin its
	    coverage where the previous incremental tape left off, or that has
	    too high an incremental level has been loaded.

       Tape read error while restoring <filename>
       Tape read error while skipping over inode <inumber>
       Tape read error while trying to resynchronize
	    A tape read error has occurred.  If a file name is specified, then
	    its contents are probably partially wrong.	If an inode  is	 being
	    skipped  or the tape is trying to resynchronize, then no extracted
	    files have been corrupted, though files may not be	found  on  the
	    tape.

       resync restore, skipped <num> blocks
	    After a tape read error, restore may have to resynchronize itself.
	    This message lists the number of blocks that were skipped over.

FILES
       /dev/rmt? the default tape drive
       /tmp/rstdir*   file containing directories on the tape.
       /tmp/rstmode*  owner, mode, and time stamps for directories.
       ./restoresymtable   information passed between incremental restores.

SEE ALSO
       rrestore(8C) dump(8), newfs(8), mount(8), mkfs(8)

BUGS
       Restore can get confused when  doing  incremental  restores  from  dump
       tapes that were made on active file systems.

       A  level	 zero dump must be done after a full restore.  Because restore
       runs in user code, it has no control over inode allocation; thus a full
       restore must be done to get a new set of directories reflecting the new
       inode numbering, even though the contents of the files is unchanged.

4th Berkeley Distribution	March 27, 1986			    RESTORE(8)
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