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amanda(8) [redhat man page]

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

NAME
amanda - Advanced Maryland Automatic Network Disk Archiver SYNOPSIS
amdump config amflush [ -f ] config amcleanup config amrecover [ config ] [ options ] amrestore [ options ] tapedevice [ hostname [ diskname ]] amlabel config label [ slot slot ] amcheck [ options ] config amadmin config command [ options ] amtape config command [ options ] amverify config amrmtape [ options ] config label amstatus config [ options ] amoverview config [ options ] amplot [ options ] amdump-files amreport [ config ] [ options ] amtoc [ options ] logfile amcheckdb config amgetconf [ config ] parameter DESCRIPTION
Amanda is the "Advanced Maryland Automatic Network Disk Archiver". This manual page gives an overview of the Amanda commands and configu- ration files for quick reference. Here are all the Amanda commands. Each one has its own manual page. See them for all the gory details. amdump Take care of automatic Amanda backups. This is normally executed by cron on a computer called the tape server host and requests backups of file systems located on backup clients. Amdump backs up all disks in the disklist file (discussed below) to tape or, if there is a problem, to a special holding disk. After all backups are done, amdump sends mail reporting failures and successes. amflush Flush backups from the holding disk to tape. Amflush is used after amdump has reported it could not write backups to tape for some reason. When this happens, backups stay in the holding disk. Run amflush after the tape problem is corrected to write backups from the holding disk to tape. amcleanup Clean up after an interrupted amdump. This command is only needed if amdump was unable to complete for some reason, usually because the tape server host crashed while amdump was running. amrecover Provides an interactive interface to browse the Amanda index files (backup image catalogues) and select which tapes to recover files from. It can also run amrestore and a restore program (e.g. tar) to actually recover the files. amrestore Read an Amanda tape, searching for requested backups. Amrestore is suitable for everything from interactive restores of single files to a full restore of all partitions on a failed disk. amlabel Write an Amanda format label onto a tape. All Amanda tapes must be labeled with amlabel. Amdump and amflush will not write to an unlabeled tape (see TAPE MANAGEMENT below). amcheck Verify the correct tape is mounted and all file systems on all backup client systems are ready to be backed up. Often run by cron before amdump to generate a mail warning that backups might fail unless corrective action is taken. amadmin Take care of administrative tasks like finding out which tapes are needed to restore a filesystem, forcing hosts to do full backups of selected disks and looking at schedule balance information. amtape Take care of tape changer control operations like loading particular tapes, ejecting tapes and scanning the tape storage slots. amverify Check Amanda backup tapes for errors. amrmtape Delete a tape from the Amanda databases. amstatus Report the status of a running or completed amdump. amoverview Display a chart of hosts and file systems backed up every run. amplot Generate utilization plots of Amanda runs for performance tuning. amreport Generate an Amanda summary E-mail report. amtoc Generate table of content files for Amanda tapes. amcheckdb Verify every tape Amanda knows about is consistent in the database. amgetconf Look up parameters in the Amanda configuration file. CONFIGURATION
There are three user-editable files that control the behavior of Amanda. The first is amanda.conf, the main configuration file. It con- tains parameters to customize Amanda for the site. Second is the disklist file, which lists hosts and disk partitions to back up. Third is the tapelist file, which lists tapes that are currently active. These files are described in more detail in the following sections. All files are stored in individual configuration directories under /etc/amanda. A site will often have more than one configuration. For example, it might have a normal configuration for everyday backups and an archive configuration for infrequent full archival backups. The configuration files would be stored under directories /etc/amanda/normal/ and /etc/amanda/archive/, respectively. Part of the job of an Amanda administrator is to create, populate and maintain these directories. All log and database files generated by Amanda go in corresponding directories somewhere. The exact location is controlled by entries in amanda.conf. A typical location would be under /var/adm/amanda. For the above example, the files might go in /var/adm/amanda/normal/ and /var/adm/amanda/archive/. As log files are no longer needed (no longer contain relevant information), Amanda cycles them out in various ways, depending on the type of file. Detailed information about amdump runs are stored in files named amdump.NN where NN is a sequence number, with 1 being the most recent file. Amdump rotates these files each run, keeping roughly the last tapecycle (see below) worth of them. The file used by amreport to generate the mail summary is named log.YYYYMMDD.NN where YYYYMMDD is the datestamp of the start of the amdump run and NN is a sequence number started at 0. At the end of each amdump run, log files for runs whose tapes have been reused are renamed into a subdirectory of the main log directory (see the logdir parameter below) named oldlog. It is up to the Amanda administrator to remove them from this directory when desired. Index (backup image catalogue) files older than the full dump matching the oldest backup image for a given client and disk are removed by amdump at the end of each run. CONFIG FILE PARAMETERS
