NAME¶
dar_xform - disk archive "re-slicer"
SYNOPSIS¶
dar_xform [options] [<path>/]source [<path>/]destination
dar_xform -h
dar_xform -V
DESCRIPTION¶
dar_xform changes the size of slices of an existing archive.
Source is the basename of the existing archive, destination is the basename of
the archive to be created. If source basename is "-", the archive is
read from standard input. If the destination basename is "-", the
archive is written to standard output and -s option is not available.
OPTIONS¶
- -h
- displays help usage.
- -V
- displays version information.
- -b
- make the terminal ring when user interaction is required (like for example
the creation of a new slice when using the -p option)
- -s <number>
- Size of the slices in bytes. If the number is followed by k (or K), M, G,
T or P the size is in kilobytes, megabytes, gigabytes, terabytes or
petabytes respectively. Example: by default "20M" means 20
megabytes it is the same as giving 20971520 as argument (see also -aSI and
-abinary options). If -s is not present the backup will be written to a
single slice whatever the size of the backup may be (there is probably
some filesystem limitation, thus you might expect problems with file size
over 2 gigabytes, depending on your filesystem).
- -S <number>
- -S gives the size of the first slice which may be chosen independently of
the size of following slices. This option needs -s and by default, the
size of the first slice is the same as the one of the following
slices.
- -p [<integer>]
- pauses before writing to a new slice (this requires -s). By default there
is no pause, all slices are output in the same directory, up to the end of
the backup or until the filesystem is full. In this later case, the user
is informed of the lack of disk space and dar stops for user interaction.
As soon as some disk space is available, the user can continue the backup.
The optional integer that this option can receive tells dar to only pause
very 'n' slice. Giving 3 for 'n' will make dar pause only after slices 3,
6, 9 and so on. If this integer is not specified, the behavior is as if
'1' was given as argument which makes dar pause after each slice.
- -n
- Do not allow overwriting of any slice.
- -w
- Do not warn before overwriting slice. By default (no -n and no -w)
overwriting is allowed but a warning is issued before proceeding.
- -E <string>
- the string is a command-line to be launched between the slices of the
destination archive. See dar(1) man page (same option) for more
information.
- -F <string>
- the string is a command-line to be launched between the slices of the
source archive. See dar(1) man page (same option) for more
information.
- -aSI[-unit[s]]
- when using k M G T E Z Y prefixes to define a size, use the SI meaning:
multiple of 10^3 (a Mega is 1,000,000).
- -abinary[-unit[s]]
- when using k M G T E Z Y prefixes to define a size, use the historical
computer science meaning: multiple of 2^10 (a Mega is 1,048,576).
-aSI and -abinary can be used several times, they affect all prefix which follow
even those found in file included by -B option up to the next -a...
occurrence. Note that if in a file included by -B option an -abinary or -aSI
is met, it affects all the following prefix even those outside the included
files (for example in the following "-B some.dcf -s 1K" 1K may be
equal to 1000 or 1024 depending on the presence of an -aSI or -abinary in the
file some.dcf. By default (before any -aSI/binary argument has been reached),
binary interpretation of suffix is done (for compatibility with older
versions).
- -Q
- Do not display any message on stderr when not launched from a terminal
(for example when launched from an at job or crontab). Remains that any
question to the user will be assumed a 'no' answer, which most of the time
will abort the program.
- -j
- when virtual memory is exhausted, as user to make room before trying to
continue. By default, when memory is exhausted dar aborts.
- -^ perm[:user[:group]]
- defines the permission and ownership to use for created slices.
- -3, --hash <algo>
- Beside each created slice is generated an on-fly hash file using the
specified algorithm. Available algorithm are "md5" and
"sha1", by default no hash file is generated. This option
description is more detailed in dar man page (where it has the same
designation as here).
- -9 <src_num>[,<dst_num>]
- Defines the minimum number of digit to use for the source archive and for
the destination archive. If you the source has not been defined with a
minimum number of digit and you want to define a value for the destination
archive, use zero (or one) as value for src. See the same option in dar
man page for more details.
NOTES¶
Dar_xform is not concerned by encryption or compression. It does not need to be
aware of it to be able to change the slice scheme. Thus, it is not able to
uncompress or uncipher an archive.
EXIT CODES¶
dar_xform uses the same exit status as dar does, see
dar(1) man page.
SIGNALS¶
Any signal sent to dar_xform will abort the program immediately, there is no way
to have a proper termination before the end of the process
SEE ALSO¶
dar(1),
dar_slave(1),
dar_manager(1),
dar_cp(1)
KNOWN BUGS¶
None actually.
AUTHOR¶
http://dar.linux.free.fr/
Denis Corbin
France
Europe