.TH VBACKUP 8 .SH NAME vbackup, vcat, vftp, vmount, vmount0, vnfs \- back up Unix file systems to Venti .SH SYNOPSIS .B vbackup [ .B -DVnv ] [ .B -s .I secs ] [ .B -w .I n ] .I disk [ .I score ] .PP .B vcat [ .B -z ] .I disk | .I score .B > .I disk .PP .B vftp .I disk | .I score .PP .B vmount [ .B -v ] .I addr .I mtpt .PP .B vmount0 [ .B -v ] [ .B -h .I handle ] .I addr .I mtpt .PP .B vnfs [ .B -LLMRVr ] [ .B -a .I addr ] [ .B -m .I mntaddr ] [ .B -b .I blocksize ] [ .B -c .I cachesize ] .I config .SH DESCRIPTION These programs back up and restore standard Unix file system images stored in .IR venti (8). Images stored in .I venti are named by .IR scores , which consist of a file system type followed by a colon and forty hexadecimal digits, as in: .IP .EX ffs:0123456789abcdef0123456789abcdef01234567 .EE .PP (The hexadecimal data is the SHA1 hash of the Venti root block representing the file system image.) .PP These programs expect the environment variable .B $venti to be set to the network address of the Venti server to use (for example, .B yourhost or .BR tcp!yourhost!venti ). .PP .I Vbackup copies the file system stored on .I disk to the Venti server and prints the score for the newly-stored image. The argument .I disk should be a disk or disk partition device that would be appropriate to pass to .IR mount (8). .PP The optional argument .I score is the score of a previous backup of the disk image. If .I score is given, .I vbackup will not write to Venti any blocks that have not changed since the previous backup. This is only a speed optimization: since the blocks are already stored on Venti they need not be sent to the Venti server again. .PP The options to .I vbackup are: .TP .B -D .TP .B -V .TP .B -n .TP .B -v .TP .B -w \fIn .TP .B -s \fIsecs .PP .I Vcat writes the named disk image to standard output. Unused file system blocks are printed zeroed regardless of their actual content. .PP If the .B -z flag is given, .I vcat will attempt to seek over unused blocks instead of writing to them. The .B -z flag should only be used when standard output is seekable .RI ( i.e. , when it has been redirected to a file or disk). .PP .I Vftp presents the file system image named by .I disk or .I score in a shell-like interactive session. Type .B help at the .B vftp> prompt for details. .PP .I Vmount mounts the NFS service at the network connection .I address onto .IR mountpoint . On most operating systems, .I vmount must be run by the user .BR root . .PP .I Vmount0 is a simple C program that .I vmount uses if .IR mount (8) does not suffice. .PP .I Vnfs serves, using the NFS version 3 protocol, one or more disk images in a synthetic tree defined by the configuration file .IR config . .I Vnfs announces NFS service at .IR addr (default .BR udp!*!nfs ) and NFS mount service at .IR mntaddr (default .BR udp!*!\fI999 ), registering both with the port mapper. If no port mapper is found running (on port 111), .I vnfs starts its own port mapper. The options are: .TP .B -r Reply to all NFS requests with RPC rejections. .TP .B -M Do not announce an NFS mount service. .TP .B -P Do not register service with the port mapper. .TP .B -a .SH EXAMPLES .PP Back up the file system stored on .BR /dev/da0s1a : .IP .EX % vbackup /dev/da0s1a ffs:0123456789abcdef0123456789abcdef01234567 % .EE .PP Serve that backup and a few others in a tree reminiscent of Plan 9's dump file system, but hide each day's contents of .B /tmp : .IP .EX % cat config mount /2005/0510 ffs:0123456789abcdef\fI...\fP mount /2005/0510/home ffs:0123456789abcdef\fI...\fP mount /2005/0510 ffs:0123456789abcdef\fI...\fP mount /2005/0510/home ffs:0123456789abcdef\fI...\fP hide /*/*/tmp % vnfs -m -b 16k -c 1k config % .EE .PP Mount the backups on a client machine using .IR vmount : .IP .EX # vmount udp!yourserver!nfs /dump # ls /dump 2005 # .EE .PP Mount the backups using the standard NFS mount program: .IP .EX # mount -t nfs -o soft,intr,ro,nfsv3,rsize=8192,timeo=100 \ -o nfsvers=3,nolock,noatime,nodev,nosuid \ .EE