Configuring the AFS Backup SystemThe AFS Backup System helps you to create backup copies of data from AFS volumes and to restore data to the file system if
it is lost or corrupted. This chapter explains how to configure the Backup System. For instructions on backing up and restoring
data and displaying dump records, see Backing Up and Restoring AFS Data.Summary of InstructionsThis chapter explains how to perform the following tasks by using the indicated commands:Determine tape capacity and filemark sizefmsDefine Tape Coordinator entry in Backup Databasebackup addhostRemove Tape Coordinator entry from Backup Databasebackup delhostDisplay Tape Coordinator entries from Backup Databasebackup listhostsCreate volume setbackup addvolsetAdd volume entry to volume setbackup addvolentryList volume sets and entriesbackup listvolsetsDelete volume set from Backup Databasebackup delvolsetDelete volume entry from volume setbackup delvolentryDefine dump levelbackup adddumpChange expiration date on existing dump levelbackup setexpDelete dump level from dump hierarchybackup deldumpDisplay dump hierarchybackup listdumpsLabel tapebackup labeltapeRead label on tapebackup readlabelIntroduction to Backup System FeaturesBackup SystemintroductionThe AFS Backup System is highly flexible, enabling you to control most aspects of the backup process, including how often
backups are performed, which volumes are backed up, and whether to dump all of the data in a volume or just the data that has
changed since the last dump operation. You can also take advantage of several features that automate much of the backup
process.To administer and use the Backup System most efficiently, it helps to be familiar with its basic features, which are
described in the following sections. For pointers to instructions for implementing the features as you configure the Backup
System in your cell, see Overview of Backup System Configuration.Volume Sets and Volume Entriesvolume set (Backup System)definedvolume set (Backup System)volume entryvolume entryvolume entry (Backup System)definedBackup Systemvolume setvolume setBackup Systemvolume entryvolume entryWhen you back up AFS data, you specify which data to include in terms of complete volumes rather than individual files.
More precisely, you define groups of volumes called volume sets, each of which includes one or more
volumes that you want to back up in a single operation. You must include a volume in a volume set to back it up, because the
command that backs up data (the backup dump command) does not accept individual volume
names.A volume set consists of one or more volume entries, each of which specifies which volumes to back
up based on their location (file server machine and partition) and volume name. You can use a wildcard notation to include all
volumes that share a location, a common character string in their names, or both.For instructions on creating and removing volume sets and volume entries, see Defining and
Displaying Volume Sets and Volume Entries.Dumps and Dump SetsBackup SystemdumpdumpBackup Systemdump setdump setdump (Backup System)appended, defineddump (Backup System)parent, defineddump (Backup System)defineddump (Backup System)full, defineddump (Backup System)incremental, defineddump (Backup System)initial, defineddump (Backup System)setdump setdump set (Backup System)definedA dump is the collection of data that results from backing up a volume set. A full
dump includes all of the data in every volume in the volume set, as it exists at the time of the dump operation. An
incremental dump includes only some of the data from the volumes in the volume set, namely those files
and directory structures that have changed since a specified previous dump operation was performed. The previous dump is
referred to as the incremental dump's parent dump, and it can be either a full dump or an incremental
dump itself.A dump set is a collection of one or more dumps stored together on one or more tapes. The first
dump in the dump set is the initial dump, and any subsequent dump added onto the end of an existing dump
set is an appended dump. Appending dumps is always optional, but maximizes use of a tape's capacity. In
contrast, creating only initial dumps can result in many partially filled tapes, because an initial dump must always start on
a new tape, but does not necessarily extend to the end of the tape. Appended dumps do not have to be related to one another or
to the initial dump (they do not have to be dumps of the same or related volume sets), but well-planned appending can reduce
the number of times you have to change tapes during a restore operation. For example, it can make sense to append incremental
dumps of a volume set together in a single dump set.All the records for a dump set are indexed together in the Backup Database based on the initial dump (for more on the
Backup Database, see The Backup Database and Backup Server Process). To delete the database
record of an appended dump, you must delete the initial dump record, and doing so deletes the records for all dumps in the
dump set. Similarly, you cannot recycle just one tape in a dump set without deleting the database records of all tapes in the
dump set.For instructions on creating an initial dump, see Backing Up Data, and to learn how to
append dumps, see Appending Dumps to an Existing Dump Set.Dump Hierarchies, Dump Levels and Expiration DatesBackup Systemdump hierarchydump hierarchyBackup Systemdump leveldump hierarchydump levelsdefineddump hierarchy (Backup System)describeddump hierarchy (Backup System)dump leveldefineddump hierarchy (Backup System)expiration date on dump leveldescribedA dump hierarchy is a logical structure that defines the relationship between full and incremental
dumps; that is, it defines which dump serves as the parent for an incremental dump. Each individual component of a hierarchy
is a dump level. When you create a dump by issuing the backup dump
command, you specify a volume set name and a dump level name. The Backup System uses the dump level to determine whether the
dump is full or incremental, and if incremental, which dump level to use as the parent.You can associate an expiration date with a dump level, to define when a dump created at that level
expires. The Backup System refuses to overwrite a tape until all dumps in the dump set to which the tape belongs have expired,
so assigning expiration dates automatically determines how you recycle tapes. You can define an expiration date either in
absolute terms (for example, 13 January 2000) or relative terms (for example, 30 days from when the dump is created). You can
also change the expiration date associated with a dump level (but not with an actual dump that has already been created at
that level).For instructions on creating dump hierarchies, assigning expiration dates, and establishing a tape recycling schedule,
see Defining and Displaying the Dump Hierarchy.Backup Systemdump namedumpBackup Systemtape nametapesBackup Systemdump ID numberdumptapes (Backup System)namesdescribeddump (Backup System)ID number, describeddump (Backup System)name, describedDump Names and Tape NamesWhen you create a dump, the Backup System creates a Backup Database record for it, assigning a name comprising the
volume set name and the last element in the dump level pathname:
volume_set_name.dump_level_name
For example, a dump of the volume set user at the dump level /sunday/friday is called user.friday. The Backup System also assigns a
unique dump ID number to the dump to distinguish it from other dumps with the same name that possibly
exist.The Backup System assigns a similar AFS tape name to each tape that contains a dump set, reflecting
the volume set and dump level of the dump set's initial dump, plus a numerical index of the tape's position in the dump set,
and a unique dump ID number:
volume_set_name.dump_level_name.tape_index (dump ID)
For example, the second tape in a dump set whose initial dump is of the volume set uservol at the dump level /sunday/friday has AFS tape name like
uservol.friday.2 (914382400).In addition to its AFS tape name, a tape can have an optional permanent name that you assign.
Unlike the AFS tape name, the permanent name does not have to indicate the volume set and dump level of the initial (or any
other) dump, and so does not change depending on the contents of the tape. The Backup System does not require a certain format
for permanent names, so you need to make sure that each tape's name is unique. If a tape has a permanent name, the Backup
System uses it rather than the AFS tape name when referring to the tape in prompts and the output from most backup commands, but still tracks the AFS tape name internally.Tape Labels, Dump Labels, and EOF Markerstapes (Backup System)labeldescribeddump (Backup System)label, describedBackup SystemfilemarksTape CoordinatorTape Coordinator (Backup System)filemarkdescribedEvery tape used in the Backup System has a magnetic label at the beginning that records the tape's name, capacity, and
other information. You can use the backup labeltape command to write a label, or the
backup dump command creates one automatically if you use an unlabeled tape. The label records
the following information: The tape's permanent name, which you can assign by using the -pname argument to
the backup labeltape command. It can be any string of up to 32 characters. If you do
not assign a permanent name, the Backup System records the value <NULL> when you
use the backup labeltape command to assign an AFS tape name, or when you use the
backup dump command to write a dump to the tape.The tape's AFS tape name, which can be one of three types of values: A name that reflects the volume set and dump level of the dump set's initial dump and the tape's place in
the sequence of tapes for the dump set, as described in Dump Names and Tape Names.
If the tape does not have a permanent name, you can assign the AFS tape name by using the -name argument to the backup labeltape command.The value <NULL>, which results when you assign a permanent name, or
provide no value for the backup labeltape command's -name argument.No AFS tape name at all, indicating that you have never labeled the tape or written a dump to it.If a tape does not already have an actual AFS tape name when you write a dump to it, the Backup System constructs
and records the appropriate AFS tape name. If the tape does have an AFS tape name and you are writing an initial dump,
then the name must correctly reflect the dump's volume set and dump level.The capacity, or size, of the tape, followed by a letter that indicates the unit of measure
(k or K for kilobytes,
m or M for megabytes,
g or G for gigabytes, or
t or T for terabytes). The tape's manufacturer
determines the tape's capacity. For further discussion of how the Backup System uses the value in the capacity field,
see Configuring the tapeconfig File.For information about labeling tapes, see Writing and Reading Tape Labels.In addition to the tape label, the Backup System writes a dump label on the tape for every appended
dump (the tape label and dump label are the same for the initial dump). A dump label records the following information:
The name of the tape containing the dumpThe date and time that the dump operation beganThe cell to which the volumes in the dump belongThe dump's size in kilobytesThe dump's dump levelThe dump's dump IDThe Backup System writes a filemark (also called an End-of-File or EOF marker) between the data
from each volume in a dump. The tape device's manufacturer determines the filemark size, which is typically between 2 KB and 2
MB; in general, the larger the usual capacity of the tapes that the device uses, the larger the filemark size. If a dump
contains a small amount of data from each of a large number of volumes, as incremental dumps often do, then the filemark size
can significantly affect how much volume data fits on the tape. To enable the Backup System to factor in filemark size as it
writes a dump, you can record the filemark size in a configuration file; see Configuring the
tapeconfig File.Tape Coordinator Machines, Port Offsets, and Backup Data FilesTape Coordinator (Backup System)describedBackup SystemTape CoordinatorTape CoordinatorBackup Systemport offsetsTape CoordinatorTape Coordinator (Backup System)port offset numberdefinedA Tape Coordinator machine is a machine that drives one or more attached tape devices used for
backup operations. It must run the AFS client software (the Cache Manager) but reside in a physically secure location to
prevent unauthorized access to its console. Before backup operations can run on a Tape Coordinator machine, each tape device
on the machine must be registered in the Backup Database, and certain files and directories must exist on the machine's local
disk; for instructions, see To configure a Tape Coordinator machine.Each tape device on a Tape Coordinator machine listens for backup requests on a different UNIX port. You pick the port
indirectly by assigning a port offset number to the tape device. The Backup System sets the device's
actual port by adding the port offset to a base port number that it determines internally. For instructions on assigning port
offset numbers, see Configuring the tapeconfig File.For a tape device to perform backup operations, a Backup Tape Coordinator (butc)
process dedicated to the device must be running actively on the Tape Coordinator machine. You then direct backup requests to
the device's Tape Coordinator by specifying its port offset number with the -portoffset
argument to the backup command.In addition to writing backup data to tape, you can direct it to a backup data file on the local
disk of a Tape Coordinator machine. You can then to transfer the data to a data-archiving system, such as a hierarchical
storage management (HSM) system, that you use in conjunction with AFS and the Backup System. A backup data file has a port
offset like a tape device. For instructions on configuring backup data files, see Dumping Data to a
Backup Data File.The Backup Database and Backup Server ProcessBackup DatabasedescribedBackup SystemBackup DatabaseBackup DatabaseThe Backup Database is a replicated administrative database maintained by the Backup Server process
on the cell's database server machines. Like the other AFS database server processes, the Backup Server
uses the Ubik utility to keep the various copies of the database synchronized (for a discussion of Ubik, see Replicating the OpenAFS Administrative Databases).The Backup Database records the following information: The Tape Coordinator machine's hostname and the port offset number for each tape device used for backup
operationsThe dump hierarchy, which consists of its component dump levels and their associated expiration datesThe volume sets and their component volume entriesA record for each dump, which includes the name of each tape it appears on, a list of the volumes from which data
is included, the dump level, the expiration date, and the dump ID of the initial dump with which the dump is
associatedA record for each tape that houses dumped dataInterfaces to the Backup SystemThe backup suite of commands is the administrative interface to the Backup System. You
can issue the commands in a command shell (or invoke them in a shell script) on any AFS client or server machine from which
you can access the backup binary. In the conventional configuration, the binary resides on
the local disk.The backup command suite provides an interactive mode, in which
you can issue multiple commands over a persistent connection to the Backup Server and the Volume Location (VL) Server.
