RESTORE(1M) RESTORE(1M) NAME restore, rrestore - incremental file system restore SYNOPSIS /sbin/restore key [ name ... ] /sbin/rrestore key [ name ... ] DESCRIPTION restore reads tapes dumped with the dump (1M) command and restores them relative to the current directory. 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. Any arguments supplied for specific options are given as subsequent words on the command line, in the same order as that of the options listed. 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 Restore the entire tape. The tape is read and its full contents loaded into the current directory. This should not be done lightly; the r key should only be used to restore a complete "level 0" dump tape onto a clear file system or to restore an incremental dump tape after a full level zero restore. Thus /etc/mkfs /dev/dsk/dks0d2s0 /etc/mount /dev/dsk0d2s0 /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 restoresymtable in the root directory to pass information between incremental restore passes. This file should be removed when the last incremental tape has been restored. Also, see the note in the BUGS section below. R Resume restoring. 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. Page 1 RESTORE(1M) RESTORE(1M) 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. 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. Page 2 RESTORE(1M) RESTORE(1M) 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, but will only be able to do so if the block size is 32 or less. For larger sizes, the b option must be used with restore. f The next argument to restore is used as the name of the archive instead of /dev/tape. If the name of the file is ``-'', restore reads from standard input. Thus, dump(1M) 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 -) If the name of the file is of the format machine:device then the filesystem dump is restored from the specified machine over the network. restore creates a remote server /etc/rmt, on the client machine to access the tape device. Since restore is normally run by root, the name of the local machine must appear in the .rhosts file of the remote machine. If the file name argument is of the form user@machine:device, restore will attempt to execute as the specified use on the remote machine. The specified user must have a .rhosts file on the remote machine that allows root from the local machine. 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. Page 3 RESTORE(1M) RESTORE(1M) s The next argument to restore is a number which selects the dump file when there are multiple dump files on the same tape. File numbering starts at 1. n Only those files which are newer than the file specified by the next argument are considered for restoration. restore looks at the modification time of the specified file using the stat(2) system call. e No existing files are overwritten. E Restores only non-existent files or newer versions (as determined by the file status change time stored in the dump file) of existing files. Note that the ls(1) command shows the modification time and not the file status change time. See stat(2) for more details. d Turn on debugging output. o Normally restore does not use chown(2) to restore files to the original user and group id unless it is being run by the super-user (or with the effective user id of zero). This is to provide Berkeley style semantics. This can be overridden with the o option which will result in restore attempting to restore the original ownership to the files. N Do not write anything to the disk. This option can be used to validate the tapes after a dump. If invoked with the "r" option, restore goes through the motion of reading all the dump tapes without actually writing anything to the disk. DIAGNOSTICS restore complains about bad key characters. On getting a read error, restore prints out diagnostics. 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. Page 4 RESTORE(1M) RESTORE(1M) <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. Error while writing to file /tmp/rstdir* An error was encountered while writing to the temporary file containing information about the directories on tape. Use the TMPDIR environment variable to relocate this file in a directory which has more space available. Error while writing to file /tmp/rstdir* An error was encountered while writing to the temporary file containing information about the owner, mode and timestamp information of directories. Use the TMPDIR environment variable to relocate this file in a directory which has more space available. EXAMPLES restore r will restore the entire tape into the current directory, reading from the default tape device /dev/tape. Page 5 RESTORE(1M) RESTORE(1M) restore rf guest@kestrel.sgi.com:/dev/tape will restore the entire tape into the current directory, reading from the remote tape device /dev/tape on host kestrel.sgi.com using the guest account. restore x /etc/hosts /etc/fstab /etc/myfile will restore the three specified files into the current directory, reading from the default tape device /dev/tape. restore x /dev/dsk will restore the entire /dev/dsk directory and subdirectories recursively into the current directory, reading from the default tape device /dev/tape restore rN will read the entire tape and go through all the motions of restoring the entire dump, without writing to the disk. This can be used to validate the dump tape. restore xe /usr/dir/foo will restore (recursively) all files in the given directory /usr/dir/foo. However, no existing files are overwritten. restore xn /usr/dir/bar will restore (recursively) all files which are newer than the given file /usr/dir/bar. FILES /dev/tape This is the default tape device used unless the environment variable TAPE is set. /tmp/rstdir* This temporary file contains the directories on the tape. If the environment variable TMPDIR is set, then the file will be created in that directory. /tmp/rstmode* This temporary file contains the owner, mode, and time stamps for directories. If the environment variable TMPDIR is set, then the Page 6 RESTORE(1M) RESTORE(1M) file will be created in that directory. ./restoresymtable Information is passed between incremental restores in this file. SEE ALSO dump(1M), mount(1M), mkfs(1M), rmt(1M), rhosts(4), mtio(7) NOTES rrestore is a link to restore. BUGS restore can get confused when doing incremental restores from dump tapes that were made on active file systems. A "level 0" dump must be done after a full restore. Because restore runs in user code, it has no control over inode allocation. This results in the files being restored having an inode numbering different from the filesystem that was originally dumped. Thus a full dump must be done to get a new set of directories reflecting the new inode numbering, even though the contents of the files is unchanged, so that later incremental dumps will be correct. Existing dangling symlinks are modified even if the e option is supplied, if the dump tape contains a hard link by the same name. Page 7 RESTORE(1) RESTORE(1) NAME Restore - restore the specified file or directory from tape SYNOPSIS Restore [ -h hostname ] [ -t tapedevice ] [ directory name | file name ] DESCRIPTION The Restore command copies the named file or directory from a local or remote backup tape(s) to disk. if no file or directory is specified Restore will copy all the files found on the tape to disk. Files are restored into the current directory if the backup tape contains "." relative path names. Files on disk are overwritten even if they are more recent than the respective files on tape. If a tape drive attached to a remote host is used for restore, the name of the remote host needs to be specified with the -h hostname option on the command line. For remote restore to successfully work, the user should have a TCP/IP network connection to the remote host and also have "guest" login privileges on that host. If the local or remote tape device is pointed to by a device file other than /dev/tape, the device should be specified by the -t tapedevice option. The Restore command expects the backup tape to be in the special "bru" format written by Backup(1) and by the System Manager Backup & Restore tool when doing full (not partial) backups. This is the same format used for system recovery. SEE ALSO Backup(1), List_tape(1), bru(1).