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HP OpenVMS System Management Utilities Reference
Manual
/FULL
Command Qualifier
Lists the file information produced by the command qualifier /LIST in
the format provided by the DCL command DIRECTORY/FULL.
Format
/LIST/FULL input-specifier [output-specifier]
Description
The /FULL qualifier is valid only with the command qualifier /LIST.
If you do not specify /FULL with /LIST, the /LIST qualifier uses the
default command qualifier /BRIEF and lists only the file specification,
size, and creation date of each file. When you specify /FULL, the list
includes more information from the file header records, such as the
BACKUP date, date of last modification, number of blocks allocated to
the file, file protection and organization, and record attributes.
Example
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$ BACKUP/LIST/FULL MTA1:ROCK.BCK
Listing of save set(s)
Save set: ROCK.BCK
Written by: RINGO
UIC: [000200,000300]
Date: 20-AUG-2002 15:39:38.89
Command: BACKUP [.STONES] MTA0:ROCK.BCK/LABEL=BACKUP
Operating system: OpenVMS Alpha Version V7.3-1
BACKUP version: V7.3-1
CPU ID register: 08000000
Node name: _SUZI::
Written on: _MTA0:
Block size: 8192
Group size: 10
Buffer count: 30
[RINGO.STONES]GRAPHITE.DAT;1
Size: 1/1 Created: 18-AUG-2002 14:10
Owner: [000200,000200] Revised: 18-AUG-2002 14:10 (2)
File ID: (91,7,1) Expires: [None specified]
Backup: [No backup done]
File protection: System:RWED, Owner:RWED, Group:RE, World:
File organization: Sequential
File attributes: Allocation = 1, Extend = 0
Global Buffer Count = 0
Record format: Variable length, maximum 255 bytes
Record attributes: Carriage return
[RINGO.STONES]GRANITE.DAT;1
Size: 1/1 Created: 18-AUG-2002 14:11
Owner: [000200,000200] Revised: 18-AUG-2002 14:11 (2)
File ID: (92,9,1) Expires: [None specified]
Backup: [No backup done]
File protection: System:RWED, Owner:RWED, Group:RE, World:
File organization: Sequential
File attributes: Allocation = 1, Extend = 0
Global Buffer Count = 0
Record format: Variable length, maximum 255 bytes
Record attributes: Carriage return
.
.
.
Total of 4 files, 16 blocks
End of save set
|
The command in this example lists the files in save set MTA1:ROCK.BCK
in full format.
/GROUP_SIZE
Output Save-Set Qualifier
Defines the number of blocks BACKUP places in each redundancy group.
Format
input-specifier output-save-set-spec/GROUP_SIZE=n
Description
BACKUP writes redundant information to output save sets to protect
against data loss. Using the redundant information, BACKUP can correct
one uncorrectable read error in each redundancy group. The
/GROUP_SIZE qualifier specifies the number of output blocks written to
each redundancy group. The value of n can be 0 to 100. The
default value is 10.
If you define a value of 0 for /GROUP_SIZE, no redundancy groups are
created for the save set.
Example
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$ BACKUP/RECORD DBA1:[*...]/SINCE=BACKUP TAPE:SAVEWORK.BCK/GROUP_SIZE=5
|
This BACKUP command saves all files in the current default directory
tree that have been modified since the last BACKUP/RECORD operation;
the /GROUP_SIZE defines the redundancy group size as 5 blocks.
/HEADER_ONLY
Input File-Selection Qualifier
Specifies that only the file headers of a file are to be saved in a
BACKUP operation.
Format
input-specifier /HEADER_ONLY=option output-specifier
Description
The /HEADER_ONLY qualifier specifies that the Backup utility is to save
only the file header of a shelved or a preshelved file in a BACKUP
operation.
When a file is shelved, the data in the file is shelved, but the file
header is retained. Users shelve files to save disk space. (In
addition, users might preshelve files to save time by
performing shelving operations ahead of time.)