Interactive mode has several convenient features, including the following: You need to type only the operation code, omitting the initial backup
string.If you assume another AFS identity or specify a foreign cell as you enter interactive mode, it applies to all
subsequent commands.You do not need to enclose shell metacharacters in double quotes.You can track current and pending operations with the (backup) jobs command,
which is available only in this mode.You can cancel current and pending operations with the (backup) kill command,
which is available only in this mode.Before issuing a command that requires reading or writing a tape (or backup data file), you must also open a connection
to the Tape Coordinator machine that is attached to the relevant tape device (or that has the backup data file on its local
disk), and issue the butc command to initialize the Tape Coordinator process. The process
must continue to run and the connection remain open as long as you need to use the tape device or file for backup
operations.For further discussion and instructions, see Using the Backup System's
Interfaces.Overview of Backup System ConfigurationBackup Systemconfiguration overviewBefore you can use the Backup System to back up and restore data, you must configure several of its basic components. The
indicated sections of this chapter explain how to perform the following configuration tasks: Determining a tape's capacity and a tape device's filemark size, and recording them in the /usr/afs/backup/tapeconfig file (see Configuring the tapeconfig
File)Determining how to grant administrative privilege to backup operators (see Granting
Administrative Privilege to Backup Operators)Configuring Tape Coordinator machines, tape devices, and backup data files (see Configuring
Tape Coordinator Machines and Tape Devices)Defining volume sets and volume entries (see Defining and Displaying Volume Sets and Volume
Entries)Defining dump levels to create a dump hierarchy (see Defining and Displaying the Dump
Hierarchy)Labeling tapes (see Writing and Reading Tape Labels)Creating a device configuration file to automate the backup process (see Automating and
Increasing the Efficiency of the Backup Process)If you have already configured all of the components required for performing a backup dump or restore operation, you can
proceed to the instructions in Backing Up Data and Restoring and
Recovering Data.Configuring the tapeconfig Filetapes (Backup System)capacitydeterminingTape Coordinator (Backup System)filemarkdetermining sizeTape Coordinator (Backup System)port offset numberassigningfilestapeconfigtapeconfig fileSeveral factors interact to determine how much data the Tape Coordinator can fit on a tape: The tape's capacity (size), as set by the tape manufacturer.The tape device's filemark size, as set by the tape device's manufacturer. Recall from Tape
Labels, Dump Labels, and EOF Markers that the Tape Coordinator writes a filemark between the data from each volume
in a dump. If a dump contains a small amount of data from each of a large number of volumes, as incremental dumps often
do, then the filemark size can significantly affect how much volume data fits on the tape.Whether or not you use the tape device's compression mode.(The amount of data that can fit in a backup data file is determined by amount of space available on the partition, and
the operating system's maximum file size. The Tape Coordinator does not write filemarks when writing to a backup data file. For
further information about configuring a Tape Coordinator to write to a backup data file, see Dumping
Data to a Backup Data File.)As the Tape Coordinator (butc) process initializes, it reads the /usr/afs/backup/tapeconfig file on its local disk to learn the tape capacity and filemark size (for a
tape device) or the file size (for a backup data file) to use for dump operations. When you begin a dump operation, the Tape
Coordinator also reads the tape or backup data file's label to see if you have recorded a different tape capacity or file size.
If you have, the value on the label overrides the default value from the tapeconfig
file.As the Tape Coordinator writes data to a tape during a dump operation, it uses the capacity and filemark information to
track how much tape it has used and how much remains before the physical end-of-tape (EOT). Shortly before reaching EOT, the
Tape Coordinator stops writing and requests a new tape. Similarly, it uses a backup data file's size to know when it is about to
exhaust the space in the file. If the Tape Coordinator reaches the EOT unexpectedly, it recovers by obtaining a new tape and
writing to it the entire contents of the volume it was writing when it reached EOT. The interrupted volume remains on the first
tape, but is never used.Many tape devices use tapes that can accommodate multiple gigabytes, or even multiple terabytes, of backup data,
especially if you use the device's compression mode. When writing to such devices and tapes, allowing the Tape Coordinator to
hit the EOT unexpectedly is generally recommended. The devices write data so quickly that it usually does not take much extra
time to rewrite the interrupted volume on the new tape. Similarly, they compress data so well that the data abandoned on the
first tape from the interrupted volume does not constitute a waste of much tape.When writing to tapes that accommodate a smaller amount of data (say, less than two GB), it is better to avoid having the
Tape Coordinator hit EOT unexpectedly. AFS supports volumes up to 2 GB in size, so an interrupted volume can in fact take up
most of the tape. For such tapes, recording accurate values for tape capacity and filemark size, if possible, helps to maximize
both use of tape and the efficiency of dump operations. The following discussion of the fields in the tapeconfig file explains how to determine the appropriate values.Use a text editor to create an entry in a Tape Coordinator's tapeconfig file for each
tape device or backup data file that it uses. Each device or file's entry is on its own line and has the following
format:
[capacity filemark_size] device_name port_offset
where capacitySpecifies the capacity of the tapes used with a tape device, or the amount of data to write into a backup data
file. Specify an integer value followed by a letter that indicates units, with no intervening space. The letter
k or K indicates kilobytes, m or M indicates megabytes, g
or G indicates gigabytes, and t or T indicates terabytes. If the units letter is omitted, the default is kilobytes.To determine the capacity of a tape under two GB in size that you are going to use in regular (noncompression)
mode, you can either use the value that the tape's manufacturer specifies on the tape's packaging or use the fms command to calculate the capacity, as described later in this section. To avoid having the
Tape Coordinator reach the EOT unexpectedly, it is best to record in the tapeconfig
file or on the label a capacity that is about 10% smaller than the actual capacity of the tape. To calculate the
appropriate value for a small tape used in compression mode, one method is to multiply the tape capacity (as recorded by
the manufacturer) by the device's compression ratio.For tapes that hold multiple gigabytes or terabytes of data, or if using a tape drive's compression mode, the
recommended configuration is to record a value quite a bit (for instance, two times) larger than the maximum amount you
believe can fit on the tape. It is not generally worthwhile to run the fms command on
large tapes, even in noncompression mode. The command definitely does not yield accurate results in compression mode.
The Tape Coordinator is likely to reach the EOT unexpectedly, but compression mode fits so much data on the tape that
the data abandoned from an interrupted volume does not represent much of the tape's capacity.For a backup data file, record a value slightly smaller than the amount of space available on the partition, and
definitely smaller than the operating system's maximum file size. It is also best to limit the ability of other
processes to write to the partition, to prevent them from using up the space in the partition.If this field is empty, the Tape Coordinator uses the maximum acceptable value (2048 GB or 2 TB). Either leave
both this field and the filemark_size field empty, or provide a value in both of them.filemark_sizeSpecifies the tape device's filemark size, which usually falls between 2 KB and 2 MB. Use the same notation as for
the capacity field, but note that if you omit the units letter, the default unit is bytes rather than kilobytes.For a tape device in regular (noncompression) mode, you can use the fms command
to determine filemark size, or use the value reported by the device's manufacturer. To help the Tape Coordinator avoid
reaching EOT unexpectedly, increase the value by about 10% when recording it in the tapeconfig file.The recommended value for a tape device in compression mode is 0 (zero). The
fms command does not yield accurate results in compression mode, so you cannot use it
to determine the filemark size.The recommended value for a backup data file is also 0 (zero). The Tape
Coordinator does not use filemarks when writing to a file, but a value must appear in this field nevertheless if there
is also a value in the capacity field.If this field is empty, the Tape Coordinator uses the value 0 (zero). Either
leave both this field and the capacity field empty, or provide a value in both of them.device_nameSpecifies the complete pathname of the tape device or backup data file. The format of tape device names depends on
the operating system, but on UNIX systems, device names generally begin with the string /dev/. For a backup data file, this field defines the complete pathname, but for suggestions on
how to name a backup data file, see Dumping Data to a Backup Data File.port_offsetSpecifies the port offset number for a specific tape device or backup data file. Each tape device listens for
backup requests on a different UNIX port. You pick the port indirectly by recording a value in this field. The Backup
System sets the device's actual port by adding the port offset to a base port number that it determines
internally.Legal values are the integers 0 through 58510
(the Backup System can track a maximum of 58,511 port offset numbers). Each value must be unique among the cell's Tape
Coordinators, but you do not have to assign port offset numbers sequentially, and you can associate any number of them
with a single machine or even tape device. For example, if you plan to use a device in both compression and
noncompression mode, assign it two different port offsets with appropriate tape capacity and filemark values for the
different modes.Assign port offset 0 (zero) to the Tape Coordinator for the tape device or backup
data file that you use most often for backup operations; doing so enables you to omit the -portoffset argument from the largest possible number of backup
commands.The following example tapeconfig file includes entries for two tape devices, /dev/rmt0h and /dev/rmt1h. Each one uses tapes with a capacity of 2 GB
and has a filemark size of 1 MB. Their port offset numbers are 0 and
1.
2g 1m /dev/rmt0h 0
2G 1M /dev/rmt1h 1
The fms command reports the capacity of the tape you have inserted and the tape device's
filemark size, both on the standard output stream (stdout) and in its fms.log file, which it
writes in the current working directory. The command interpreter must write data to the entire tape, so running the command can
take from several hours to more than a day, depending on the size of the tape.To run the fms command on a noncompressing tape devicefms.log filefilesfms.loglog filesfms.logcommandsfmsfms commandIf an fms.log file does not already exist in the current directory, verify that you
can insert and write to files in the current directory. If the log file already exists, you must be able to write to the
file.Insert a tape into the drive. Running the command completely overwrites the tape, so use a blank tape or one that
you want to recycle.Issue the fms command.
% fms <tape special file>
where fmsMust be typed in full.tape special fileSpecifies the tape device's UNIX device name, such as /dev/rmt0h.The following example output reports that the tape in the device with device name /dev/rmt0h has a capacity of 2136604672 bytes (about 2 GB), and that the device's filemark size is
1910205 bytes (close to 2 MB).
% fms /dev/rmt0h
wrote block: 130408
Finished data capacity test - rewinding
wrote 1109 blocks, 1109 file marks
Finished file mark test
Tape capacity is 2136604672 bytes
File marks are 1910205 bytes
Granting Administrative Privilege to Backup OperatorsEach person who issues the backup and butc commands in
your cell must be listed in the /usr/afs/etc/UserList file on every database server machine
that stores the Backup Database and Volume Location Database (VLDB), and every machine that houses a volume included in a volume
set. By convention, the UserList file is the same on every server machine in the cell; the
instructions in this document assume that your cell is configured in this way. To edit the UserList file, use the bos adduser and bos
removeuser commands as described in Administering the UserList File.In addition to being listed in the UserList file, backup operators who issue the
butc command must be able to write to the files stored in each Tape Coordinator machine's local
/usr/afs/backup directory, which are protected by UNIX mode bits. Before configuring your
cell's first Tape Coordinator machine, decide which local user and group to designate as the owner of the directory and the
files in it. Among the possible ownership options are the following: The local superuser root. With this option, the issuer of the butc command must log onto the local file system as the local superuser root. If the Tape Coordinator is also a server machine, the -localauth flag is used on the butc command to construct a server
ticket from the local /usr/afs/etc/KeyFile file. On non-server machine, the issuer must
issue the klog command to authenticate as an AFS administrator while logged in as
root.A single AFS administrator. Logging in and authenticating are a single step if an AFS-modified login utility is
used. The administrator is the only user who can start the Tape Coordinator.An administrative account for which several operators know the password. This allows them all to start the Tape
Coordinator.Another option is to define a group in the local group file (/etc/group or equivalent) to
which all backup operators belong. Then turn on the w mode bit (write permission) in the group mode bits rather than the user mode bits of the /usr/afs/backup directory and files in it. An advantage over the methods listed previously is that each
operator can retain an individual administrative account for finer granularity in auditing.For instructions on implementing your choice of protection methods, see Configuring Tape
Coordinator Machines and Tape Devices.Configuring Tape Coordinator Machines and Tape DevicesTape Coordinator (Backup System)configuringmachineTape Coordinator (Backup System)configuringtape deviceTape Coordinator (Backup System)configuringAIX systemAIXconfiguring tape deviceThis section explains how to configure a machine as a Tape Coordinator machine, and how to configure or remove the Tape
Coordinator associated with a single tape device or backup data file.When configuring a tape device attached to an AIX system, you must set the device's tape block size to 0 (zero) to indicate variable block size. If you do not, it is possible that devices attached to
machines of other system types cannot read the tapes made on the AIX system. Use the AIX smit
program to verify or change the value of the tape block size for a tape device, as instructed in Sep 3.To configure a Tape Coordinator machineVerify that you are authenticated as a user listed in the /usr/afs/etc/UserList
file. If necessary, issue the bos listusers command, which is fully described in To display the users in the UserList file.
