dump/restore
Brian Beattie
beattie at visenix.UUCP
Wed Nov 2 08:36:48 AEST 1988
In article <8373 at alice.UUCP> debra at alice.UUCP () writes:
>In article <44433 at beno.seismo.CSS.GOV> rick at seismo.CSS.GOV (Rick Adams) writes:
>>...
>>A BACKUP program should be able to restore the disk to the state it
>>was at the time of the backup. It should also offer incremental backups.
>
>Right, and since there is no way to reset the create-time on a Unix system
>(except by setting the date and resetting it but that's awful and can never
or writting the inode by writting the raw device as dump/restor does.
>be used in a multiuser environment) there are NO backup programs that can
you should never dump an active filesystem.
>restore the disk to the state it was at the time of the backup since this
>is simply not possible in Unix.
>The only way to restore the disk is if you make a complete image, using
>volcopy or dskcpy or whatever it is called (depending on the Unix version)
or dump/restor if ATT has not castrated you system.
>but those programs cannot offer incremental backups.
dump/restor will do incremental backups just fine. It is true that
an _incremental_ _restor_ will not set the create time back but that too
could be worked if necessary.
>
>Paul.
>
>--
>------------------------------------------------------
>|debra at research.att.com | uunet!research!debra |
>------------------------------------------------------
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