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Date:      Mon, 22 Feb 2010 12:34:07 -0500
From:      Jerry McAllister <jerrymc@msu.edu>
To:        Aiza <aiza21@comclark.com>
Cc:        freebsd-questions <questions@freebsd.org>, Dan Nelson <dnelson@allantgroup.com>
Subject:   Re: Dump questions
Message-ID:  <20100222173407.GA44738@gizmo.acns.msu.edu>
In-Reply-To: <4B80E4AF.3040204@comclark.com>
References:  <4B80ABBA.9000707@comclark.com> <20100221061449.GK70798@dan.emsphone.com> <4B80E4AF.3040204@comclark.com>

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On Sun, Feb 21, 2010 at 03:45:51PM +0800, Aiza wrote:

> Dan Nelson wrote:
> >In the last episode (Feb 21), Aiza said:
> >>1. Using the -L flag to create a snapshot of the
> >>live running file system.
> >>
> >>Does this mean that a complete copy of the file
> >>system is written to .snap directory?
> >
> >No; that would be a "copy".  Snapshots only copy blocks as they are 
> >modified
> >on the parent filesystem, so their size is determined by how much data is
> >modified since the snapshot was created.
> >
> So how does this interact with the dump process?
> 
> Dump start reading and writing its dump file and as the live system 
> changes the changes are written to the .snap and when dump completes it 
> overwrites it dump with the changes from the .snap???

No.

> 
> How does this process work in detail?

Go back and read the good and quite complete description someone put
in about how snapshotting works a while back in this thread.  I think
it was Matthew Seaman, but I don't remember for sure.

////jerry


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