backup_status - Reports a Tape Coordinator's status
backup status
[-portoffset <TC port offset>]
[-localauth] [-cell <cell name>]
[-help]
backup st
[-p <TC port offset>]
[-l] [-c <cell name>]
[-h]
The backup status command displays which operation, if any,
the indicated Tape Coordinator is currently executing.
- -portoffset
<TC port offset>
- Specifies the port offset number of the Tape Coordinator for which to
report the status.
- -localauth
- Constructs a server ticket using a key from the local
/etc/openafs/server/KeyFile file. The backup command
interpreter presents it to the Backup Server, Volume Server and VL Server
during mutual authentication. Do not combine this flag with the
-cell argument. For more details, see backup(8).
- -cell <cell
name>
- Names the cell in which to run the command. Do not combine this argument
with the -localauth flag. For more details, see
backup(8).
- -help
- Prints the online help for this command. All other valid options are
ignored.
The following message indicates that the Tape Coordinator is not
currently performing an operation:
Tape coordinator is idle
Otherwise, the output includes a message of the following format
for each running or pending operation:
Task <task_ID>: <operation>: <status>
where
- <task_ID>
- Is a task identification number assigned by the Tape Coordinator. It
begins with the Tape Coordinator's port offset number.
- <operation>
- Identifies the operation the Tape Coordinator is performing, which is
initiated by the indicated command:
- Dump
- The backup dump command.
- Restore
- The backup diskrestore, backup volrestore, or backup
volsetrestore commands.
- Labeltape
- The backup labeltape command.
- Scantape
- The backup scantape command.
- SaveDb
- The backup savedb command.
- RestoreDb
- The backup restoredb command.
- <status>
- Indicates the job's current status in one of the following messages.
- number Kbytes
transferred, volume volume_name
- For a running dump operation, indicates the number of kilobytes copied to
tape or a backup data file so far, and the volume currently being
dumped.
- number Kbytes,
restore.volume
- For a running restore operation, indicates the number of kilobytes copied
into AFS from a tape or a backup data file so far.
- [abort requested]
- The backup kill command was issued, but the termination signal has
yet to reach the Tape Coordinator.
- [abort sent]
- The operation is canceled by the backup kill command. Once the
Backup System removes an operation from the queue or stops it from
running, it no longer appears at all in the output from the command.
- [butc contact lost]
- The backup command interpreter cannot reach the Tape Coordinator.
The message can mean either that the Tape Coordinator handling the
operation was terminated or failed while the operation was running, or
that the connection to the Tape Coordinator timed out.
- [done]
- The Tape Coordinator has finished the operation.
- [drive wait]
- The operation is waiting for the specified tape drive to become free.
- [operator wait]
- The Tape Coordinator is waiting for the backup operator to insert a tape
in the drive.
If the Tape Coordinator is communicating with an XBSA server (a
third-party backup utility that implements the Open Group's Backup Service
API [XBSA]), the following message appears last in the output:
<XBSA_program> Tape coordinator
where <XBSA_program> is the name of the XBSA-compliant
program.
The following example shows that the Tape Coordinator with port
offset 4 has so far dumped about 1.5 MB of data for the current dump
operation, and is currently dumping the volume named
"user.pat.backup":
% backup status -portoffset 4
Task 4001: Dump: 1520 Kbytes transferred, volume user.pat.backup
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.