There are a number of configuration parameters that control the behavior of the Amanda programs. All have default values, so you need not specify the parameter in amanda.conf if the default is suitable. Lines starting with # are ignored, as are blank lines. Comments may be placed on a line with a directive by starting the comment with a #. The remainder of the line is ignored. Keywords are case insensitive, i.e. mailto and MailTo are treated the same. Integer arguments may have one of the following (case insensitive) suffixes, some of which have a multiplier effect: b byte bytes Some number of bytes. bps Some number of bytes per second. k kb kbyte kbytes kilobyte kilobytes Some number of kilobytes (bytes*1024). kps kbps Some number of kilobytes per second (bytes*1024). m mb meg mbyte mbytes megabyte megabytes Some number of megabytes (bytes*1024*1024). mps mbps Some number of megabytes per second (bytes*1024*1024). g gb gbyte gbytes gigabyte gigabytes Some number of gigabytes (bytes*1024*1024*1024). tape tapes Some number of tapes. day days Some number of days. week weeks Some number of weeks (days*7). The value inf may be used in most places where an integer is expected to mean an infinite amount. Boolean arguments may have any of the values y, yes, t, true or on to indicate a true state, or n, no, f, false or off to indicate a false state. If no argument is given, true is assumed. org "string" Default: DailySet1. A descriptive name for the configuration. This string appears in the Subject line of mail reports. Each Amanda configuration should have a different string to keep mail reports distinct. mailto "string" Default: operators. A space separated list of recipients for mail reports. dumpcycle int Default: 10 days. The number of days in the backup cycle. Each disk will get a full backup at least this often. Setting this to zero tries to do a full backup each run. Note that this parameter may also be set in a specific dumptype (see below). This value sets the default for all dumptypes so must appear in amanda.conf before any dumptypes are defined. runspercycle int Default: same as dumpcycle. The number of amdump runs in dumpcycle days. A value of 0 means the same value as dumpcycle. A value of -1 means guess the number of runs from the tapelist file, which is the number of tapes used in the last dumpcycle days / run- tapes. tapecycle int Default: 15 tapes. The mininum number of tapes in the active tape cycle. You can have more tapes in your active tape cycle. It means that you must write at least tapecycle tape before a tape is overwritten. A tape marked as no-reuse is not in the active tape cycle. Amanda will accept any tape for writting if it is not in the last tapecycle tapes used. This must be at least one larger than the number of Amanda runs done during a dump cycle (see the dumpcycle parameter) times the number of tapes used per run (see the runtapes parameter). For instance, if dumpcycle is set to 14 days, one Amanda run is done every day (Sunday through Saturday), and runtapes is set to one, then tapecycle must be at least 15 (14 days * one run/day * one tape/run + one tape). In practice, there should be several extra tapes to allow for schedule adjustments or disaster recovery. dumpuser "string" Default: amanda. The login name Amanda uses to run the backups. The backup client hosts must allow access from the tape server host as this user via .rhosts or .amandahosts, depending on how the Amanda software was built. printer "string" Printer to use when doing tape labels. See the lbl-templ tapetype option. tapedev "string" Default: /dev/null. The path name of the non-rewinding tape device. Non-rewinding tape device names often have an 'n' in the name, e.g. /dev/rmt/0mn, however this is operating system specific and you should consult that documentation for detailed naming informa- tion. If a tape changer is configured (see the tpchanger option), this option might not be used. If the null output driver is selected (see the OUTPUT DRIVERS section later for more information), programs such as amdump will run normally but all images will be thrown away. This should only be used for debugging and testing, and probably only with the record option set to no. rawtapedev "string" Default: /dev/null. The path name of the raw tape device. This is only used if Amanda is compiled for Linux machines with floppy tapes and is needed for QIC volume table operations. tpchanger "string" Default: none. The name of the tape changer. If a tape changer is not configured, this option is not used and should be commented out of the configuration file. If a tape changer is configured, choose one of the changer scripts (e.g. chg-scsi) and enter that here. changerdev "string" Default: /dev/null. A tape changer configuration parameter. Usage depends on the particular changer defined with the tpchanger option. changerfile "string" Default: /usr/adm/amanda/log/changer-status. A tape changer configuration parameter. Usage depends on the particular changer defined with the tpchanger option. runtapes int Default: 1. The maximum number of tapes used in a single run. If a tape changer is not configured, this option is not used and should be commented out of the configuration file. If a tape changer is configured, this may be set larger than one to let Amanda write to more than one tape. Note that this is an upper bound on the number of tapes, and Amanda may use less. Also note that as of this release, Amanda does not support true tape overflow. When it reaches the end of one tape, the backup image Amanda was processing starts over again on the next tape. labelstr "string" Default: .