% bos listusers <machine name>
Become the local superuser root on the machine, if you are not already, by issuing
the su command.
% su root
Password: <root_password>
Install one or more tape devices on the Tape Coordinator machine according to the
manufacturer's instructions. The Backup System can track a maximum of 58,511 tape devices or backup data files per
cell.If the Tape Coordinator machine is an AIX system, issue the following command to change the tape device's tape block
size to 0 (zero), which indicates variable block size. Repeat for each tape
device.
# chdev -l 'device_name' -a block_size='0'where device_name is the tape device's device name (for example, /dev/rmt0h).Verify that the binary files for the backup, butc,
and fms commands are available on the local disk. If the machine is an AFS client, the
conventional location is the /usr/afsws/etc directory.
# ls /usr/afsws/etcCreate the /usr/afs directory. (If the Tape Coordinator machine is also configured
as a file server machine, this directory already exists.) Then create the /usr/afs/backup
directory.
# mkdir /usr/afs
# mkdir /usr/afs/backupUse a text editor to create the /usr/afs/backup/tapeconfig file. Include a single
line for each tape device or backup data file, specifying the following information in the indicated order. For syntax
details and suggestions on the values to use in each field, see Configuring the tapeconfig
File. The capacity of tapes to be used in the device, or the size of the backup data fileThe device's filemark sizeThe device's device name, starting with the string /dev/The device's port offset numberTape Coordinator (Backup System)assigning file ownershipusr/afs/backup directoryownership, assigningtapeconfig fileownership, assigningdirectories/usr/afs/backupDecide which user and group are to own the /usr/afs/backup directory and /usr/afs/backup/tapeconfig file, based on the suggestions in Granting
Administrative Privilege to Backup Operators. Correct the UNIX mode bits on the directory and file, if necessary.
# chown admin_owner /usr/afs/backup
# chown admin_owner /usr/afs/backup/tapeconfig
# chgrp admin_group /usr/afs/backup
# chgrp admin_group /usr/afs/backup/tapeconfig
# chmod 774 /usr/afs/backup
# chmod 664 /usr/afs/backup/tapeconfigcommandsbackup addhostbackup commandsaddhostTape Coordinator (Backup System)adding to Backup DatabaseBackup DatabaseTape Coordinatoradding entryIssue the backup addhost command to create a Tape
Coordinator entry in the Backup Database. Repeat the command for each Tape Coordinator.
# backup addhost <tape machine name> [<TC port offset>]
where addhIs the shortest acceptable abbreviation of addhost.tape machine nameSpecifies the Tape Coordinator machine's fully qualified hostname.TC port offsetSpecifies the tape device's port offset number. Provide the same value as you specified for the device in
the tapeconfig file. You must provide this argument unless the default value of 0
(zero) is appropriate.To configure an additional Tape Coordinator on an existing Tape Coordinator machineVerify that you are authenticated as a user listed in the /usr/afs/etc/UserList
file. If necessary, issue the bos listusers command, which is fully described in To display the users in the UserList file.
% bos listusers <machine name>
Become the local superuser root on the machine, if you are not already, by issuing
the su command.
% su root
Password: <root_password>
Install the tape device on the Tape Coordinator machine according to the manufacturer's instructions.If the Tape Coordinator machine is an AIX system, issue the following command to change the tape device's tape block
size to 0 (zero), which indicates variable block size.
# chdev -l 'device_name' -a block_size='0'Choose the port offset number to assign to the tape device. If necessary, use the backup
listhosts command to display the port offset numbers that are already used; for a discussion of the output, see
To display the list of configured Tape Coordinators.
# backup listhostswhere listh is the shortest acceptable abbreviation of listhosts.Use a text editor to add one or more entries for the device to the /usr/afs/backup/tapeconfig file. Specify the following information in the indicated order. For
syntax details and suggestions on the values to use in each field, see Configuring the tapeconfig
File. The capacity of tapes to be used in the device, or the size of the backup data fileThe device's filemark sizeThe device's device name, starting with the string /dev/The device's port offset numberIssue the backup addhost command to create an entry in the Backup Database for the
Tape Coordinator. For complete syntax, see Step 8 in To
configure a Tape Coordinator machine.
# backup addhost <tape machine name> [<TC port offset>]
backup commandsdelhostcommandsbackup delhostTape Coordinator (Backup System)removing from Backup DatabaseBackup DatabaseTape Coordinatorremoving entryTo unconfigure a Tape CoordinatorVerify that you are authenticated as a user listed in the /usr/afs/etc/UserList
file. If necessary, issue the bos listusers command, which is fully described in To display the users in the UserList file.
% bos listusers <machine name>
Using a text editor, remove each of the Tape Coordinator's entries from the /usr/afs/backup/tapeconfig file.Issue the backup delhost command to delete the Tape Coordinator's Backup Database
entry.
% backup delhost <tape machine name> [<TC port offset>]
where delhIs the shortest acceptable abbreviation of delhost.tape machine nameIs the complete Internet host name of the Tape Coordinator machine.TC port offsetIs the same port offset number removed from the tapeconfig file. You must
provide this argument unless the default value of 0 (zero) is appropriate.Tape Coordinator (Backup System)port offset numberdisplayingBackup Databaseport offset numbersdisplayingbackup commandslisthostscommandsbackup listhostsTo display the list of configured Tape CoordinatorsIssue the backup listhosts command to list the Tape Coordinators and port offset
numbers currently configured in the Backup Database.
% backup listhostswhere listhIs the shortest acceptable abbreviation of listhosts.The output lists each Tape Coordinator machine and the port offset numbers currently allocated to it in the Backup
Database. The appearance of a port offset number does not imply that the associated Tape Coordinator is actually running.
Machine names appear in the format in which they were specified with the backup addhost
command.The following example output lists the Tape Coordinators currently defined in the Backup Database of the Example Corporation
cell:
% backup listhosts
Tape hosts:
Host backup1.example.com, port offset 0
Host backup1.example.com, port offset 2
Host backup2.example.com, port offset 1
Host backup2.example.com, port offset 3
Defining and Displaying Volume Sets and Volume EntriesThe Backup System handles data at the level of volumes rather than individual files. You must define groups of volumes
called volume sets before performing backup operations, by using the backup
addvolset command. A volume set name can be up to 31 characters long and can include any character other than the
period (.), but avoid using metacharacters that have special meanings to the shell.After creating a volume set, use the backup addvolentry command to place one or more
volume entries in it. They define the volumes that belong to it in terms of their location (file server
machine and partition) and name. Use the command's required -server argument to designate the
file server machine that houses the volumes of interest and its required -partition argument to
designate the partition. Two types of values are acceptable: The fully qualified hostname of one machine or full name of one partition (such as /vicepm)The regular expression .* (period and asterisk), which matches every machine name
or partition name in the VLDBregular expressionBackup SystemBackup Systemregular expressionsFor the volume name (the required -volume argument), specify a combination of
alphanumeric characters and one or more metacharacters to specify part or all of the volume name with a wildcard. You can use
any of the following metacharacters in the volume name field: .The period matches any single character.*The asterisk matches zero or more instances of the preceding character. Combine it with any other alphanumeric
character or metacharacter.[ ]Square brackets around a list of characters match a single instance of any of the characters, but no other
characters; for example, [abc] matches a single a or
b or c, but not d or
A. You can combine this expression with the asterisk.^The caret, when used as the first character in a square-bracketed set, designates a match with any single
character other than the characters that follow it; for example, [^a] matches any
single character except lowercase a. You can combine this expression with the
asterisk.\A backslash preceding any of the metacharacters in this list makes it match its literal value only. For example,
the expression \. (backslash and period) matches a single period, \* matches a single asterisk, and \\ matches a single backslash.
You can combine such expressions with the asterisk (for example, \.* matches any number
of periods).Perhaps the most common regular expression is the period followed by an asterisk (.*).
This expression matches any string of any length, because the period matches any character and the asterisk means any number of
that character. As mentioned, it is the only acceptable regular expression in the file server and partition fields of a volume
entry. In the volume name field, it can stand alone (in which case it matches every volume listed in the VLDB), or can combine
with alphanumeric characters. For example, the string user.*\.backup matches any volume name
that begins with the string user and ends with .backup.Issuing the backup addvolentry command in interactive mode is simplest. If you issue it
at the shell prompt, you must surround any string that includes a regular expression with double quotes ("
") so that the shell passes them uninterpreted to the backup command interpreter
rather than resolving them.To define various combinations of volumes, provide the following types of values for the backup
addvolentry command's three arguments. The list uses the notation appropriate for interactive mode; if you issue the
command at the shell prompt instead, place double quotes around any string that includes a regular expression. To create a
volume entry that includes: All volumes listed in the VLDB, use the regular expression .* for all three
arguments (-server .* -partition .* -volume .*)Every volume on a specific file server machine, specify its fully qualified hostname as the -server argument and use the regular expression .* for the
-partition and -volume arguments (for example: -server fs1.example.com -partition .* -volume .*)All volumes that reside on a partition with the same name on various file server machines, specify the complete
partition name as the -partition argument and use the regular expression .* for the -server and -volume
arguments (for example: -server .* -partition /vicepd -volume .*)Every volume with a common string in its name, use the regular expression .* for
the -server and -partition arguments, and provide a
combination of alphanumeric characters and metacharacters as the -volume argument (for
example: -server .* -partition .* -volume .*\.backup includes all volumes whose names end
in the string .backup).All volumes on one partition, specify the machine's fully qualified hostname as the -server argument and the full partition name as the -partition
argument, and use the regular expression .* for the -volume argument (for example: -server fs2.example.com -partition /vicepb -volume
.*).A single volume, specify its complete name as the -volume argument. To bypass the
potentially time-consuming search through the VLDB for matching entries, you can specify an actual machine and partition
name for the -server and -partition arguments
respectively. However, if it is possible that you need to move the volume in future, it is best to use the regular
expression .* for the machine and partition name.As you create volume sets, define groups of volumes you want to dump to the same tape at the same time (for example,
weekly or daily) and in the same manner (fully or incrementally). In general, a volume set that includes volumes with similar
contents (as indicated by similar names) is more useful than one that includes volumes that share a common location, especially
if you often move volumes for load-balancing or space reasons. Most often, then, it is appropriate to use the regular expression
.* (period followed by a backslash) for the -server and
-partition arguments to the backup addvolentry command.It is generally more efficient to include a limited number of volumes in a volume entry. Dumps of a volume set that
includes a large number of volume can take a long time to complete, increasing the possibility that the operation fails due to a
service interruption or outage.To remove a volume entry from a volume set, use the backup delvolentry command. To remove
a volume set and all of its component volume entries from the Backup Database, use the backup
delvolset command. To display the volume entries in a volume set, use the backup
listvolsets command.By default, a Backup Database record is created for the new volume set. Sometimes it is convenient to create volume sets
without recording them permanently in the Backup Database, for example when using the backup
volsetrestore command to restore a group of volumes that were not necessarily backed up together (for further
discussion, see Using the backup volsetrestore Command). To create a
temporary volume set, include the -temporary flag to the backup addvolset command. A temporary volume set exists only during the lifetime of the current
interactive session, so the flag is effective only when used during an interactive session (opened by issuing the backup (interactive) command). You can use the backup delvolset command
to delete a temporary volume set before the interactive session ends, if you wish, but as noted it is automatically deleted when
you end the session. One advantage of temporary volume sets is that the backup addvolset
command, and any backup addvolentry commands subsequently used to add volume entries to it,
complete more quickly than for regular volume sets, because you are not creating any Backup Database records.Backup Databasevolume setcreatingvolume set (Backup System)creatingcommandsbackup addvolsetbackup commandsaddvolsetTo create a volume setVerify that you are authenticated as a user listed in the /usr/afs/etc/UserList
file. If necessary, issue the bos listusers command, which is fully described in To display the users in the UserList file.
