X-Git-Url: https://git.dogcows.com/gitweb?a=blobdiff_plain;f=doc%2Ftar-snapshot-edit.texi;fp=doc%2Ftar-snapshot-edit.texi;h=9c01a4ae35b5aed81b5fec44c1c31701e450f378;hb=01cf5c53151cb0c4166dbc061551b79c173d13f5;hp=0000000000000000000000000000000000000000;hpb=0dd814fac2287d1d88ae886d614bb3bb5dd2ea9d;p=chaz%2Ftar diff --git a/doc/tar-snapshot-edit.texi b/doc/tar-snapshot-edit.texi new file mode 100644 index 0000000..9c01a4a --- /dev/null +++ b/doc/tar-snapshot-edit.texi @@ -0,0 +1,58 @@ +@c This is part of the paxutils manual. +@c Copyright (C) 2007 Free Software Foundation, Inc. +@c This file is distributed under GFDL 1.1 or any later version +@c published by the Free Software Foundation. + +@cindex Device numbers, changing +@cindex snapshot files, editing +@cindex snapshot files, fixing device numbers + Sometimes device numbers can change after upgrading your kernel +version or recofiguring the harvare. Reportedly this is the case with +some newer @i{Linux} kernels, when using @acronym{LVM}. In majority of +cases this change is unnoticed by the users. However, it influences +@command{tar} incremental backups: the device number is stored in tar +snapshot files (@pxref{Snapshot Files}) and is used to determine whether +the file has changed since the last backup. If the device numbers +change for some reason, the next backup you run will be a full backup. + +@pindex tar-snapshot-edit + To minimize the impact in these cases, GNU @command{tar} comes with +the @command{tar-snapshot-edit} utility for inspecting and updating +device numbers in snapshot files. The utility, written by +Dustin J.@: Mitchell, is available from +@uref{http://www.gnu.org/@/software/@/tar/@/utils/@/tar-snapshot-edit.html, +@GNUTAR{} home page}. + + To obtain the device numbers used in the snapshot file, run + +@smallexample +$ @kbd{tar-snapshot-edit @var{snapfile}} +@end smallexample + +@noindent +where @var{snapfile} is the name of the snapshot file (you can supply as many +files as you wish in a single command line ). + +To update all occurrences of the given device number in the file, use +@option{-r} option. It takes a single argument of the form +@samp{@var{olddev}-@var{newdev}}, where @var{olddev} is the device number +used in the snapshot file, and @var{newdev} is the corresponding new device +number. Both numbers may be specified in hex (e.g., @samp{0xfe01}), +decimal (e.g., @samp{65025}), or as a major:minor number pair (e.g., +@samp{254:1}). To change several device numbers at once, specify them +in a single comma-separated list, as in +@option{-r 0x3060-0x4500,0x307-0x4600}. + +Before updating the snapshot file, it is a good idea to create a backup +copy of it. This is accomplished by @samp{-b} option. The name of the +backup file is obtained by appending @samp{~} to the original file name. + +An example session: +@smallexample +$ @kbd{tar-snapshot-edit /var/backup/snap.a} +file version 2 +/tmp/snap: Device 0x0306 occurs 634 times. +$ @kbd{tar-snapshot-edit -b -r 0x0306-0x4500 /var/backup/snap.a} +file version 2 +@end smallexample +