*. The tape label constraint regular expression. All tape labels generated (see amlabel(8)) and used by this configura- tion must match the regular expression. If multiple configurations are run from the same tape server host, it is helpful to set their labels to different strings (for example, "DAILY[0-9][0-9]*" vs. "ARCHIVE[0-9][0-9]*") to avoid overwriting each other's tapes. tapetype "string" Default: EXABYTE. The type of tape drive associated with tapedev or tpchanger. This refers to one of the defined tapetypes in the config file (see below), which specify various tape parameters, like the length, filemark size, and speed of the tape media and device. ctimeout int Default: 30 seconds. Maximum amount of time that amcheck will wait for each client host. dtimeout int Default: 1800 seconds. Amount of idle time per disk on a given client that a dumper running from within amdump will wait before it fails with a data timeout error. etimeout int Default: 300 seconds. Amount of time per disk on a given client that the planner step of amdump will wait to get the dump size estimates. For instance, with the default of 300 seconds and four disks on client A, planner will wait up to 20 minutes for that machine. A negative value will be interpreted as a total amount of time to wait per client instead of per disk. netusage int Default: 300 Kbps. The maximum network bandwidth allocated to Amanda, in Kbytes per second. See also the interface section. inparallel int Default: 10. The maximum number of backups that Amanda will attempt to run in parallel. Amanda will stay within the constraints of network bandwidth and holding disk space available, so it doesn't hurt to set this number a bit high. Some contention can occur with larger numbers of backups, but this effect is relatively small on most systems. dumporder "string" Default: tttTTTTTTT. The priority order of each dumper: s: smallest size S: largest size t: smallest time T: largest time b: smallest bandwidth B: largest bandwidth maxdumps int Default: 1. The maximum number of backups from a single host that Amanda will attempt to run in parallel. See also the inparallel option. Note that this parameter may also be set in a specific dumptype (see below). This value sets the default for all dumptypes so must appear in amanda.conf before any dumptypes are defined. bumpsize int Default: 10 Mbytes. The minimum savings required to trigger an automatic bump from one incremental level to the next. If Amanda determines that the next higher backup level will be this much smaller than the current level, it will do the next level. See also the bumpmult option. bumpmult float Default: 1.5. The bump size multiplier. Amanda multiplies bumpsize by this factor for each level. This prevents active filesys- tems from bumping too much by making it harder to bump to the next level. For example, with the default bumpsize and bumpmult set to 2.0, the bump threshold will be 10 Mbytes for level one, 20 Mbytes for level two, 40 Mbytes for level three, and so on. bumpdays int Default: 2 days. To insure redundancy in the dumps, Amanda keeps filesystems at the same incremental level for at least bumpdays days, even if the other bump threshold criteria are met. diskfile "string" Default: disklist. The file name for the disklist file holding client hosts, disks and other client dumping information. infofile "string" Default: /usr/adm/amanda/curinfo. The file or directory name for the historical information database. If Amanda was configured to use DBM databases, this is the base file name for them. If it was configured to use text formated databases (the default), this is the base directory and within here will be a directory per client, then a directory per disk, then a text file of data. logdir "string" Default: /usr/adm/amanda. The directory for the amdump and log files. indexdir "string" Default /usr/adm/amanda/index. The directory where index files (backup image catalogues) are stored. Index files are only gener- ated for filesystems whose dumptype has the index option enabled. tapelist "string" Default: tapelist. The file name for the active tapelist file. Amanda maintains this file with information about the active set of tapes. tapebufs int Default: 20. The number of buffers used by the taper process run by amdump and amflush to hold data as it is read from the network or disk before it is written to tape. Each buffer is a little larger than 32 KBytes and is held in a shared memory region. reserve number Default: 100(percent). The amount of holding-disk space that should not be used for full backups if no tape is available. By