% bos listusers <machine name>
(Optional) Issue the backup command to enter
interactive mode. If you are going to define volume entries right away with the backup
addvolentry command, this eliminates the need to surround metacharacter expressions with double quotes. You
must enter interactive mode if creating a temporary volume set.
% backupIssue the (backup) addvolset command to create the volume set. You must then issue
the (backup) addvolentry command to define volume entries in it.
backup> addvolset <volume set name> [-temporary]
where addvolsIs the shortest acceptable abbreviation of addvolset.volume set nameNames the volume set. The name can include no more than 31 characters, cannot include periods, and must be
unique within the Backup Database. (A temporary volume set can have the same name as an existing permanent volume
set, but this is not recommended because of the confusion it can cause.)-temporaryCreates a temporary volume set, which exists only during the current interactive session.volume entry (Backup System)creatingBackup Databasevolume entrycreatingcommandsbackup addvolentrybackup commandsaddvolentryTo add a volume entry to a volume setVerify that you are authenticated as a user listed in the /usr/afs/etc/UserList
file. If necessary, issue the bos listusers command, which is fully described in To display the users in the UserList file.
% bos listusers <machine name>
(Optional) Issue the backup command to enter
interactive mode if you have not already. This makes it simpler to use metacharacter expressions, because you do not need
to surround them with double quotes. If you are adding entries to a temporary volume set, you must already have entered
interactive mode before creating the volume set.
% backupIssue the (backup) addvolentry command to define volume entries in an existing
volume set. The Backup System assigns each volume entry an index within the volume set, starting with 1 (one).
backup> addvolentry -name <volume set name> \
-server <machine name> \
-partition <partition name> \
-volumes <volume name (regular expression)>
where addvoleIs the shortest acceptable abbreviation of addvolentry.-nameNames the volume set to which to add the volume entry. It must already exist (use the backup addvolset command to create it).-serverDefines the set of one or more file server machines that house the volumes in the volume entry. Provide
either one fully-qualified hostname (such as fs1.example.com) or the metacharacter
expression .* (period and asterisk), which matches all machine names in the
VLDB.-partitionDefines the set of one or more partitions that house the volumes in the volume entry. Provide either one
complete partition name (such as /vicepa) or the metacharacter expression
.* (period and asterisk), which matches all partition names.-volumesDefines the set of one or more volumes included in the volume entry, identifying them by name. This argument
can include a combination of alphanumeric characters and one or more of the metacharacter expressions discussed in
the introductory material in this section.Backup Databasevolume setdisplayingBackup Databasevolume entrydisplayingvolume set (Backup System)displayingvolume entry (Backup System)displayingbackup commandslistvolsetscommandsbackup listvolsetsTo display volume sets and volume entriesIssue the backup listvolsets command to display the volume entries in a specific
volume set or all of them. If you are displaying a temporary volume set, you must still be in the interactive session in
which you created it.
% backup listvolsets [<volume set name>]
where listvIs the shortest acceptable abbreviation of listvolsets.volume set nameNames the volume set to display. Omit this argument to display all defined volume sets.The output from the command uses the wildcard notation used when the volume entries were created. The string
(temporary) marks a temporary volume set. The following example displays all three of the
volume sets defined in a cell's Backup Database, plus a temporary volume set pat+jones
created during the current interactive session:
backup> listv
Volume set pat+jones (temporary):
Entry 1: server fs1.example.com, partition /vicepe, volumes: user.pat.backup
Entry 2: server fs5.example.com, partition /viceph, volumes: user.jones.backup
Volume set user:
Entry 1: server .*, partition .*, volumes: user.*\.backup
Volume set sun:
Entry 1: server .*, partition .*, volumes: sun4x_55\..*
Entry 2: server .*, partition .*, volumes: sun4x_56\..*
Volume set rs:
Entry 1: server .*, partition .*, volumes: rs_aix42\..*
Backup Databasevolume setdeletingvolume set (Backup System)deletingcommandsbackup delvolsetbackup commandsdelvolsetTo delete a volume setVerify that you are authenticated as a user listed in the /usr/afs/etc/UserList
file. If necessary, issue the bos listusers command, which is fully described in To display the users in the UserList file.
% bos listusers <machine name>
Issue the backup delvolset command to delete one or more volume sets and all of the
component volume entries in them. If you are deleting a temporary volume set, you must still be in the interactive session
in which you created it.
% backup delvolset <volume set name>+
where delvolsIs the shortest acceptable abbreviation of delvolset.volume set nameNames each volume set to delete.Backup Databasevolume entrydeleting from volume setvolume set (Backup System)deleting volume entryvolume entry (Backup System)deletingcommandsbackup delvolentrybackup commandsdelvolentryTo delete a volume entry from a volume setVerify that you are authenticated as a user listed in the /usr/afs/etc/UserList
file. If necessary, issue the bos listusers command, which is fully described in To display the users in the UserList file.
% bos listusers <machine name>
Issue the backup command to enter interactive mode.
% backupIf the volume set includes more than one volume entry, issue the (backup)
listvolsets command to display the index number associated with each one (if there is only one volume entry,
its index is 1). For a more detailed description of the command's output, see To display volume
sets and volume entries.
backup> listvolsets <volume set name>
where listvIs the shortest acceptable abbreviation of listvolsets.volume set nameNames the volume set for which to display volume entries.Issue the (backup) delvolentry command to delete the volume entry.
backup> delvolentry <volume set name> <volume entry index>
where delvoleIs the shortest acceptable abbreviation of delvolentry.volume set nameNames the volume set from which to delete a volume entry.volume entry indexSpecifies the index number of the volume entry to delete.Defining and Displaying the Dump Hierarchydump hierarchy (Backup System)creatingdump hierarchy (Backup System)expiration datesassigning to dump levelsA dump hierarchy is a logical structure in the Backup Database that defines the relationship between full and incremental
dumps; that is, it defines which dump serves as the parent for an incremental dump. Each individual component of a hierarchy is
a dump level.As you define dump levels with the backup adddump command, keep the following rules and
suggestions in mind: Each full dump level is the top level of a hierarchy. You can create as many hierarchies as you need to dump
different volume sets on different schedules.The name of a full dump level consists of an initial slash (/), followed by a
string of up to 28 alphanumeric characters.The name of an incremental dump level resembles a pathname, starting with the name of a full dump level, then the
first incremental level, and so on, down to the final incremental level. Precede each level name with a slash to separate
it from the preceding level. Like the full level, each component level in the name can have up to 28 alphanumeric
characters, not including the slash.A hierarchy can have any have any number of levels, but the maximum length of a complete dump level name is 256
characters, including the slashes.Before defining a given incremental level, you must define all of the levels above it in the hierarchy.Do not use the period (.) in dump level names. The Backup System uses the period as
the separator between a dump's volume set name and dump level name when it creates the dump name and AFS tape name. Any
other alphanumeric and punctuation characters are allowed, but it is best to avoid metacharacters. If you include a
metacharacter, you must precede it with a backslash (\) or surround the entire dump level
name with double quotes (" ").Naming dump levels for days or other actual time points reminds you when to perform dumps, and makes it easier to
track the relationship between dumps performed at different levels. However, the names have no meaning to the Backup
System: it does not automatically create dumps according to the names, and does not prevent you from, for example, using
the /sunday level when creating a dump on a Tuesday.It is best not to use the same name for more than one component level in a hierarchy, because it means the resulting
dump name no longer indicates which level was used. For example, if you name a dump level /full/incr/incr, then the dump name and AFS tape name that result from dumping a volume set at the
first incremental level (/full/incr) look the same as the names that result from dumping
at the second incremental level (/full/incr/incr).Individual levels in different hierarchies can have the same name, but the complete pathnames must be unique. For
example, /sunday1/monday and /sunday2/monday share the
same name at the final level, but are unique because they have different names at the full level (belong to different
hierarchies). However, using the same name in multiple hierarchies means that dump and AFS tape names do not unambiguously
indicate which hierarchy was used.The following example shows three hierarchies. Each begins with a full dump at the top: sunday1 for the first hierarchy, sunday2 for the second hierarchy, and
sunday_bin for the third hierarchy. In all three hierarchies, each of the other dump levels is
an incremental level.
/sunday1
/monday
/tuesday
/wednesday
/thursday
/friday
/sunday2
/monday
/tuesday
/wednesday
/thursday
/friday
/sunday_bin
/monday
/wednesday
/friday
In the first hierarchy, each incremental dump level refers to the full level /sunday1 as
its parent. When (for example) you dump a volume set at the /sunday1/wednesday level, it
includes data that has changed since the volume set was dumped at the /sunday1 level.In contrast, each incremental dump level in the second hierarchy refers to the immediately preceding dump level as its
parent. When you dump a volume set at the corresponding level in the second hierarchy (/sunday2/monday/tuesday/wednesday), the dump includes only data that has changed since the volume set was
dumped at the /sunday2/monday/tuesday level (presumably the day before). Assuming you create
dumps on the indicated days, an incremental dump made using this hierarchy contains less data than an incremental dump made at
the corresponding level in the first hierarchy.The third hierarchy is more appropriate for dumping volumes for which a daily backup is excessive because the data does
not change often (for example, system binaries).Creating a Tape Recycling Scheduleexpiration datesBackup Databaseexpiration datesdump hierarchy (Backup System)expiration datesdump levelsexpiration datesexpiration datesabsoluteexpiration datesrelativeBackup Systemrecycling schedule for tapestape recycling schedulesIf your cell is like most cells, you have a limited amount of room for storing backup tapes and a limited budget for new
tapes. The easiest solution is to recycle tapes by overwriting them when you no longer need the backup data on them. The
Backup System helps you implement a recycling schedule by enabling you to associate an expiration date with each dump level.
The expiration date defines when a dump created at that level expires. Until that time the Backup System refuses to overwrite
a tape that contains the dump. Thus, assigning expiration dates automatically determines how you recycle tapes.When designing a tape-recycling schedule, you must decide how far in the past and to what level of precision you want to
guarantee access to backed up data. For instance, if you decide to guarantee that you can restore a user's home volume to its
state on any given day in the last two weeks, you cannot recycle the tape that contains a given daily dump for at least two
weeks after you create it. Similarly, if you decide to guarantee that you can restore home volumes to their state at the
beginning of any given week in the last month, you cannot recycle the tapes in a dump set containing a weekly dump for at
least four weeks. The following example dump hierarchy implements this recycling schedule by setting the expiration date for
each daily incremental dump to 13 days and the expiration date of the weekly full dumps to 27 days.The tapes used to store dumps created at the daily incremental levels in the /sunday1
hierarchy expire just in time to be recycled for daily dumps in the /sunday3 hierarchy (and
vice versa), and there is a similar relationship between the /sunday2 and /sunday4 hierarchies. Similarly, the tape that houses a full dump at the /sunday1 level expires just in time to be used for a full dump on the first Sunday of the following
month.