In a BACKUP save operation, the default behavior is to unshelve files
before backing them up. This brings back the file data online, so that,
when the BACKUP operation is performed, the entire file is backed up
(not just the file header). The only exception to the BACKUP default
behavior is in operations that use the /PHYSICAL or /IMAGE qualifier.
For those operations, the file remains in the file shelved state.
For more information about file shelving and preshelving, refer to
Hierarchical Storage Management (HSM) documentation.
Use the following options with the /HEADER_ONLY qualifier:
Option |
Description |
SHELVED
|
Saves only the file header of a shelved file.
|
NOSHELVED
|
Saves both the file header and the file data of a shelved file. (This
causes the file to be unshelved.)
|
PRESHELVED
|
Saves only the file header of a preshelved file.
|
NOPRESHELVE
|
Saves both the file header and the file data of a preshelved file.
|
Examples
#1 |
$ BACKUP [INFO]/HEADER_ONLY=(SHELVED) MKA600:INFO.BCK/SAVE_SET
|
The command in this example saves all files in the directory [INFO] to
a tape drive save set named INFO.BCK. The shelved files in [INFO] will
not be unshelved. Only their file headers will be saved to save set
INFO.BCK because the /HEADER_ONLY=(SHELVED) qualifier is specified.
#2 |
$ BACKUP [INFO]/HEADER_ONLY=(SHELVED,PRESHELVED)
MKA600:INFO.BCK/SAVE_SET
|
This command saves all files in the directory [INFO] to a tape drive
save set named INFO.BCK. The files saved from [INFO] will not be
unshelved because the HEADER_ONLY=(SHELVED,PRESHELVED) qualifier is
specified. The save set INFO.BCK will contain only the file headers of
files that are shelved or preshelved.
#3 |
$ BACKUP/IMAGE DUA0: MKA600:INFO.BCK/SAVE_SET
|
The command in this example saves all files on the disk DKA0:. Because
the /IMAGE qualifier is specified, only the file headers of files that
are shelved or preshelved are saved to INFO.BCK.
#4 |
$ BACKUP [INFO] MKA600:INFO.BCK/SAVE_SET
|
The command in this example saves all files in the directory [INFO] to
a tape drive save set named INFO.BCK. The files saved from [INFO] will
be unshelved (the default). The save set INFO.BCK will contain both the
file header and the data of files that are shelved or preshelved.
/IGNORE=option
Command Qualifier
Specifies that a BACKUP save or copy operation will override
restrictions placed on files or will not perform tape label processing
checks.
Note
File system interlocks are expressly designed to prevent data
corruptions, and to allow applications to detect and report data access
conflicts.
Use of the INTERLOCK keyword overrides these file data integrity
interlocks. The data that BACKUP subsequently transfers can then
contain corrupted data for open files. Also, all cases in which these
data corruptions can occur in the data that BACKUP transfers are not
reliably reported to you; in other words, silent data corruptions are
possible within the transferred data.
|
Format
/IGNORE= option input-specifier output-specifier
Description
The /IGNORE= qualifier has the following options:
ACCESSIBILITY
|
Processes files on a tape that is protected by a volume accessibility
character, or on a tape created by HSC Backup. The option applies only
to tapes. It affects the first tape mounted and all subsequent tapes in
the save set.
|
INTERLOCK
|
Processes files that otherwise cannot be processed due to file access
conflicts. Use this option to save or copy files currently open for
writing. No synchronization is made with the process writing the file,
so the file data that is copied might be inconsistent with the input
file, depending on the circumstances (for example, if another user is
editing the file, the contents might change). When a file open for
writing is processed, BACKUP issues the following message:
%BACKUP-W-ACCONFLICT, 'filename' is open for write by another user.
|
|
The INTERLOCK option is especially useful if you have files that are
open so much of the time that they might not otherwise be saved. The
use of this option requires the user privilege SYSPRV, a system UIC, or
ownership of the volume.
