dump/restore
Griff Smith
ggs at ulysses.homer.nj.att.com
Tue Nov 1 10:19:58 AEST 1988
In article <262 at mpx2.UUCP>, erik at mpx2.UUCP (Erik Murrey) writes:
> Dump/restore is very quick, and it backs up everything, but I have
> a few questions: It seems to dump the entire filesystem, including
> the superblock/inode dumps.
It dumps most of the inode information so it can restore file
attributes. It also dumps a block map so `holes' can be restored
in the right places.
> It also seems to me that it dumps
> disk blocks in order of the disk itself, rather than the order of the
> file. This means that restoring a filesystem will *not* reduce
> the fragmentation.
Which version of `restore' are you using? Blocks are dumped in file
order. The 4.[23]BSD version of restore puts files into a directory
tree using standard `write' and `seek' operations. Fragmentation IS
reduced, but the original fragmentation seems to be insignificant on
the disks I have seen.
> (Which is often why I backup/restore in the first place.)
Are you using something other than the BSD fast file system? The
last time I saw studies of the fragmentation of file systems that use
allocation bit-tables instead of free lists, the fragmentation reached
a steady state in about two weeks. This is much shorter than the
pay-back time for a full dump/restore.
> Does it also require the exact same filesystem to by restored on?
No. Unless you are talking about 4.1BSD. I never used `restor'.
> If this is so, then I can't use dump/restore to expand a full filesystem.
No problem. You can also use `restore' to recover selected trees in a
filesystem.
> The docs I have for dump/restore don't explain details like
> this to me. Please fill me in!
Do you have `dump(8)' and `restore(8)' in the (Berkeley) UNIX System
Manager's Manual?
> ---
> Erik Murrey
> MPX Data Systems, Inc.
> erik at mpx1.UUCP
> ...!{bpa,spl1,cbmvax,vu-vlsi}!mpx1!erik
--
Griff Smith AT&T (Bell Laboratories), Murray Hill
Phone: 1-201-582-7736
UUCP: {most AT&T sites}!ulysses!ggs
Internet: ggs at ulysses.att.com
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