/sunday1 expires in 27d
/monday1 expires in 13d
/tuesday1 expires in 13d
/wednesday1 expires in 13d
/thursday1 expires in 13d
/friday1 expires in 13d
/sunday2 expires in 27d
/monday2 expires in 13d
/tuesday2 expires in 13d
/wednesday2 expires in 13d
/thursday2 expires in 13d
/friday2 expires in 13d
/sunday3 expires in 27d
/monday1 expires in 13d
/tuesday1 expires in 13d
/wednesday1 expires in 13d
/thursday1 expires in 13d
/friday1 expires in 13d
/sunday4 expires in 27d
/monday2 expires in 13d
/tuesday2 expires in 13d
/wednesday2 expires in 13d
/thursday2 expires in 13d
/friday2 expires in 13d
If you use appended dumps in your cell, keep in mind that all dumps in a dump set are subject to the latest (furthest
into the future) expiration date associated with any of the constituent dumps. You cannot recycle any of the tapes that
contain a dump set until all of the dumps have reached their expiration date. See also Appending
Dumps to an Existing Dump Set.Most tape manufacturers recommend that you write to a tape a limited number of times, and it is best not to exceed this
limit when recycling tapes. To help you track tape usage, the Backup System records a
useCount counter on the tape's label. It increments the counter each time the tape's label is
rewritten (each time you use the backup labeltape or backup
dump command). To display the useCount counter, use the backup readlabel or backup scantape command or include the -id and -verbose options when you issue the backup dumpinfo command. For instructions see Writing and Reading Tape
Labels or Displaying Backup Dump Records.useCount counter on tape label (Backup System)Backup SystemuseCount counter on tape labelrecyclinguseCounts of tapes (Backup System)tape labelsuseCounts of tapesArchiving Tapesarchivingtapes in Backup Systemtapes (Backup System)archivingEven if you make extensive use of tape recycling, there is probably some backup data that you need to archive for a long
(or even an indefinite) period of time. You can use the Backup System to archive data on a regular schedule, and you can also
choose to archive data on tapes that you previously expected to recycle.If you want to archive data on a regular basis, you can create date-specific dump levels in the dump hierarchy. For
example, if you decide to archive a full dump of all data in your cell at the beginning of each quarter in the year 2000, you
can define the following levels in the dump hierarchy:
/1Q2000
/2Q2000
/3Q2000
/4Q2000
If you decide to archive data that is on tapes you previously planned to recycle, you must gather all of the tapes that
contain the relevant dumps, both full and incremental. To avoid accidental erasure, it is best to set the switch on the tapes
that makes them read-only, before placing them in your archive storage area. If the tapes also contain a large amount of
extraneous data that you do not want to archive, you can restore just the relevant data into a new temporary volume, and back
up that volume to the smallest number of tapes possible. One reason to keep a dump set small is to minimize the amount of
irrelevant data in a dump set you end up needing to archive.If you do not expect to restore archived data to the file system, you can consider using the backup deletedump command to remove the associated dump records from the Backup Database, which helps
keep it to an efficient size. If you ever need to restore the data, you can use the -dbadd
flag to the backup scantape command to reinsert the dump records into the database. For
instructions, see To scan the contents of a tape.Defining Expiration DatesTo associate an expiration date with a dump level as you create it, use the -expires
argument to the backup adddump command. To change an existing dump level's expiration date,
use the -expires argument to the backup setexp command.
(Note that it is not possible to change the expiration date of an actual dump that has already been created at that level).
With both commands, you can define an expiration date either in absolute terms (for example, 13 January 2000) or relative
terms (for example, 30 days from when the dump is created). To define an absolute expiration date, provide a value for the -expires argument
with the following format:
[at] mm/dd/yyyy [hh:MM]
where mm indicates the month, dd the day, and yyyy the year when the dump expires. Valid values for the year fall
in the range 1970 through 2037 (the latest possible
date that the UNIX time representation can express is in early 2038). If you provide a time, it must be in 24-hour
format with hh the hours and MM the minutes (for example, 21:50 is 9:50 p.m.). If you
omit the time, the default is 00:00 hours (12:00 midnight) on the indicated date.To define a relative expiration date, provide a value for the -expires argument
with the following format:
[in] [yearsy] [monthsm] [daysd]
where each of years, months, and days is an integer. Provide at least one of them together with the corresponding
units letter (y, m, or d respectively), with no intervening space. If you provide more than one of the three, list them
in the indicated order.The Backup System calculates a dump's actual expiration date by adding the indicated relative value to the start
time of the dump operation. For example, it assigns an expiration date 1 year, 6 months, and 2 days in the future to a
dump created at a dump level with associated expiration date in 1y 6m 2d.To indicate that a dump backed up at the corresponding dump level never expires, provide the value NEVER instead of a date and time. To recycle tapes that contain dumps created at such a level,
you must use the backup readlabel command to overwrite the tape's label.If you omit the -expires argument to the backup
adddump command, then the expiration date is set to UNIX time zero (00:00 hours on 1 January 1970). The Backup
System considers dumps created at such a dump level to expire at their creation time. If no dumps in a dump set have an
expiration date, then the Backup System does not impose any restriction on recycling the tapes that contain the dump set. If
you need to prevent premature recycling of the tapes that contain the dump set, you must use a manual tracking system.Backup Databasedump levelsaddingdump levelsin Backup Databaseaddingdump hierarchy (Backup System)dump levelsaddingexpiration datessettingBackup Databaseexpiration datessettingdump hierarchy (Backup System)expiration datessettingdump levelsexpiration datessettingbackup commandsadddumpcommandsbackup adddumpTo add a dump level to the dump hierarchyVerify that you are authenticated as a user listed in the /usr/afs/etc/UserList
file. If necessary, issue the bos listusers command, which is fully described in To display the users in the UserList file.
% bos listusers <machine name>
Optional. Issue the backup command to enter
interactive mode.
% backupIssue the backup adddump command to define one or more dump levels. If you are
defining an incremental level, then all of the parent levels that precede it in its pathname must either already exist or
precede it on the command line.
backup> adddump -dump <dump level name>+ [-expires <expiration date>+]
where adddIs the shortest acceptable abbreviation of adddump.-dumpNames each dump level to added. If you specify more than one dump level name, you must include the -dump switch.Provide the entire pathname of the dump level, preceding each level in the pathname with a slash (/). Each component level can be up to 28 characters in length, and the pathname can include
up to 256 characters including the slashes.-expiresSets the expiration date associated with each dump level. Specify either a relative or absolute expiration
date, as described in Defining Expiration Dates, or omit this argument to assign
no expiration date to the dump levels.A plus sign follows this argument in the command's syntax statement because it accepts a multiword value
which does not need to be enclosed in double quotes or other delimiters, not because it accepts multiple dates.
Provide only one date (and optionally, time) definition to be associated with each dump level specified by the
-dump argument.expiration dateschangingBackup Databaseexpiration dateschangingdump hierarchy (Backup System)expiration dateschangingdump levelsexpiration dateschangingbackup commandssetexpcommandsbackup setexpTo change a dump level's expiration dateVerify that you are authenticated as a user listed in the /usr/afs/etc/UserList
file. If necessary, issue the bos listusers command, which is fully described in To display the users in the UserList file.
% bos listusers <machine name>
Optional. Issue the backup command to enter
interactive mode.
% backupIssue the (backup) setexp command to change the expiration date associated with one
or more dump levels.
backup> setexp -dump <dump level name>+ [-expires <expiration date>+]
where seIs the shortest acceptable abbreviation of setexp.-dumpNames each existing dump level for which to change the expiration date.-expiresSets the expiration date associated with each dump level. Specify either a relative or absolute expiration
date, as described in Defining Expiration Dates; omit this argument to remove the
expiration date currently associated with each dump level.A plus sign follows this argument in the command's syntax statement because it accepts a multiword value
which does not need to be enclosed in double quotes or other delimiters, not because it accepts multiple dates.
Provide only one date (and optionally, time) definition to be associated with each dump level specified by the
-dump argument.Backup Databasedump levelsdeletingdump levelsin Backup Databasedeletingdump hierarchy (Backup System)dump levelsdeletingbackup commandsdeldumpcommandsbackup deldumpTo delete a dump level from the dump hierarchyVerify that you are authenticated as a user listed in the /usr/afs/etc/UserList
file. If necessary, issue the bos listusers command, which is fully described in To display the users in the UserList file.
% bos listusers <machine name>
Optional. Issue the backup command to enter
interactive mode.
% backupIssue the (backup) deldump command to delete the dump level. Note that the command
automatically removes all incremental dump levels for which the specified level serves as parent, either directly or
indirectly.
backup> deldump <dump level name>
where deldIs the shortest acceptable abbreviation of deldump.dump level nameSpecifies the complete pathname of the dump level to delete.Backup Databasedump hierarchydisplayingBackup Databasedump levelsdisplayingdump hierarchy (Backup System)displayingdump levelsin Backup Databasedisplayingbackup commandslistdumpscommandsbackup listdumpsTo display the dump hierarchyIssue the backup listdumps command to display the dump hierarchy.
% backup listdumpswhere listd is the shortest acceptable abbreviation of listdumps.The output from this command displays the dump hierarchy, reporting the expiration date associated with each dump
level, as in the following example.
% backup listdumps
/week1 expires in 27d
/tuesday expires in 13d
/thursday expires in 13d
/sunday expires in 13d
/tuesday expires in 13d
/thursday expires in 13d
/week3 expires in 27d
/tuesday expires in 13d
/thursday expires in 13d
/sunday expires in 13d
/tuesday expires in 13d
/thursday expires in 13d
sunday1 expires in 27d
/monday1 expires in 13d
/tuesday1 expires in 13d
/wednesday1 expires in 13d
/thursday1 expires in 13d
/friday1 expires in 13d
sunday2 expires in 27d
/monday2 expires in 13d
/tuesday2 expires in 13d
/wednesday2 expires in 13d
/thursday2 expires in 13d
/friday2 expires in 13d
sunday3 expires in 27d
/monday1 expires in 13d
/tuesday1 expires in 13d
/wednesday1 expires in 13d
/thursday1 expires in 13d
/friday1 expires in 13d
sunday4 expires in 27d
/monday2 expires in 13d
/tuesday2 expires in 13d
/wednesday2 expires in 13d
/thursday2 expires in 13d
/friday2 expires in 13d
Writing and Reading Tape Labelstapes (Backup System)labelcreatingtapes (Backup System)labeldisplayingtapes (Backup System)capacityrecording on labeltapes (Backup System)namesassigningcreatingtape label (Backup System)displayingtape label (Backup System)As described in Dump Names and Tape Names and Tape Labels, Dump
Labels, and EOF Markers, you can assign either a permanent name or an AFS tape name to a tape that you use in the Backup
System. The names are recorded on the tape's magnetic label, along with an indication of the tape's capacity (size).You can assign either a permanent name or an AFS tape name, but not both. In general, assigning permanent names rather
than AFS tape names simplifies the backup process, because the Backup System does not dictate the format of permanent names. If
a tape does not have a permanent name, then by default the Backup System accepts only three strictly defined values in the AFS
tape name field, and refuses to write a dump to a tape with an inappropriate AFS tape name. The acceptable values are a name
that matches the volume set and dump level of the initial dump, the value <NULL>, and no
value in the field at all.If a tape has a permanent name, the Backup System does not check the AFS tape name, and as part of the dump operation
constructs the appropriate AFS tape name itself and records it on the label. This means that if you assign a permanent name, the
Backup System assigns an AFS tape name itself and the tape has both types of name. In contrast, if a tape has an AFS tape name
but not a permanent name, you cannot assign a permanent name without first erasing the AFS tape name.(You can also suppress the Backup System's check of a tape's AFS tape name, even it does not have a permanent name, by
assigning the value NO to the NAME_CHECK instruction in the
device configuration file. See Eliminating the AFS Tape Name Check.)Because the Backup System accepts unlabeled tapes, you do not have to label a tape before using it for the first time.