See the Note before this table for more information about this
keyword.
|
LABEL_PROCESSING
|
Saves or copies the contents of files to the specified magnetic tape
volume regardless of the information contained in the volume header
record. BACKUP does not verify the volume label or expiration date
before writing information to the tape volume. Note that you cannot use
this option with the /EXACT_ORDER qualifier.
|
NOBACKUP
|
Saves or copies both the file header record and the contents of files
marked with the NOBACKUP flag by the /NOBACKUP qualifier of the DCL
command SET FILE. If you do not specify this option, BACKUP saves only
the file header record of files marked with the NOBACKUP flag.
|
Examples
#1 |
$ BACKUP/IGNORE=INTERLOCK
_From: DUA0:[SUSAN...]
_To: MTA0:SONGBIRD.BCK/LABEL=TAPE01
|
This command saves an entire directory tree and the files in all
subdirectories, including any files that are open.
#2 |
$ BACKUP/IGNORE=LABEL_PROCESSING *.*;* MFA1:MYFILES.BCK/REWIND
|
This command rewinds the tape in drive MFA1 to the beginning-of-tape
marker, initializes the tape, and creates a save set containing all
files in the user's current directory. The command qualifier
/IGNORE=LABEL_PROCESSING specifies that no tape label processing checks
are done before BACKUP initializes the tape. When the tape is
initialized, access to data that previously resided on the tape is lost.
#3 |
$ INITIALIZE/LABEL=VOLUME_ACCESSIBILITY:"K" MUA1: 29JUN
$ BACKUP/IGNORE=(ACCESSIBILITY)
_From: DUA0:[BOOKS...]
_To: MUA1:BACKUP.SAV /LABEL=29JUN
|
The INITIALIZE command in this example initializes the tape with an
accessibility character (K) and a volume label (29JUN). The BACKUP
command mounts the tape, regardless of the accessibility, and performs
the BACKUP operation. For more information about tape protection, refer
to the HP OpenVMS System Manager's Manual.
#4 |
$ BACKUP/LOG/IMAGE/CONVERT DKA500:[000000]IMAGE.BCK/SAVE DKA200:/NOINIT
%BACKUP-I-ODS5CONV, structure level 5 files will be converted to structure
level 2 on DKA200:
-BACKUP-I-ODS5LOSS, conversion may result in loss of structure level 5
file attributes
%BACKUP-S-CREATED, created DKA200:[000000]000000.DIR;1
%BACKUP-S-CREATED, created DKA200:[000000]BACKUP.SYS;1
%BACKUP-S-CREATED, created DKA200:[000000]CONTIN.SYS;1
%BACKUP-S-CREATED, created DKA200:[000000]CORIMG.SYS;1
%BACKUP-S-CREATED, created DKA200:[000000]SECURITY.SYS;1
%BACKUP-S-CREATED, created MDA2:[000000]TEST_FILES.DIR;1
%BACKUP-S-CREATEDAS, created DKA200:[TEST_FILES]SUB^_^{DIR^}.DIR;1 as
DKA200:[TEST_FILES]SUB$$DIR$.DIR;1
|
You can use commands like the ones in the example if you have an image
backup of an ODS-5 disk, and you want to restore it to an ODS-2 disk.
In the command line in the example, IMAGE.BCK is the ODS-5 save set,
and DKA200: is the ODS-2 disk. When you use this conversion method, you
must preinitialize the output disk to ODS-2 and then include the
/NOINIT qualifier in your command line.
/IMAGE
Command Qualifier
Directs BACKUP to process an entire volume or volume set.
Format
/IMAGE input-specifier output-specifier
Description
To use the /IMAGE qualifier, you need write access to the volume index
file (INDEXF.SYS) and the bit map file (BITMAP.SYS), or the input
medium must be write-locked. BACKUP opens the index file to synchronize
with the file system (no update is made). Finally, you must have read
access to all files on the input medium.
You can receive a fatal error if you use /IMAGE with the /PHYSICAL
qualifier.
