Este contenido no está disponible en el idioma seleccionado.
8.7. Backup and Restoration of XFS File Systems
XFS file system backup and restoration involves two utilities:
xfsdump
and xfsrestore
.
To backup or dump an XFS file system, use the
xfsdump
utility. Red Hat Enterprise Linux 6 supports backups to tape drives or regular file images, and also allows multiple dumps to be written to the same tape. The xfsdump
utility also allows a dump to span multiple tapes, although only one dump can be written to a regular file. In addition, xfsdump
supports incremental backups, and can exclude files from a backup using size, subtree, or inode flags to filter them.
In order to support incremental backups,
xfsdump
uses dump levels to determine a base dump to which a specific dump is relative. The -l
option specifies a dump level (0-9). To perform a full backup, perform a level 0 dump on the file system (that is, /path/to/filesystem
), as in:
# xfsdump -l 0 -f /dev/device /path/to/filesystem
Note
The
-f
option specifies a destination for a backup. For example, the /dev/st0
destination is normally used for tape drives. An xfsdump
destination can be a tape drive, regular file, or remote tape device.
In contrast, an incremental backup will only dump files that changed since the last level 0 dump. A level 1 dump is the first incremental dump after a full dump; the next incremental dump would be level 2, and so on, to a maximum of level 9. So, to perform a level 1 dump to a tape drive:
# xfsdump -l 1 -f /dev/st0 /path/to/filesystem
Conversely, the
xfsrestore
utility restores file systems from dumps produced by xfsdump
. The xfsrestore
utility has two modes: a default simple mode, and a cumulative mode. Specific dumps are identified by session ID or session label. As such, restoring a dump requires its corresponding session ID or label. To display the session ID and labels of all dumps (both full and incremental), use the -I
option:
# xfsrestore -I
This will provide output similar to the following:
Example 8.4. Session ID and labels of all dumps
file system 0: fs id: 45e9af35-efd2-4244-87bc-4762e476cbab session 0: mount point: bear-05:/mnt/test device: bear-05:/dev/sdb2 time: Fri Feb 26 16:55:21 2010 session label: "my_dump_session_label" session id: b74a3586-e52e-4a4a-8775-c3334fa8ea2c level: 0 resumed: NO subtree: NO streams: 1 stream 0: pathname: /mnt/test2/backup start: ino 0 offset 0 end: ino 1 offset 0 interrupted: NO media files: 1 media file 0: mfile index: 0 mfile type: data mfile size: 21016 mfile start: ino 0 offset 0 mfile end: ino 1 offset 0 media label: "my_dump_media_label" media id: 4a518062-2a8f-4f17-81fd-bb1eb2e3cb4f xfsrestore: Restore Status: SUCCESS
Simple Mode for xfsrestore
The simple mode allows users to restore an entire file system from a level 0 dump. After identifying a level 0 dump's session ID (that is,
session-ID
), restore it fully to /path/to/destination
using:
# xfsrestore -f /dev/st0 -S session-ID /path/to/destination
Note
The
-f
option specifies the location of the dump, while the -S
or -L
option specifies which specific dump to restore. The -S
option is used to specify a session ID, while the -L
option is used for session labels. The -I
option displays both session labels and IDs for each dump.
Cumulative Mode for xfsrestore
The cumulative mode of
xfsrestore
allows file system restoration from a specific incremental backup, for example, level 1 to level 9. To restore a file system from an incremental backup, simply add the -r
option:
# xfsrestore -f /dev/st0 -S session-ID -r /path/to/destination
Interactive Operation
The
xfsrestore
utility also allows specific files from a dump to be extracted, added, or deleted. To use xfsrestore
interactively, use the -i
option, as in:
xfsrestore -f /dev/st0 -i
The interactive dialogue will begin after
xfsrestore
finishes reading the specified device. Available commands in this dialogue include cd
, ls
, add
, delete
, and extract
; for a complete list of commands, use help
.
For more information about dumping and restoring XFS file systems, refer to
man xfsdump
and man xfsrestore
.