Main index | Section 8 | 日本語 | Options |
On media that cannot reliably return an end-of-media indication
(such as some cartridge tape drives)
each volume is of a fixed size;
the actual size is determined by the tape size and density and/or
The file system to be dumped is specified by the argument filesystem as either its device-special file or its mount point (if that is in a standard entry in /etc/fstab).
dump may also be invoked as rdump. The BSD 4.3 option syntax is implemented for backward compatibility, but is not documented here.
The following options are supported by dump:
| |
Dump levels.
A level 0, full backup,
guarantees the entire file system is copied
(but see also the
| |
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"auto-size". Bypass all tape length considerations, and enforce writing until an end-of-media indication is returned. This fits best for most modern tape drives. Use of this option is particularly recommended when appending to an existing tape, or using a tape drive with hardware compression (where you can never be sure about the compression ratio). | |
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The number of kilobytes per output volume, except that if it is not an integer multiple of the output block size, the command uses the next smaller such multiple. This option overrides the calculation of tape size based on length and density. | |
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The number of kilobytes per output block. The default block size is 10. | |
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Specify the cache size in megabytes. This will greatly improve performance at the cost of dump possibly not noticing changes in the file system between passes unless a snapshot is being used. The potential for performance improvement indicates that use of this option together with snapshots is the recommended course of action. Beware that dump forks, and the actual memory use may be larger than the specified cache size. The recommended cache size is between 8 and 32 (megabytes). | |
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Change the defaults for use with a cartridge tape drive, with a density of 8000 bpi, and a length of 1700 feet. | |
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Specify an alternate path to the dumpdates file. The default is /etc/dumpdates. | |
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Set tape density to density. The default is 1600BPI. | |
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Write the backup to file; file may be a special device file like /dev/sa0 (a tape drive), /dev/fd1 (a floppy disk drive), an ordinary file, or '-' (the standard output). Multiple file names may be given as a single argument separated by commas. Each file will be used for one dump volume in the order listed; if the dump requires more volumes than the number of names given, the last file name will used for all remaining volumes after prompting for media changes. If the name of the file is of the form "host:file", or "user@host:file", dump writes to the named file on the remote host using rmt(8). The default path name of the remote rmt(8) program is /etc/rmt; this can be overridden by the environment variable RMT. | |
| |
Use
popen(3)
to execute the
sh(1)
script string defined by
pipecommand
for the output device of each volume.
This child pipeline's
stdin
( /dev/fd/0)
is redirected from the
dump
output stream, and the environment variable
DUMP_VOLUME
is set to the current volume number being written.
After every volume, the writer side of the pipe is closed and
pipecommand
is executed again.
Subject to the media size specified by
| |
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Honor the user "nodump" flag ( UF_NODUMP) only for dumps at or above the given level. The default honor level is 1, so that incremental backups omit such files but full backups retain them. | |
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This option is to notify dump that it is dumping a live file system. To obtain a consistent dump image, dump takes a snapshot of the file system in the .snap directory in the root of the file system being dumped and then does a dump of the snapshot. The snapshot is unlinked as soon as the dump starts, and is thus removed when the dump is complete. This option is ignored for unmounted or read-only file systems. If the .snap directory does not exist in the root of the file system being dumped, a warning will be issued and the dump will revert to the standard behavior. This problem can be corrected by creating a .snap directory in the root of the file system to be dumped; its owner should be "root", its group should be "operator", and its mode should be "0770". | |
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Whenever dump requires operator attention, notify all operators in the group "operator" by means similar to a wall(1). | |
| |
Be rsync-friendly.
Normally dump stores the date of the current
and prior dump in numerous places throughout the dump.
These scattered changes significantly slow down rsync or
another incremental file transfer program when they are
used to update a remote copy of a level 0 dump,
since the date changes for each dump.
This option sets both dates to the epoch, permitting
rsync to be much more efficient when transferring a dump file.
The
| |
| |
Be even more rsync-friendly.
This option disables the storage of the actual inode access time
(storing it instead as the inode's modified time).