When you use the /IMAGE qualifier to save to a disk, alias directory
trees are not processed.
Note
The input and output devices in an image operation must be different
except in an image save operation when the output device is a Files--11
disk save set.
|
If the output volume is a disk, all files on the output volume are
stored contiguously. Contiguous storage of files eliminates disk
fragmentation and creates contiguous free blocks of disk space.
Because all files on the input volume are processed, you cannot use
input file-selection qualifiers in image copy or save operations. You
can, however, restore files and directories selectively from an image
save set.
When performing image operations on volume sets (more than one volume),
the number of volumes specified by the output specifier must be equal
to the number of volumes in the input volume set.
In an image save or copy operation, BACKUP attempts to save or copy all
files on the input disk volume including files marked for deletion and
lost files (files without a directory entry). By default, a BACKUP
image operation saves or copies the attributes but not the contents of
files flagged as NOBACKUP.
Also by default, BACKUP does not save the attributes nor the contents
of files open for write access by another user at the time of the image
save operation. If you want these files to be included, specify the
command qualifier /IGNORE in the BACKUP command line. The command
qualifier /IGNORE=NOBACKUP directs BACKUP to save or copy files flagged
as NOBACKUP. The command qualifier /IGNORE=INTERLOCK directs BACKUP to
save or copy files open for write access by another user.
An image restore or copy operation initializes the output volume or
volume set. The initialization data comes from the save-volume summary
record of the input volume unless the command qualifier /NOINITIALIZE
is specified. Specifying /NOINITIALIZE directs BACKUP to initialize the
output volume using volume initialization data that already exists on
the output volume.
In image restore and copy operations, every file is restored or copied.
The output volume must be mounted using the /FOREIGN qualifier. The new
volume is a functionally equivalent copy of the input volume; however,
file placement will change. Files are stored contiguously on the output
volume.
You cannot change the structure level of the output volume in an image
restore or copy operation. A BACKUP operation to mixed tape and disk
save sets, as shown in the following command, is unsupported:
$ BACKUP SYS$DISK:/IMAGE dka0:FUN,MKA0:/SAVE/REW
|
Examples
#1 |
$ MOUNT/FOREIGN DMA1:
%MOUNT-I-MOUNTED, mounted on NODE$DMA1:
$ BACKUP/IMAGE/LOG DLA2: DMA1:
%BACKUP-S-CREATED, created DMA1:[000000]000000.DIR;1
%BACKUP-S-CREATED, created DMA1:[000000]BACKUP.SYS;1
%BACKUP-S-CREATED, created DMA1:[000000]CONTIN.SYS;1
%BACKUP-S-CREATED, created DMA1:[000000]CORIMG.SYS;1
%BACKUP-S-CREATED, created DMA1:[000000]ELLA.DIR;1
%BACKUP-S-CREATED, created DMA1:[ELLA]SCAT.DAT;1
%BACKUP-S-CREATED, created DMA1:[000000]JOE.DIR;1
%BACKUP-S-CREATED, created DMA1:[JOE]STRINGS.DAT;1
%BACKUP-S-CREATED, created DMA1:[000000]OSCAR.DIR;1
%BACKUP-S-CREATED, created DMA1:[OSCAR]KEYS.DAT;1
%BACKUP-S-CREATED, created DMA1:[000000]VOLSET.SYS;1
.
.
.
$
|
The MOUNT command prepares the target disk for the image copy
operation. The command qualifier /LOG directs BACKUP to display
information about each file copied on your terminal. The BACKUP command
initializes DMA1 and copies the disk volume DLA2 to DMA1. All files on
DMA1 are stored contiguously.
#2 |
$ BACKUP/IMAGE DBA2: MTA0:ET.BCK,MTA1:
|
This command saves an entire disk volume to a multivolume save set
named ET.BCK using two magnetic tape drives.