After the first use, there are a couple of cases in which you must relabel a tape in order to write a dump to it: The tape does not have a permanent name, and the AFS tape name on it does not match the new initial dump set you
want to create (the volume set and dump level names are different, or the index is incorrect).You want to recycle a tape before all of the dumps on it have expired. The Backup System does not overwrite a tape
with any unexpired dumps. Keep in mind, though, that if you relabel the tape to making recycling possible, you erase all
the dump records for the tape from the Backup Database, which makes it impossible to restore any data from the
tape.Labeling a tape that contains dump data makes it impossible to use that data in a restore operation, because the
labeling operation removes the dump's records from the Backup Database. If you want to record a permanent name on a tape
label, you must do it before dumping any data to the tape.Recording a Name on the LabelTo write a permanent name on a tape's label, include the -pname argument to specify a
string of up to 32 characters. Check that no other tape used with the Backup System in your cell already has the permanent
name you are assigning, because the Backup System does not prevent you from assigning the same name to multiple tapes. The
Backup System overwrites the existing AFS tape name, if any, with the value <NULL>.
When a tape has a permanent name, the Backup System uses it instead of the AFS tape name in most prompts and when referring to
the tape in output from backup commands. The permanent name persists until you again include
the -pname argument to the backup labeltape command,
regardless of the tape's contents and of how often you recycle the tape or use the backup
labeltape command without the -pname argument.To write an AFS tape name on the label, provide a value for the -name argument that
matches the volume set name and the final element in the dump level pathname of the initial dump that you plan to write to the
tape, and an index that indicates the tape's place in the sequence of tapes for the dump set. The format is as follows:
volume_set_name.dump_level_name.tape_index
If you omit the -name argument, the Backup System sets the AFS tape name to
<NULL>. The Backup System automatically constructs and records the appropriate name
when you later write an initial dump to the tape by using the backup dump or backup savedb command.You cannot use the -name argument if the tape already has a permanent name. To erase a
tape's permanent name, provide a null value to the -pname argument by issuing the following
command:
% backup labeltape -pname ""Recording a Capacity on the LabelTo record the tape's capacity on the label, specify a number of kilobytes as the -size
argument. If you omit this argument the first time you label a tape, the Backup System records the default tape capacity
associated with the specified port offset in the /usr/afs/backup/tapeconfig file on the Tape
Coordinator machine. If the tape's capacity is different (in particular, larger) than the capacity recorded in the tapeconfig file, it is best to record a capacity on the label before using the tape. Once set, the
value in the label's capacity field persists until you again use the -size argument to the
backup labeltape command. For a discussion of the appropriate capacity to record for tapes,
see Configuring the tapeconfig File.To read a tape's label, use the backup readlabel command.Most tapes also come with an adhesive label you can apply to the exterior casing. To help you easily identify a tape,
record at least the tape's permanent and AFS tape names on the adhesive label. Depending on the recycling scheme you use, it
can be useful to record other information, such as the dump ID, dump creation date, and expiration date of each dump you write
to the tape.backup commandslabeltapecommandsbackup labeltapeTo label a tapeVerify that you are authenticated as a user listed in the /usr/afs/etc/UserList
file. If necessary, issue the bos listusers command, which is fully described in To display the users in the UserList file.
% bos listusers <machine name>
If the Tape Coordinator for the tape device that is to perform the operation is not already running, open a
connection to the appropriate Tape Coordinator machine and issue the butc command, for
which complete instructions appear in To start a Tape Coordinator process.
% butc [<port offset>] [-noautoquery]
Place the tape in the device.Optional. Issue the backup command to enter
interactive mode, if you want to label multiple tapes or issue additional commands after labeling the tape. The
interactive prompt appears in the following step.
% backupIssue the (backup) labeltape command to label the tape.
backup> labeltape [-name <tape name, defaults to NULL>] \
[-size <tape size in Kbytes, defaults to size in tapeconfig>] \
[-portoffset <TC port offset>] [-pname <permanent tape name>]
where laIs the shortest acceptable abbreviation of labeltape.-nameSpecifies the AFS tape name to record on the label. Include this argument or the -pname argument, but not both. If you omit this argument, the AFS tape name is set to
<NULL>. If you provide it, it must have the following format.
volume_set_name.dump_level_name.tape_index
for the tape to be acceptable for use in a future backup dump operation.
The volume_set_name must match the volume set name of the initial dump to be written to the tape, dump_level_name
must match the last element of the dump level pathname at which the volume set is to be dumped, and tape_index
must correctly indicate the tape's place in the sequence of tapes that house the dump set; indexing begins with
the number 1 (one).-sizeSpecifies the tape capacity to record on the label. If you are labeling the tape for the first time, you
need to include this argument only if the tape's capacity differs from the capacity associated with the specified
port offset in the /usr/afs/backup/tapeconfig file on the Tape Coordinator
machine.If you provide a value, it is an integer value followed by a letter that indicates units, with no
intervening space. A unit value of k or K
indicates kilobytes, m or M indicates megabytes,
and g or G indicates gigabytes. If you omit the
units letter, the default is kilobytes.-portoffsetSpecifies the port offset number of the Tape Coordinator handling the tape or backup data file for this
operation. You must provide this argument unless the default value of 0 (zero) is
appropriate.-pnameSpecifies the permanent name to record on the label. It can be up to 32 characters in length, and include
any alphanumeric characters. Avoid metacharacters that have a special meaning to the shell, to avoid having to
mark them as literal in commands issued at the shell prompt.Include this argument or the -name argument, but not both. When you provide
this argument, the AFS tape name is set to <NULL>. If you omit this
argument, any existing permanent name is retained.If you did not include the -noautoquery flag when you issued the butc command, or if the device's device configuration file includes the instruction AUTOQUERY YES, then the Tape Coordinator prompts you to place the tape in the device's drive. You
have already done so, but you must now press <Return> to indicate that the tape is
ready for labeling.backup commandsreadlabelcommandsbackup readlabelTo read the label on a tapeVerify that you are authenticated as a user listed in the /usr/afs/etc/UserList
file. If necessary, issue the bos listusers command, which is fully described in To display the users in the UserList file.
% bos listusers <machine name>
If the Tape Coordinator for the tape device that is to perform the operation is not already running, open a
connection to the appropriate Tape Coordinator machine and issue the butc command, for
which complete instructions appear in To start a Tape Coordinator process.
% butc [<port offset>] [-noautoquery]
Place the tape in the device.Optional. Issue the backup command to enter
interactive mode, if you want to label multiple tapes or issue additional commands after labeling the tape. The
interactive prompt appears in the following step.
% backupIssue the (backup) readlabel command to read the label on the tape.
backup> readlabel [<TC port offset>]
where reaIs the shortest acceptable abbreviation of readlabel.TC port offsetSpecifies the port offset number of Tape Coordinator handling the tape or backup data file for this
operation. You must provide this argument unless the default value of 0 (zero) is
appropriate.If you did not include the -noautoquery flag when you issued the butc command, or the device's device configuration file includes the instruction AUTOQUERY YES instruction, then the Tape Coordinator prompts you to place the tape in the device's
drive. You have already done so, but you must now press <Return> to indicate that
the tape is ready for reading.Information from the tape label appears both in the backup command window and in the
Tape Coordinator window. The output in the command window has the following format:
Tape read was labelled: tape_name (initial_dump_ID)
size: size KBytes
where tape_name is the tape's permanent name (if it has one) or AFS tape name, initial_dump_ID is the dump ID of the
initial dump on the tape, and size is the capacity recorded on the label, in kilobytes.The information in the Tape Coordinator window is more extensive. The tape's permanent name appears in the
tape name field and its AFS tape name in the AFS tape name
field. If either name is undefined, a value of <NULL> appears in the field instead. The
capacity recorded on the label appears in the size field. Other fields in the output report
the creation time, dump level name, and dump ID of the initial dump on the tape
(creationTime, dump path, and dump
id respectively). The cell field reports the cell in which the dump
operation was performed, and the useCount field reports the number of times the tape has been
relabeled, either with the backup labeltape command or during a dump operation. For further
details, see the command's reference page in the OpenAFS Administration Reference.If the tape has no label, or if the drive is empty, the following message appears at the command shell:
Failed to read tape label.
The following example illustrates the output in the command shell for a tape in the device with port offset 1:
% backup readlabel 1
Tape read was labelled: monthly_guest (917860000)
size: 2150000 KBytes
The following output appears in the Tape Coordinator window at the same time:
Tape label
----------
tape name = monthly_guest
AFS tape name = guests.monthly.3
creationTime = Mon Feb 1 04:06:40 1999
cell = example.com
size = 2150000 Kbytes
dump path = /monthly
dump id = 917860000
useCount = 44
-- End of tape label --
Automating and Increasing the Efficiency of the Backup ProcessBackup Systemautomating operationsBackup Systemreducing operator interventionThe Backup System includes several optional features to help you automate the backup process in your cell and make it more
efficient. By combining several of the features, you can dump volume data to tape with minimal human intervention in most cases.
To take advantage of many of the features, you create a device configuration file in the /usr/afs/backup directory for each tape device that participates in automated operations. For general
instructions on creating the device configuration file, see Creating a Device Configuration
File. The following list refers you to sections that describe each feature in greater detail. You can use tape stackers and jukeboxes to perform backup operations. These are tape drives with an attached unit
that stores several tapes and can physically insert and remove them from the tape reader (tape drive) without human
intervention, meaning that no operator has to be present even for backup operations that require several tapes. To use a
stacker or jukebox with the Backup System, include the MOUNT and UNMOUNT instructions in its device configuration file. See Invoking a
Device's Tape Mounting and Unmounting Routines.You can suppress the Tape Coordinator's default prompt for the initial tape that it needs for a backup operation,
again eliminating the need for a human operator to be present when a backup operation begins. (You must still insert the
correct tape in the drive at some point before the operation begins.) To suppress the initial prompt, include the
-noautoquery flag on the butc command, or assign the
value NO to the AUTOQUERY instruction in the device
configuration file. See Eliminating the Search or Prompt for the Initial Tape.You can suppress the prompts that the Tape Coordinator otherwise generates when it encounters several types of
errors. When you use this feature, the Tape Coordinator instead responds to the errors in a default manner, which
generally allows the operation to continue without human intervention. To suppress prompts about error conditions, assign
the value NO to the ASK instruction in the device
configuration file. See Enabling Default Responses to Error Conditions.You can suppress the Backup System's default verification that the AFS tape name on a tape that has no permanent
name matches the name derived from the volume set and dump level names of the initial dump the Backup System is writing to
the tape. This enables you to recycle a tape without first relabeling it, as long as all dumps on it are expired. To
suppress name checking, assign the value NO to the NAME_CHECK instruction in the device configuration file. See Eliminating
the AFS Tape Name Check.You can promote tape streaming (the most efficient way for a tape device to operate) by setting the size of the
memory buffer the Tape Coordinator uses when transferring volume data between the file system and the device. To set the
buffer size, include the BUFFERSIZE instruction in the device configuration file. See
Setting the Memory Buffer Size to Promote Tape Streaming.You can write dumps to a backup data file on the local disk of the Tape Coordinator machine,
rather than to tape. You can then transfer the backup data file to a data-archiving system, such as a hierarchical storage
management (HSM) system, that you use in conjunction with AFS and the Backup System. Writing a dump to a file is usually
more efficient that issuing the equivalent vos dump commands individually. To write dumps
to a file, include the FILE instruction in the device configuration file. See Dumping Data to a Backup Data File.There are two additional ways to increase backup automation and efficiency that do not involve the device configuration
file: You can schedule one or more backup dump commands to run at specified times. This
enables you to create backups at times of low system usage, without requiring a human operator to be present. You can
schedule a single dump operation for a future time, or multiple operations to run at various future times. See Scheduling Dumps.You can append dumps to a tape that already has other dumps on it. This enables you to use as much of a tape's
capacity as possible. The appended dumps do not have be related in any way to one another or to the initial dump on the
tape, but grouping dumps appropriately can reduce the number of necessary tape changes during a restore operation. To
append a dump, include the -append argument to the backup
dump command. See Appending Dumps to an Existing Dump Set.Creating a Device Configuration FileCFG_device_name filefilesCFG_<device_name>Tape Coordinator (Backup System)device configuration file (CFG)configuration fileCFG_<device_name> configuration fileTo use many of the features that automate backup operations, create a configuration file for each tape device in the
/usr/afs/backup directory on the local disk of the Tape Coordinator machine that drives the
device. The filename has the following form:CFG_device_namewhere device_name represents the name of the tape device or backup data file (see Dumping Data
to a Backup Data File to learn about writing dumps to a file rather than to tape).For a tape device, construct the device_name portion of the name by stripping off the initial /dev/ string with which all UNIX device names conventionally begin, and replacing any other slashes in
the name with underscores. For example, CFG_rmt_4m is the appropriate filename for a device
called /dev/rmt/4m.For a backup data file, construct the device_name portion by stripping off the initial slash (/) and replacing any other slashes (/) in the name with underscores.
