BACKUP_DELETEDUMP(8) | AFS Command Reference | BACKUP_DELETEDUMP(8) |
backup_deletedump - Deletes one or more dump records from the Backup Database
backup deletedump
[-dumpid <dump id>+]
[-from <date time>+]
[-to <date time>+]
[-portoffset <TC port offset>]
[-groupid <group ID>]
[-dbonly] [-force] [-dryrun | -n]
[-localauth]
[-cell <cell name>]
[-help]
backup dele
[-d <dump id>+]
[-fr <date time>+]
[-t <date time>+]
[-p <TC port offset>]
[-g <group ID>]
[-db] [-fo] [-l]
[-dryrun | -n]
[-c <cell name>]
[-h]
The backup deletedump command deletes one or more dump records from the Backup Database. Either use the -dumpid argument to specify the dump ID number of one or more dumps, or use the -from and -to arguments to delete the records for all regular dumps created during the time period bracketed by the specified values.
Use this command to remove dump records that are incorrect (possibly because a dump operation was interrupted or failed), or that correspond to dumps that are expired or otherwise no longer needed.
The only way to remove the dump record for an appended dump is to remove the record for its initial dump, and doing so removes the records for all of the initial dump's associated appended dumps.
The only way to remove the record for a Backup Database dump (created with the backup savedb command) is to specify its dump ID number with the -dumpid argument. Using the -from and -to arguments never removes database dump records.
Removing records of a dump makes it impossible to restore data from the corresponding tapes or from any dump that refers to the deleted dump as its parent, directly or indirectly. That is, restore operations must begin with the full dump and continue with each incremental dump in order. If the records for a specific dump are removed, it is not possible to restore data from later incremental dumps unless the deleted records are restored by running the backup scantape command with the -dbadd flag.
If a dump set contains any dumps that were created outside the time range specified by the -from and -to arguments, the command does not delete any of the records associated with the dump set, even if some of them represent dumps created during the time range.
Provide either this argument or the -to (and optionally -from) argument.
Omit this argument to indicate the default of midnight (00:00 hours) on 1 January 1970 (UNIX time zero), or provide a date value in the format mm/dd/yyyy [hh:MM]. The month (mm), day (dd), and year (yyyy) are required. The hour and minutes (hh:MM) are optional, but if provided must be in 24-hour format (for example, the value "14:36" represents 2:36 p.m.). If omitted, the time defaults to midnight (00:00 hours).
The -to argument must be provided along with this one.
Provide either the value "NOW" to indicate the current date and time, or a date value in the same format as for the -from argument. Valid values for the year (yyyy) range from 1970 to 2037; higher values are not valid because the latest possible date in the standard UNIX representation is in February 2038. The command interpreter automatically reduces any later date to the maximum value.
If the time portion (hh:MM) is omitted, it defaults to 59 seconds after midnight (00:00:59 hours). Similarly, the backup command interpreter automatically adds 59 seconds to any time value provided. In both cases, adding 59 seconds compensates for how the Backup Database and backup dumpinfo command represent dump creation times in hours and minutes only. For example, the Database records a creation timestamp of "20:55" for any dump operation that begins between 20:55:00 and 20:55:59. Automatically adding 59 seconds to a time thus includes the records for all dumps created during that minute.
Provide either this argument, or the -dumpid argument. This argument is required if the -from argument is provided.
Caution: Specifying the value "NOW" for this argument when the -from argument is omitted deletes all dump records from the Backup Database (except for Backup Database dump records created with the backup savedb command).
At the conclusion of processing, the output lists the dump IDs of all dump records deleted in the following format:
The following dumps were deleted: dump ID 1 dump ID 2 etc.
The following command deletes the dump record with dump ID 653777462, and for any appended dumps associated with it:
% backup deletedump -dumpid 653777462 The following dumps were deleted: 653777462
The following command deletes the Backup Database record of all dumps created between midnight on 1 January 1997 and 23:59:59 hours on 31 December 1997:
% backup deletedump -from 01/01/1997 -to 12/31/1997 The following dumps were deleted: 598324045 598346873 ... ... 653777523 653779648
The issuer must be listed in the /etc/openafs/server/UserList file on every machine where the Backup Server is running, or must be logged onto a server machine as the local superuser "root" if the -localauth flag is included.
IBM Corporation 2000. <http://www.ibm.com/> All Rights Reserved.
This documentation is covered by the IBM Public License Version 1.0. It was converted from HTML to POD by software written by Chas Williams and Russ Allbery, based on work by Alf Wachsmann and Elizabeth Cassell.
2021-01-27 | OpenAFS |