default, when there is no tape to write to, degraded mode (incremental) backups will be performed to the holding disk. If full backups should also be allowed in this case, the amount of holding disk space reserved for incrementals should be lowered. autoflush bool Default: off. Whether an amdump run will flush the dump already on holding disk to tape. columnspec "string" Defines the width of columns amreport should use. String is a comma (',') separated list of triples. Each triple consists of three parts which are separated by a equal sign ('=') and a colon (':') (see the example). These three parts specify: + the name of the column, which may be: Compress (compression ratio) Disk (client disk name) DumpRate (dump rate in KBytes/sec) DumpTime (total dump time in hours:minutes) HostName (client host name) Level (dump level) OrigKB (original image size in KBytes) OutKB (output image size in KBytes) TapeRate (tape writing rate in KBytes/sec) TapeTime (total tape time in hours:minutes) + the amount of space to display before the column (used to get whitespace between columns). + the width of the column itself. If set to a negative value, the width will be calculated on demand to fit the largest entry in this column. Here is an example: columnspec "Disk=1:18,HostName=0:10,OutKB=1:7" The above will display the disk information in 18 characters and put one space before it. The hostname column will be 10 characters wide with no space to the left. The output KBytes column is seven characters wide with one space before it. includefile "string" Default: none. The name of an amanda configuration file to include within the current file. Useful for sharing dumptypes, tapetypes and interface definitions among several configurations. HOLDINGDISK SECTION
The amanda.conf file may define one or more holding disks used as buffers to hold backup images before they are written to tape. The syn- tax is: holdingdisk name { holdingdisk-option holdingdisk-value ... } Name is a logical name for this holding disk. The options and values are: comment "string" Default: none. A comment string describing this holding disk. directory "disk" Default: /dumps/amanda. The path to this holding area. use int Default: 0 Gb. Amount of space that can be used in this holding disk area. If the value is zero, all available space on the file system is used. If the value is negative, Amanda will use all available space minus that value. chunksize int Default: 1 Gb. Holding disk chunk size. Dumps larger than the specified size will be stored in multiple holding disk files. The size of each chunk will not exceed the specified value. However, even though dump images are split in the holding disk, they are concatenated as they are written to tape, so each dump image still corresponds to a single continuous tape section. If 0 is specified, Amanda will create holding disk chunks as large as ((INT_MAX/1024)-64) Kbytes. Each holding disk chunk includes a 32 Kbyte header, so the minimum chunk size is 64 Kbytes (but that would be really silly). Operating systems that are limited to a maximum file size of 2 Gbytes actually cannot handle files that large. They must be at least one byte less than 2 Gbytes. Since Amanda works with 32 Kbyte blocks, and to handle the final read at the end of the chunk, the chunk size should be at least 64 Kbytes (2 * 32 Kbytes) smaller than the maximum file size, e.g. 2047 Mbytes. DUMPTYPE SECTION
The amanda.conf file may define multiple sets of backup options and refer to them by name from the disklist file. For instance, one set of options might be defined for file systems that can benefit from high compression, another set that does not compress well, another set for file systems that should always get a full backup and so on. A set of backup options are entered in a dumptype section, which looks like this: define dumptype name { dumptype-option dumptype-value ... } Name is the name of this set of backup options. It is referenced from the disklist file. Some of the options in a dumptype section are the same as those in the main part of amanda.conf. The main option value is used to set the default for all dumptype sections. For instance, setting dumpcycle to 50 in the main part of the config file causes all following dumptype sections to start with that value, but the value may be changed on a section by section basis. Changes to variables in the main part of the config file must be done before (earlier in the file) any dumptypes are defined. The dumptype options and values are: auth "string" Default: bsd. Type of authorization to perform between tape server and backup client hosts. May be krb4 to use Kerberos-IV autho- rization. comment "string" Default: none. A comment string describing this set of backup options. comprate float [, float ] Default: 0.50, 0.50. The expected full and incremental compression factor for dumps. It is only used if Amanda does not have any history information on compression rates for a filesystem, so should not usually need to be set. However, it may be useful for the first time a very large filesystem that compresses very little is backed up. compress [client|server] "string" Default: client fast. If Amanda does compression of the backup images, it can do so either on the backup client host before it crosses the network or on the tape server host as it goes from the network into the holding