For example, CFG_var_tmp_FILE is the appropriate filename for a backup data file called
/var/tmp/FILE.Creating a device configuration file is optional. If you do not want to take advantage of any of the features that the
file provides, you do not have to create it.You can include one of each of the following instructions in any order in a device configuration file. All are optional.
Place each instruction on its own line, but do not include any newline (<Return>)
characters within an instruction. MOUNT and UNMOUNTIdentify a script of routines for mounting and unmounting tapes in a tape stacker or jukebox's drive as needed.
See Invoking a Device's Tape Mounting and Unmounting Routines.AUTOQUERYControls whether the Tape Coordinator prompts for the first tape it needs for a backup operation. See Eliminating the Search or Prompt for the Initial Tape.ASKControls whether the Tape Coordinator asks you how to respond to certain error conditions. See Enabling Default Responses to Error Conditions.NAME_CHECKControls whether the Tape Coordinator verifies that an AFS tape name matches the initial dump you are writing to
the tape. See Eliminating the AFS Tape Name Check.BUFFERSIZESets the size of the memory buffer the Tape Coordinator uses when transferring data between a tape device and a
volume. See Setting the Memory Buffer Size to Promote Tape Streaming.FILEControls whether the Tape Coordinator writes dumps to, and restores data from, a tape device or a backup data
file. See Dumping Data to a Backup Data File.UNMOUNT instruction in CFG_device_name fileMOUNT instruction in CFG_device_name fileBackup Systemautomating tape mounting and unmountingtape (Backup System)automating mounting and unmountingTape Coordinator (Backup System)automating tape mounting and unmountingautomatingtape mounting and unmounting by Backup SystemInvoking a Device's Tape Mounting and Unmounting RoutinesA tape stacker or jukebox helps you automate backup operations because it can switch between multiple tapes during an
operation without human intervention. To take advantage of this feature, include the MOUNT
and optionally UNMOUNT instructions in the device configuration file that you write for the
stacker or jukebox. The instructions share the same syntax:MOUNT filename
UNMOUNT filename
where filename is the pathname on the local disk of a script or program you have written that invokes the routines
defined by the device's manufacturer for mounting or unmounting a tape in the device's tape drive. (For convenience, the
following discussion uses the term script to refers to both scripts and programs.) The script usually
also contains additional logic that handles error conditions or modifies the script's behavior depending on which backup
operation is being performed.You can refer to different scripts with the MOUNT or UNMOUNT instructions, or to a single script that invokes both mounting and unmounting routines. The
scripts inherit the local identity and AFS tokens associated with to the issuer of the butc
command.You need to include a MOUNT instruction in the device configuration file for all tape
devices, but the need for an UNMOUNT instruction depends on the tape-handling routines that
the device's manufacturer provides. Some devices, usually stackers, have only a single routine for mounting tapes, which also
automatically unmounts a tape whose presence prevents insertion of the required new tape. In this case, an UNMOUNT instruction is not necessary. For devices that have separate mounting and unmounting routines,
you must include an UNMOUNT instruction to remove a tape when the Tape Coordinator is
finished with it; otherwise, subsequent attempts to run the MOUNT instruction fail with an
error.When the device configuration file includes a MOUNT instruction, you must stock the
stacker or jukebox with the necessary tapes before running a backup operation. Many jukeboxes are able to search for the
required tape by reading external labels (such as barcodes) on the tapes, but many stackers can only switch between tapes in
sequence and sometimes only in one direction. In the latter case, you must also stock the tapes in the correct order.To obtain a list of the tapes required for a restore operation so that you can prestock them in the tape device, include
the -n flag on the appropriate backup command (backup diskrestore, backup volrestore, or backup
volsetrestore). For a dump operation, it is generally sufficient to stock the device with more tapes than the
operation is likely to require. You can prelabel the tapes with permanent names or AFS tape names, or not prelabel them at
all. If you prelabel the tapes for a dump operation with AFS tape names, then it is simplest to load them into the stacker in
sequential order by tape index. But it is probably simpler still to prelabel tapes with permanent tape names or use unlabeled
tapes, in which case the Backup System generates and applies the appropriately indexed AFS tape name itself during the dump
operation.How the Tape Coordinator Uses the MOUNT and UNMOUNT InstructionsWhen you issue the butc command to initialize the Tape Coordinator for a given tape
device, the Tape Coordinator looks for the device configuration file called /usr/afs/backup/CFG_device_name on its local disk, where device_name has the format described in
Creating a Device Configuration File. If the file exists and contains a MOUNT instruction, then whenever the Tape Coordinator needs a tape, it executes the script named by
the instruction's filename argument.If the device configuration file does not exist, or does not include a MOUNT
instruction, then whenever the Tape Coordinator needs a tape, it generates a prompt in its window instructing the operator
to insert the necessary tape. The operator must insert the tape and press <Return>
before the Tape Coordinator continues the backup operation.Note, however, that you can modify the Tape Coordinator's behavior with respect to the first tape needed for an
operation, by setting the AUTOQUERY instruction in the device configuration file to
NO, or including the -noautoquery flag to the butc command. In this case, the Tape Coordinator does not execute the MOUNT instruction or prompt for a tape at the start of an operation, because it expects to find the
required first tape in the drive. See Eliminating the Search or Prompt for the Initial
Tape.If there is an UNMOUNT instruction in the device configuration file, then whenever
the Tape Coordinator closes the tape device, it executes the script named by the instruction's filename argument. It
executes the script only once, and regardless of whether the close operation on the device
succeeded or not. If the device configuration file does not include an UNMOUNT instruction,
then the Tape Coordinator takes no action.The Available Parameters and Required Exit CodesWhen the Tape Coordinator executes the MOUNT script, it passes in five parameters,
ordered as follows. You can use the parameters in your script to refine its response to varying circumstances that can arise
during a backup operation. The tape device or backup data file's pathname, as recorded in the /usr/afs/backup/tapeconfig file.The tape operation, which (except for the exceptions noted in the following list) matches the backup command operation code used to initiate the operation: appenddump (when a backup dump command
includes the -append flag)dump (when a backup dump command does
not include the -append flag)labeltapereadlabelrestore (for a backup diskrestore,
backup volrestore, or backup volsetrestore
command)restoredbsavedbscantapeThe number of times the Tape Coordinator has attempted to open the tape device or backup data file. If the open
attempt returns an error, the Tape Coordinator increments this value by one and again invokes the MOUNT instruction.The tape name. For some operations, the Tape Coordinator passes the string
none, because it does not know the tape name (when running the backup scantape or backup readlabel, for example), or because
the tape does not necessarily have a name (when running the backup labeltape command,
for example).The tape ID recorded in the Backup Database. As with the tape name, the Backup System passes the string
none for operations where it does not know the tape ID or the tape does not
necessarily have an ID.Your MOUNT script must return one of the following exit codes to tell the Tape
Coordinator whether or not it mounted the tape successfully: Code 0 (zero) indicates a successful mount, and the Tape Coordinator continues
the backup operation. If the script or program called by the MOUNT instruction does
not return this exit code, the Tape Coordinator never calls the UNMOUNT
instruction.Code 1 indicates that mount attempt failed. The Tape Coordinator terminates the
backup operation.Any other code indicates that the script was unable to access the correct tape. The Tape Coordinator prompts the
operator to insert it.When the Tape Coordinator executes the UNMOUNT script, it passes in two parameters in
the following order. The tape device's pathname (as specified in the /usr/afs/backup/tapeconfig
file)The tape operation, which is always unmount.The following example script uses two of the parameters passed to it by the Backup System:
tries and operation. It follows the recommended practice
of exiting if the value of the tries parameter exceeds one, because that implies that the
stacker is out of tapes.For a backup dump or backup savedb operation, the
routine calls the example stackerCmd_NextTape function provided by the stacker's
manufacturer. Note that the final lines in the file return the exit code that prompts the operator to insert a tape; these
lines are invoked when either the stacker cannot load a tape or a the operation being performed is not one of those
explicitly mentioned in the file (is a restore operation, for example).
#! /bin/csh -f
set devicefile = $1
set operation = $2
set tries = $3
set tapename = $4
set tapeid = $5
set exit_continue = 0
set exit_abort = 1
set exit_interactive = 2
#--------------------------------------------
if (${tries} > 1) then
echo "Too many tries"
exit ${exit_interactive}
endif
if (${operation} == "unmount") then
echo "UnMount: Will leave tape in drive"
exit ${exit_continue}
endif
if ((${operation} == "dump") |\
(${operation} == "appenddump") |\
(${operation} == "savedb")) then
stackerCmd_NextTape ${devicefile}
if (${status} != 0)exit${exit_interactive}
echo "Will continue"
exit ${exit_continue}
endif
if ((${operation} == "labeltape") |\
(${operation} == "readlabel")) then
echo "Will continue"
exit ${exit_continue}
endif
echo "Prompt for tape"
exit ${exit_interactive}
Backup Systemeliminating search/prompt for initial tapeTape Coordinator (Backup System)eliminating search/prompt for initial tapetapes (Backup System)eliminating search/prompt for initialAUTOQUERY instruction in CFG_device_name fileEliminating the Search or Prompt for the Initial TapeBy default, the Tape Coordinator obtains the first tape it needs for a backup operation by reading the device
configuration file for the appropriate tape device. If there is a MOUNT instruction in the
file, the Tape Coordinator executes the referenced script. If the device configuration file does not exist or does not have a
MOUNT instruction in it, the Tape Coordinator prompts you to insert the correct tape and
press <Return>.If you know in advance that an operation requires a tape, you can increase efficiency by placing the required tape in
the drive before issuing the backup command and telling the Tape Coordinator's to skip its
initial tape-acquisition steps. This both enables the operation to begin more quickly and eliminates that need for you to be
present to insert a tape.There are two ways to bypass the Tape Coordinator's initial tape-acquisition steps: Include the instruction AUTOQUERY NO in the device configuration fileInclude the -noautoquery flag to the butc
commandTo avoid any error conditions that require operator attention, be sure that the tape you are placing in the drive does
not contain any unexpired dumps and is not write protected. If there is no permanent name on the tape's label and you are
creating an initial dump, make sure that the AFS tape name either matches the volume set and dump set names or is
<NULL>. Alternatively, suppress the Tape Coordinator's name verification step by
assigning the value NO to the NAME_CHECK instruction in the
device configuration file, as described in Eliminating the AFS Tape Name Check.ASK instruction in CFG_device_name fileBackup Systemusing default responses to errorsTape Coordinator (Backup System)using default responses to errorsEnabling Default Responses to Error ConditionsBy default, the Tape Coordinator asks you how to respond when it encounters certain error conditions. To suppress the
prompts and cause the Tape Coordinator to handle the errors in a predetermined manner, include the instruction ASK NO in the device configuration file. If you assign the value YES,
or omit the ASK instruction completely, the Tape Coordinator prompts you for direction when
it encounters one of the errors.The following list describes the error conditions and the Tape Coordinator's response to them. The Backup System is unable to dump a volume while running the backup dump
command. When you assign the value NO, the Tape Coordinator omits the volume from the
dump and continues the operation. When you assign the value YES, it prompts to ask if
you want to try to dump the volume again immediately, to omit the volume from the dump but continue the operation, or to
terminate the operation.The Backup System is unable to restore a volume while running the backup
diskrestore, backup volrestore, or backup
volsetrestore command. When you assign the value NO, the Tape Coordinator
continues the operation, omitting the problematic volume but restoring the remaining ones. When you assign the value
YES, it prompts to ask if you want to omit the volume and continue the operation, or to
terminate the operation.The Backup System cannot determine if the dump set includes any more tapes while running the backup scantape command (the command's reference page in the OpenAFS Administration
Reference discusses possible reasons for this problem). When you assign the value NO, the Tape Coordinator proceeds as though there are more tapes and invokes the MOUNT script named in the device configuration file, or prompts the operator to insert the next
tape. When you assign the value YES, it prompts to ask if there are more tapes to
scan.The Backup System determines that the tape contains an unexpired dump while running the backup labeltape command. When you assign the value NO, it
terminates the operation without relabeling the tape. With a YES value, the Tape
Coordinator prompts to ask if you want to relabel the tape anyway.NAME_CHECK instruction in CFG_device_name fileBackup Systemeliminating check for proper tape nametape (Backup System)eliminating check for proper nameTape Coordinator (Backup System)eliminating check for proper tape nameEliminating the AFS Tape Name CheckIf a tape does not have a permanent name and you are writing an initial dump to it, then by default the Backup System
verifies that the tape's AFS tape name is acceptable. It accepts three types of values: A name that reflects the volume set and dump level of the initial dump and the tape's place in the sequence of
tapes for the dump set, as described in Dump Names and Tape Names. If the tape does not
already have a permanent name, you can assign the AFS tape name by using the -name
argument to the backup labeltape command.A <NULL> value, which results when you assign a permanent name, or provide
no value for the backup labeltape command's -name
argument.No AFS tape name at all, indicating that you have never labeled the tape or written a dump to it.To bypass the name check, include the NAME_CHECK NO instruction in the device
configuration file. This enables you to recycle a tape without first relabeling it, as long as all dumps on it are expired.