#3 |
$ MOUNT/FOREIGN DBA1:
%MOUNT-I-MOUNTED, mounted on NODE$DBA1:
$ BACKUP/IMAGE WORKDISK DBA1:28SEP.BCK/SAVE_SET
|
The MOUNT command prepares the target disk for the image save
operation. The BACKUP command performs an image save operation to a
Files--11 save set named 28SEP.BCK.
/INCREMENTAL
Command Qualifier
Allows you to restore an incremental save set.
Note
/INCREMENTAL is valid only in restore operations. It is not related to
the /NOINCREMENTAL qualifier, which is valid only in BACKUP save
operations.
|
Format
/INCREMENTAL save-set-spec disk-device-name
Description
Use /INCREMENTAL only in restore operations that restore incremental
save sets. When you use /INCREMENTAL, the output specifier must specify
a device only; file specifications are not allowed. Also, input
save-set qualifiers are not allowed in incremental restore operations.
You can create incremental save sets with the command qualifier /RECORD
and the file-selection qualifier /SINCE=BACKUP or /SINCE=date. Most
sites perform daily incremental save operations to keep copies of files
created or modified that day, and periodic full backups to keep a copy
of all files on the disk volume. (HP recommends that you use the
command qualifier /IMAGE to perform full backups.)
If a disk volume is lost, corrupted, or destroyed, its contents can be
recreated by performing the following tasks:
- Restore the volume using the latest (most recent) image backup save
set. (The saveset must have been created using the /IMAGE and /RECORD
BACKUP command qualifiers.)
- Restore any incremental save sets since the last full backup, in
reverse chronological order, using the /INCREMENTAL qualifier.
After you restore the save sets in this order, the output disk volume
contains the same files it contained when the most recent incremental
save operation was performed.
When the /INCREMENTAL qualifier is used, the /BY_OWNER=ORIGINAL
qualifier is assumed; therefore, specifying /BY_OWNER is unnecessary
unless you want to change the original UICs. The /INCREMENTAL qualifier
can be used only on Files--11 Structure Level 2 or 5 volumes.
You can receive a fatal error if you use the /PHYSICAL qualifier with
/INCREMENTAL.
Example
If you have been performing a combination of full backups and
incremental save operations on a public volume, and the public volume
is lost, corrupted, or destroyed, use a procedure like the following
one to create a new copy of the public volume. First, restore the
volume from the latest full backup with an image restore operation.
The section "Formulating a Backup Strategy" in the BACKUP
chapter of the HP OpenVMS System Manager's Manual discusses the importance of using the
/IMAGE and /RECORD qualifiers the first time you back up a disk, before
you perform incremental backups.
$ MOUNT/FOREIGN DRA0:
%MOUNT-I-MOUNTED, mounted on _DRA0:
$ BACKUP/IMAGE/RECORD MTA0:FULLJUN02,MTA1 DRA0:
%BACKUP-I-RESUME, resuming operation on volume 2
%BACKUP-I-RESUME, resuming operation on volume 3
%BACKUP-I-RESUME, resuming operation on volume 4
.
.
.
$ DISMOUNT/NOUNLOAD DRA0:
|
Next, mount the disk as a file-structured volume and restore the
incremental save sets in reverse chronological order. Finally, restore
the weekly incremental save sets. The /INCREMENTAL qualifier must be
used where shown in the following example to obtain the correct results:
$ MOUNT DRA0: PUBLIC
%MOUNT-I-MOUNTED, PUBLIC mounted on _DRA0:
$ BACKUP/INCREMENTAL MTA0:INCD17JUN DRA0:
$ BACKUP/INCREMENTAL MTA0:INCD16JUN DRA0:
$ BACKUP/INCREMENTAL MTA0:INCD15JUN DRA0:
$ BACKUP/INCREMENTAL MTA0:INCW14JUN DRA0:
$ BACKUP/INCREMENTAL MTA0:INCW7JUN DRA0:
|
Note that BACKUP restores the volume correctly regardless of the order
in which the incremental save sets are applied; using reverse
chronological order is most efficient.
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