disk or to tape. Which place to do com- pression (if at all) depends on how well the dump image usually compresses, the speed and load on the client or server, network capacity, holding disk capacity, availability of tape hardware compression, etc. For either type of compression, Amanda also allows the selection of two styles of compression. Best is the best compression avail- able, often at the expense of CPU overhead. Fast is often not as good a compression as best, but usually less CPU overhead. So the compress options line may be one of: compress none compress [client] fast compress [client] best compress server fast compress server best Note that some tape devices do compression and this option has nothing to do with whether that is used. If hardware compression is used (usually via a particular tape device name or mt option), Amanda (software) compression should be disabled. dumpcycle int Default: 10 days. The number of days in the backup cycle. Each disk using this set of options will get a full backup at least this often. Setting this to zero tries to do a full backup each run. exclude [ list|file ][[optional][ append ][ "string" ]+] Default: file. There is two exclude list exclude file and exclude list. With exclude file , the string is a gnutar exclude expres- sion. With exclude list , the string is a file name on the client containing gnutar exclude expression. All exclude expression are concatenated in one file and passed to gnutar as a --exclude-from argument. With the append keyword, the string are appended to the current value of the list, without it, the string overwrite the list. If optional is specified for exclude list, then amcheck will not complain if the file doesn't exist or is not readable. For exclude list, If the file name is relative, the disk name being backed up is prepended. So if this is entered: exclude list ".amanda.excludes" the actual file use would be /var/.amanda.excludes for a backup of /var, /usr/local/.amanda.excludes for a backup of /usr/local, and so on. holdingdisk "boolean" Default: yes. Whether a holding disk should be used for these backups or whether they should go directly to tape. If the holding disk is a portion of another file system that Amanda is backing up, that file system should refer to a dumptype with holdingdisk set to no to avoid backing up the holding disk into itself. ignore "boolean" Default: no. Whether disks associated with this backup type should be backed up or not. This option is useful when the disklist file is shared among several configurations, some of which should not back up all the listed file systems. include [ list|file ][[optional][ append ][ "string" ]+] Default: file ".". There is two include list include file and include list. With include file , the string is a glob expression. With include list , the string is a file name on the client containing glob expression. All include expression are expanded by amanda and concatenated in one file and passed to gnutar as a --files-from argument. They must start with "./" and containing no other "/". With the append keyword, the string are appended to the current value of the list, without it, the string overwrite the list. If optional is specified for include list, then amcheck will not complain if the file doesn't exist or is not readable. For include list, If the file name is relative, the disk name being backed up is prepended. index "boolean" Default: no. Whether an index (catalogue) of the backup should be generated and saved in indexdir. These catalogues are used by the amrecover utility. kencrypt "boolean" Default: no. Whether the backup image should be encrypted by Kerberos as it is sent across the network from the backup client host to the tape server host. maxdumps "int" Default: 1. The maximum number of backups from a single host that Amanda will attempt to run in parallel. See also the main sec- tion inparallel option. priority "string" Default: medium. When there is no tape to write to, Amanda will do incremental backups in priority order to the holding disk. The priority may be high(2), medium(1), low(0) or a number of your choice. program "string" Default: DUMP. The type of backup to perform. Valid values are DUMP for the native operating system backup program, and GNUTAR to use GNU tar or to do Samba PC backups. record "boolean" Default: yes. Whether to ask the backup program to update its database (e.g. /etc/dumpdates) of time stamps. This is normally enabled for daily backups and turned off for periodic archival runs. skip-full "boolean" Default: no. If true and planner has scheduled a full backup, these disks will be skipped, and full backups should be run off-line on these days. It was reported that Amanda only schedules level 1 incrementals in this configuration; this is probably a bug. skip-incr "boolean" Default: no. If true and planner has scheduled an incremental backup, these disks will be skipped. starttime "int" Default: none. Backups will not start until after this time of day. The value should be hh*100+mm, e.g. 6:30PM (18:30) would be entered as 1830. strategy "string" Default: standard. Strategy to use when planning what level of backup to run next. Values are: standard The standard Amanda schedule. nofull Never do full backups, only level 1 incrementals. noinc Never do incremental backups, only full dumps. skip Never do backups (useful when