(If a tape has unexpired dumps on it but you want to recycle it anyway, you must use the backup
labeltape command to relabel it first. For this to work, the ASK NO instruction
cannot appear in the device configuration file.)Setting the Memory Buffer Size to Promote Tape StreamingBy default, the Tape Coordinator uses a 16-KB memory buffer during dump operations. As it receives volume data from the
Volume Server, the Tape Coordinator gathers 16 KB of data in the buffer before transferring the entire 16 KB to the tape
device. Similarly, during a restore operation the Tape Coordinator by default buffers 32 KB of data from the tape device
before transferring the entire 32 KB to the Volume Server for restoration into the file system. Buffering makes the volume of
data flowing to and from a tape device more even and so promotes tape streaming, which is the most efficient way for a tape
device to operate.In a normal network configuration, the default buffer sizes are usually large enough to promote tape streaming. If the
network between the Tape Coordinator machine and file server machines is slow, it can help to increase the buffer size.To determine if altering the buffer size is helpful for your configuration, observe the tape device in operation to see
if it is streaming, or consult the manufacturer. To set the buffer size, include the BUFFERSIZE instruction in the device configuration file. It takes an integer value, and optionally
units, in the following format:BUFFERSIZE size[{k | K | m | M | g | G}]
where size specifies the amount of memory the Tape Coordinator allocates to use as a buffer during both dump and restore
operations. The default unit is bytes, but use k or K to
specify kilobytes, m or M for megabytes, and g or G for gigabytes. There is no space between the size value and the
units letter.Dumping Data to a Backup Data FileYou can write dumps to a backup data file rather than to tape. This is useful if, for example, you
want to transfer the data to a data-archiving system, such as a hierarchical storage management (HSM) system, that you use in
conjunction with AFS and the Backup System. You can restore data from a backup data file into the file system as well. Using a
backup data file is usually more efficient than issuing the equivalent vos dump and vos restore commands individually for multiple volumes.Writing to a backup data file is simplest if it is on the local disk of the Tape Coordinator machine, but you can also
write the file to an NFS-mounted partition that resides on a remote machine. It is even acceptable to write to a file in AFS,
provided that the access control list (ACL) on its parent directory grants the necessary permissions, but it is somewhat
circular to back up AFS data into AFS itself.If the backup data file does not already exist when the Tape Coordinator attempts to write a dump to it, the Tape
Coordinator creates it. For a restore operation to succeed, the file must exist and contain volume data previously written to
it during a backup dump operation.When writing to a backup data file, the Tape Coordinator writes data at 16 KB offsets. If a given block of data (such as
the marker that signals the beginning or end of a volume) does not fill the entire 16 KB, the Tape Coordinator still skips to
the next offset before writing the next block. In the output of a backup dumpinfo command
issued with the -id option, the value in the Pos column is
the ordinal of the 16-KB offset at which the volume data begins, and so is not generally only one higher than the position
number on the previous line, as it is for dumps to tape.Before writing to a backup data file, you need to configure the file as though it were a tape device.A file pathname, rather than a tape device name, must appear in the third field of the /usr/afs/backup/tapeconfig file when the FILE YES instruction
appears in the device configuration file, and vice versa. If the tapeconfig file instead
refers to a tape device, dump operations appear to succeed but are inoperative. You cannot restore data that you accidently
dumped to a tape device while the FILE instruction was set to YES. In the same way, if the FILE instruction is set to NO, the tapeconfig entry must refer to an actual tape device.To configure a backup data fileVerify that you are authenticated as a user listed in the /usr/afs/etc/UserList
file. If necessary, issue the bos listusers command, which is fully described in To display the users in the UserList file.
% bos listusers <machine name>
Become the local superuser root on the machine, if you are not already, by issuing
the su command.
% su root
Password: <root_password>
Optional. Issue the backup command to enter
interactive mode.
# backupChoose the port offset number to assign to the file. If necessary, display previously assigned port offsets by
issuing the (backup) listhosts command, which is fully described in To display the list of configured Tape Coordinators.
backup> listhostsAs for a tape device, acceptable values are the integers 0 (zero) through 58510 (the Backup System can track a maximum of 58,511 port offset numbers). Each port offset must
be unique in the cell, but you can associate any number them with a single Tape Coordinator machine. You do not have to
assign port offset numbers sequentially.Issue the (backup) addhost command to register the backup data file's port offset
in the Backup Database.
backup> addhost <tape machine name> [<TC port offset>]
where addhIs the shortest acceptable abbreviation of addhost.tape machine nameSpecifies the fully qualified hostname of the Tape Coordinator machine you invoke to write to the backup
data file.TC port offsetSpecifies the file's port offset number. You must provide this argument unless the default value of
0 (zero) is appropriate.Using a text editor, create an entry for the backup data file in the local
/usr/afs/backup/tapeconfig file, using the standard syntax:
[capacity filemark_size] device_name port_offset
where capacitySpecifies the amount of space on the partition that houses the backup data file that you want to make
available for the file. To avoid the complications that arise from filling up the partition, it is best to provide
a value somewhat smaller than the actual amount of space you expect to be available when the dump operation runs,
and never larger than the maximum file size allowed by the operating system.Specify a numerical value followed by a letter that indicates units, with no intervening space. The letter
k or K indicates kilobytes, m or M indicates megabytes, and g or G indicates gigabytes. If you omit the units letter,
the default is kilobytes. If you leave this field empty, the Tape Coordinator uses the maximum acceptable value
(2048 GB or 2 TB). Also leave the filemark_size field empty in that case.filemark_sizeSpecify the value 0 (zero) or leave both this field and the capacity field
empty. In the latter case, the Tape Coordinator also uses the value zero.device_nameSpecifies the complete pathname of the backup data file. Rather than specifying an actual file pathname,
however, the recommended configuration is to create a symbolic link in the /dev
directory that points to the actual file pathname, and record the symbolic link in this field. This configuration
provides these advantages: It makes the device_name portion of the CFG_device_name, of the
TE_device_name, and of the TL_device_name
filenames as short as possible. Because the symbolic link is in the /dev
directory as though it is a tape device, you strip off the entire /dev/
prefix when forming the filename, instead of just the initial slash (/).
If, for example, the symbolic link is called /dev/FILE, the device
configuration file's name is CFG_FILE, whereas if the actual pathname
/var/tmp/FILE appears in the tapeconfig
file, the configuration file's name must be CFG_var_tmp_FILE.It provides for a more graceful, and potentially automated, recovery if the Tape Coordinator cannot
write a complete dump into the backup data file (for example, because the partition housing the backup data
file becomes full). The Tape Coordinator's reaction to this problem is to invoke the MOUNT script, or to prompt you if the MOUNT
instruction does not appear in the configuration file. If there is a MOUNT script, you can prepare for this situation
by adding a subroutine to the script that changes the symbolic link to point to another backup data
file on a partition where there is space available.If there is no MOUNT instruction, the prompt enables you
manually to change the symbolic link to point to another backup data file and then press <Return> to signal that the Tape Coordinator can continue the
operation.If this field names the actual file, there is no way to recover from exhausting the space on the
partition. You cannot change the tapeconfig file in the middle of an
operation.port_offsetSpecifies the port offset number that you chose for the backup data file.Create the device configuration file CFG_device_name in the Tape Coordinator
machine's /usr/afs/backup directory. Include the FILE
YES instruction in the file.Construct the device_name portion of the name based on the device name you recorded in the tapeconfig file in Step 6. If, as recommended, you
recorded a symbolic link name, strip off the /dev/ string and replace any other slashes
(/) in the name with underscores (_). For example,
CFG_FILE is the appropriate name if the symbolic link is /dev/FILE. If you recorded the name of an actual file, then strip off the initial slash only and
replace any other slashes in the name with underscores. For a backup data file called /var/tmp/FILE, the appropriate device configuration filename is CFG_var_tmp_FILE.If you chose in Step 6 to record a symbolic link name in the device_name
field of the tapeconfig entry, then you must do one of the following: Use the ln -s command to create the appropriate symbolic link in the
/dev directoryWrite a script that initializes the backup data file in this way, and include a MOUNT instruction in the device configuration file to invoke the script. An example script
appears following these instructions.You do not need to create the backup data file itself, because the Tape Coordinator does so if the file does not exist
when the dump operation begins.The following example script illustrates how you can automatically create a symbolic link to the backup data file during
the preparation phase for writing to the file. When the Tape Coordinator is executing a backup
dump, backup restore, backup savedb, or backup restoredb operation, the routine invokes the UNIX ln -s command
to create a symbolic link from the backup data file named in the tapeconfig file to the
actual file to use (this is the recommended method). It uses the values of the tapename and
tapeid parameters passed to it by the Backup System when constructing the filename.The routine makes use of two other parameters as well: tries and
operation. The tries parameter tracks how many times the
Tape Coordinator has attempted to access the file. A value greater than one indicates that the Tape Coordinator cannot access
it, and the routine returns exit code 2 (exit_interactive), which results in a prompt for the
operator to load a tape. The operator can use this opportunity to change the name of the backup data file specified in the
tapeconfig file.
#! /bin/csh -f
set devicefile = $1
set operation = $2
set tries = $3
set tapename = $4
set tapeid = $5
set exit_continue = 0
set exit_abort = 1
set exit_interactive = 2
#--------------------------------------------
if (${tries} > 1) then
echo "Too many tries"
exit ${exit_interactive}
endif
if (${operation} == "labeltape") then
echo "Won't label a tape/file"
exit ${exit_abort}
endif
if ((${operation} == "dump") |\
(${operation} == "appenddump") |\
(${operation} == "restore") |\
(${operation} == "savedb") |\
(${operation} == "restoredb")) then
/bin/rm -f ${devicefile}
/bin/ln -s /hsm/${tapename}_${tapeid} ${devicefile}
if (${status} != 0) exit ${exit_abort}
endif
exit ${exit_continue}