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Full Discussion: Backup / restore
Operating Systems Solaris Backup / restore Post 79401 by mhm4 on Wednesday 27th of July 2005 03:39:31 PM
Old 07-27-2005
There is no such thing as a logical and physical partitions in Solaris. I think you may mean partitions and volumes. In that case, remember that volume management systems store volume/disk group specific data in private regions of the disk and spreads copies of it accross disks for redundancy. It is important to backup your volume configuration data and your system/applicaiton data. If you are not runing a volume manager then you can just rely on ufsdump.

If you lose your vol config data (pretty hard since it is spread across multiple disks), you will not be able to recreate your volumes on a replacement disk and you will have to recite thrm from memory.

Question 2: Commands differ with different vol managers VXvm uses vxprint Disk Suite uses metastat.

Q3: read up on ufsrestore
 

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BACKUP(8)						      System Manager's Manual							 BACKUP(8)

NAME
backup - backup files SYNOPSIS
backup [-djmnorstvz] dir1 dir2 OPTIONS
-d At top level, only directories are backed up -j Do not copy junk: *.Z, *.bak, a.out, core, etc -m If device full, prompt for new diskette -n Do not backup top-level directories -o Do not copy *.o files -r Restore files -s Do not copy *.s files -t Preserve creation times -v Verbose; list files being backed up -z Compress the files on the backup medium EXAMPLES
backup -mz . /f0 # Backup current directory compressed backup /bin /usr/bin # Backup bin from RAM disk to hard disk DESCRIPTION
Backup (recursively) backs up the contents of a given directory and its subdirectories to another part of the file system. It has two typ- ical uses. First, some portion of the file system can be backed up onto 1 or more diskettes. When a diskette fills up, the user is prompted for a new one. The backups are in the form of mountable file systems. Second, a directory on RAM disk can be backed up onto hard disk. If the target directory is empty, the entire source directory is copied there, optionally compressed to save space. If the target directory is an old backup, only those files in the target directory that are older than similar names in the source directory are replaced. Backup uses times for this purpose, like make. Calling Backup as Restore is equivalent to using the -r option; this replaces newer files in the target directory with older files from the source directory, uncompressing them if necessary. The target directory con- tents are thus returned to some previous state. SEE ALSO
tar(1). BACKUP(8)
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