sharing the disklist file). incronly Only do incremental dumps. `amadmin force' should be used to tell Amanda that a full dump has been performed off-line, so that it resets to level 1. It is similar to skip-full, but with incronly full dumps may be scheduled manually. Unfortu- nately, it appears that Amanda will perform full backups with this configuration, which is probably a bug. The following dumptype entries are predefined by Amanda: define dumptype no-compress { compress none } define dumptype compress-fast { compress client fast } define dumptype compress-best { compress client best } define dumptype srvcompress { compress server fast } define dumptype bsd-auth { auth bsd } define dumptype krb4-auth { auth krb4 } define dumptype no-record { record no } define dumptype no-hold { holdingdisk no } define dumptype no-full { skip-full yes } In addition to options in a dumptype section, one or more other dumptype names may be entered, which make this dumptype inherit options from other previously defined dumptypes. For instance, two sections might be the same except for the record option: define dumptype normal { comment "Normal backup, no compression, do indexing" no-compress index yes maxdumps 2 } define dumptype testing { comment "Test backup, no compression, do indexing, no recording" normal record no } Amanda provides a dumptype named global in the sample amanda.conf file that all dumptypes should reference. This provides an easy place to make changes that will affect every dumptype. TAPETYPE SECTION
The amanda.conf file may define multiple types of tape media and devices. The information is entered in a tapetype section, which looks like this in the config file: define tapetype name { tapetype-option tapetype-value ... } Name is the name of this type of tape medium/device. It is referenced from the tapetype option in the main part of the config file. The tapetype options and values are: comment "string" Default: none. A comment string describing this set of tape information. filemark "int" Default: 1000 bytes. How large a file mark (tape mark) is, measured in bytes. If the size is only known in some linear measurement (e.g. inches), convert it to bytes using the device density. length "int" Default: 2000 kbytes. How much data will fit on a tape. Note that this value is only used by Amanda to schedule which backups will be run. Once the backups start, Amanda will continue to write to a tape until it gets an error, regardless of what value is entered for length (but see the OUTPUT DRIVERS section later for exceptions). blocksize "int" Default: 32 kbytes. How much data will be written in each tape record. The minimum blocksize value is 32 KBytes. The maximum blocksize value is 32 KBytes. file-pad "boolean" Default: true. If true, every record, including the last one in the file, will have the same length. This matches the way Amanda wrote tapes prior to the availability of this parameter. It may also be useful on devices that only support a fixed blocksize. Note that the last record on the tape probably includes trailing null byte padding, which will be passed back to gzip, compress or the restore program. Most programs just ignore this (although possibly with a warning). If this parameter is false, the last record in a file may be shorter than the block size. The file will contain the same amount of data the dump program generated, without trailing null byte padding. When read, the same amount of data that was written will be returned. speed "int" Default: 200 bps. How fast the drive will accept data, in bytes per second. This parameter is not currently used by Amanda. lbl-templ "string" A PostScript template file used by amreport to generate labels. Several sample files are provided with the Amanda sources in the example directory. See the amreport(8) man page for more information. In addition to options, another tapetype name may be entered, which makes this tapetype inherit options from another tapetype. For instance, the only difference between a DLT4000 tape drive using Compact-III tapes and one using Compact-IV tapes is the length of the tape. So they could be entered as: define tapetype DLT4000-III { comment "DLT4000 tape drives with Compact-III tapes" length 12500 mbytes # 10 Gig tapes with some compression filemark 2000 kbytes speed 1536 kps } define tapetype DLT4000-IV { DLT4000-III comment "DLT4000 tape drives with Compact-IV tapes" length 25000 mbytes # 20 Gig tapes with some compression } INTERFACE SECTION
The amanda.conf file may define multiple types of network interfaces. The information is entered in an interface section, which looks like this: define interface name { interface-option interface-value ... } Name is the name of this type of network interface. It is referenced from the disklist file. Note that these sections define network interface characteristics, not the actual interface that will be used. Nor do they impose limits on the bandwidth that will actually be taken up by Amanda. Amanda computes the estimated bandwidth each file system backup will take based on the estimated size and time, then compares that plus any other running backups with the limit as another of the criteria when deciding whether to start the backup. Once a backup starts, Amanda will use as much of the network as it can leaving throttling up to the operating system and network hardware. The interface options and values are: comment "string" Default: none. A comment string describing this set of network information. use "int" Default: 300 Kbps. The speed of the interface in Kbytes per second. In addition to options, another interface name may be entered, which makes this interface inherit options from another interface. At the moment, this is of little use. DISKLIST FILE