This option permits rsync to be even more efficient
when transferring dumps generated from filesystems with numerous files
which are not changing other than their access times.
The
| |
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Display an estimate of the backup size and the number of tapes required, and exit without actually performing the dump. | |
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Attempt to calculate the amount of tape needed at a particular density. If this amount is exceeded, dump prompts for a new tape. It is recommended to be a bit conservative on this option. The default tape length is 2300 feet. | |
| |
Use the specified date as the starting time for the dump
instead of the time determined from looking in
the
dumpdates
file.
The format of date is the same as that of
ctime(3).
This option is useful for automated dump scripts that wish to
dump over a specific period of time.
The
| |
| |
Update the
dumpdates
file
after a successful dump.
The format of
the
dumpdates
file
is readable by people, consisting of one
free format record per line:
file system name,
increment level
and
ctime(3)
format dump date.
There may be only one entry per file system at each level.
The
dumpdates
file
may be edited to change any of the fields,
if necessary.
The default path for the
dumpdates
file is
/etc/dumpdates,
but the
| |
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Tell the operator what file systems need to be dumped.
This information is gleaned from the files
dumpdates
and
/etc/fstab.
The
| |
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Is like
| |
Directories and regular files which have their
"nodump"
flag
( UF_NODUMP)
set will be omitted along with everything under such directories,
subject to the
The
dump
utility requires operator intervention on these conditions:
end of tape,
end of dump,
tape write error,
tape open error or
disk read error (if there are more than a threshold of 32).
In addition to alerting all operators implied by the
Since making a dump involves a lot of time and effort for full dumps, dump checkpoints itself at the start of each tape volume. If writing that volume fails for some reason, dump will, with operator permission, restart itself from the checkpoint after the old tape has been rewound and removed, and a new tape has been mounted.
The dump utility tells the operator what is going on at periodic intervals (every 5 minutes, or promptly after receiving SIGINFO), including usually low estimates of the number of blocks to write, the number of tapes it will take, the time to completion, and the time to the tape change. The output is verbose, so that others know that the terminal controlling dump is busy, and will be for some time.
In the event of a catastrophic disk event, the time required to restore all the necessary backup tapes or files to disk can be kept to a minimum by staggering the incremental dumps. An efficient method of staggering incremental dumps to minimize the number of tapes follows:
/sbin/dump -0u -f /dev/nsa0 /usr/src
This should be done at set intervals, say once a month or once every two months, and on a set of fresh tapes that is saved forever.
3 2 5 4 7 6 9 8 9 9 ...
For the daily dumps, it should be possible to use a fixed number of tapes for each day, used on a weekly basis. Each week, a level 1 dump is taken, and the daily Hanoi sequence repeats beginning with 3. For weekly dumps, another fixed set of tapes per dumped file system is used, also on a cyclical basis.
After several months or so, the daily and weekly tapes should get rotated out of the dump cycle and fresh tapes brought in.
TAPE |
The
file
or device to dump to if the
|
RMT | Pathname of the remote rmt(8) program. |
RSH | Pathname of a remote shell program, if not rsh(1). |
/dev/sa0 | default tape unit to dump to |
/etc/dumpdates | |
dump date records
(this can be changed;
see the
| |
/etc/fstab | dump table: file systems and frequency |
/etc/group | to find group operator |
/sbin/dump -0u -L -C16 -B4589840 -P 'growisofs -Z /dev/cd0=/dev/fd/0' /u
Each reel requires a new process, so parent processes for reels already written just hang around until the entire tape is written.
The
dump
utility with the
It would be nice if dump knew about the dump sequence, kept track of the tapes scribbled on, told the operator which tape to mount when, and provided more assistance for the operator running restore(8).
The dump utility cannot do remote backups without being run as root, due to its security history. This will be fixed in a later version of FreeBSD . Presently, it works if you set it setuid (like it used to be), but this might constitute a security risk.
DUMP (8) | December 28, 2020 |
Main index | Section 8 | 日本語 | Options |
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