The disklist file determines which disks will be backed up by Amanda. The file usually contains one line per disk: hostname diskname [ diskdevice ] dumptype [ spindle [ interface ] ] All pair [ hostname diskname ] must be unique. Lines starting with # are ignored, as are blank lines. The fields have the following meanings: hostname The name of the host to be backed up. If diskdevice refers to a PC share, this is the host Amanda will run the Samba smbclient pro- gram on to back up the share. diskname The name of the disk (a label). In most case, you set your diskname to the diskdevice and you don't set the diskdevice. If you want multiple entry with the same diskdevice, you must set a different diskname for each entry. It's the diskname that you use on command line for any amanda command. Look at the example/disklist file for example. diskdevice Default: same as diskname. The name of the disk device to be backed up. It may be a full device name, a device name without the /dev/ prefix, e.g. sd0a, or a mount point such as /usr. It may also refer to a PC share by starting the name with two (forward) slashes, e.g. //some-pc/home. In this case, the program option in the associated dumptype must be entered as GNUTAR. It is the combination of the double slash disk name and program GNUTAR in the dumptype that triggers the use of Samba. dumptype Refers to a dumptype defined in the amanda.conf file. Dumptypes specify backup related parameters, such as whether to compress the backups, whether to record backup results in /etc/dumpdates, the disk's relative priority, etc. spindle Default: -1. A number used to balance backup load on a host. Amanda will not run multiple backups at the same time on the same spindle, unless the spindle number is -1, which means there is no spindle restriction. interface Default: local. The name of a network interface definition in the amanda.conf file, used to balance network load. Instead of naming a dumptype, it is possible to define one in-line, enclosing dumptype options within curly braces, one per line, just like a dumptype definition in amanda.conf. Since pre-existing dumptypes are valid option names, this syntax may be used to customize dumptypes for particular disks. A line break must follow the left curly bracket. For instance, if a dumptype named normal is used for most disks, but use of the holding disk needs to be disabled for the file system that holds it, this would work instead of defining a new dumptype: hostname diskname [ diskdevice ] { normal holdingdisk no } [ spindle [ interface ] ] TAPE MANAGEMENT
The tapelist file contains the list of tapes in active use. This file is maintained entirely by Amanda and should not be created or edited during normal operation. It contains lines of the form: YYYYMMDD label flags Where YYYYMMDD is the date the tape was written, label is a label for the tape as written by amlabel and flags tell Amanda whether the tape may be reused, etc (see the reuse options of amadmin). Amdump and amflush will refuse to write to an unlabeled tape, or to a labeled tape that is considered active. There must be more tapes in active rotation (see the tapecycle option) than there are runs in the backup cycle (see the dumpcycle option) to prevent overwriting a backup image that would be needed to do a full recovery. OUTPUT DRIVERS
The normal value for the tapedev parameter, or for what a tape changer returns, is a full path name to a non-rewinding tape device, such as /dev/nst0 or /dev/rmt/0mn or /dev/nst0.1 or whatever conventions the operating system uses. Amanda provides additional application level drivers that support non-tradition tape simulatation or features. To access a specific output driver, set tapedev (or configure your changer to return) a string of the form driver:driver-info where driver is one of the supported drivers and driver-info is optional addi- tional information needed by the driver. The supported drivers are: tape This is the default driver. The driver-info is the tape device name. Entering /dev/rmt/0mn is really a short hand for tape:/dev/rmt/0mn. null This driver throws away anything written to it and returns EOF for any reads except a special case is made for reading a label, in which case a "fake" value is returned that Amanda checks for and allows through regardless of what you have set in labelstr. The driver-info field is not used and may be left blank: tapedev "null:" The length value from the associated tapetype is used to limit the amount of data written. When the limit is reached, the driver will simulate end of tape. NOTE: this driver should only be used for debugging and testing, and probably only with the record option set to no. rait Redundant Array of Inexpensive (?) Tapes. Reads and writes tapes mounted on multiple drives by spreading the data across N-1 drives and using the last drive for a checksum. See docs/RAIT for more information. The driver-info field describes the devices to use. Curly braces indicate multiple replacements in the string. For instance: tapedev "rait:/dev/rmt/tps0d{4,5,6}n" would use the following devices: /dev/rmt/tps0d4n /dev/rmt/tps0d5n /dev/rmt/tps0d6n file This driver emulates a tape device with a set of files in a directory. The driver-info field must be the name of an existing directory. The driver will test for a subdirectory of that named data and return offline until it is present. When present, the driver uses two files in the data subdirectory for each tape file. One contains the actual data. The other contains record length information. The driver uses a file named status in the file device directory to hold driver status information, such as tape position. If not present, the driver will create it as though the device is rewound. The length value from the associated tapetype is used to limit the amount of data written. When the limit is reached, the driver will simulate end of tape. One way to use this driver with a real device such as a CD is to create a directory for the file device and one or more other directories for the actual data. Create a symlink named data in the file directory to one of the data directories. Set the tapetype length to whatever the medium will hold. When Amanda fills the file device, remove the symlink and (optionally) create a new symlink to another data area. Use a CD writer software package to burn the image from the first data area. To read the CD, mount it and create the data symlink in the file device directory. AUTHORIZATION
Amanda processes on the tape server host run as the dumpuser user listed in amanda.conf. When they connect to a backup client, they do so with an Amanda-specific protocol. They do not, for instance, use rsh or ssh directly. On the client side, the amandad daemon validates the connection using one of several methods, depending on how it was compiled and on options it is passed: .rhosts Even though Amanda does not use rsh, it can use .rhosts-style authentication and a .rhosts file. .amandahosts This is essentially the same as .rhosts authentication except a different file, with almost the same format, is used. This is the default mechanism built into Amanda. The format of the .amandahosts file is: hostname [ username ] If username is ommitted, it defaults to the user running amandad, i.e. the user listed in the inetd or xinetd configuration file. Kerberos Amanda may use the Kerberos authentication system. Further information is in the docs/KERBEROS file that comes with an Amanda dis- tribution. For Samba access, Amanda needs a file on the Samba server (which may or may not also be the tape server) named /etc/amandapass with share names, (clear text) passwords and (optional) domain names, in that order, one per line, whitespace separated. By default, the user used to connect to the PC is the same for all PC's and is compiled into Amanda. It may be changed on a host by host basis by listing it first in the password field followed by a percent sign and then the password. For instance: //some-pc/home normalpw //another-pc/disk otheruser%otherpw With clear text passwords, this file should obviously be tightly protected. It only needs to be readable by the Amanda user on the Samba server. Further information is in the docs/SAMBA file that comes with an Amanda distribution. HOST &; DISK EXPRESSION All host and disk arguments to programs are special expression. The command apply to all disk that match your arguments. This section describe the matcher. The matcher match by word, each word is a glob expression, word are separated by the separator '.' for host and '/' for disk. You can anchor the expression at left with a '^'. You can anchor the expression at right with a '$'. The matcher is case insensitive for host but is case sensitive for disk. A match succeed if all word in your expression match contiguous word in the host or disk. . word separator for a host / word separator for a disk ^ anchor at left $ anchor at right ? match exactly one character except the separator * match zero or more characters except the separator ** match zero or more characters including the separator Some examples: EXPRESSION WILL MATCH WILL NOT MATCH hosta hosta hostb hoSTA.dOMAIna.ORG foo.hosta.org host host hosta host? hosta host hostb ho*na hoina ho.aina.org ho**na hoina ho.aina.org ^hosta hosta foo.hosta.org sda* /dev/sda1 /dev/sda12 /opt/ opt (disk) opt (host) .opt. opt (host) opt (disk) / / any other disk /usr /usr /usr/opt /usr$ /usr /usr/opt DATESTAMP EXPRESSION
A datestamp expression is a range expression where we only match the prefix. Leading ^ is removed. Trailing $ force an exact match. 20001212-14 match all dates beginning with 20001212, 20001213 or 20001214 20001212-4 same as previous 20001212-24 match all dates between 20001212 and 20001224 2000121 match all dates that start with 2000121 (20001210-20001219) 2 match all dates that start with 2 (20000101-29991231) 2000-10 match all dates between 20000101-20101231 200010$ match only 200010 AUTHOR
James da Silva <jds@cs.umd.edu> University of Maryland, College Park SEE ALSO
amadmin(8), amcheck(8), amcheckdb(8), amcleanup(8), amdd(8), amdump(8), amflush(8), amgetconf(8), amlabel(8), ammt(8), amoverview(8), amplot(8), amrecover(8), amreport(8), amrestore(8), amrmtape(8), amstatus(8), amtape(8), amtoc(8), amverify(8), amverifyrun(8) AMANDA(8)
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