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Date:      Tue, 29 Apr 2003 00:06:00 +0300
From:      Tomi Vainio - Sun Finland <Tomi.Vainio@Sun.COM>
To:        obrien@freebsd.org
Cc:        freebsd-current@freebsd.org
Subject:   Re: dump restore problem
Message-ID:  <16045.38840.203334.824671@ultrahot.finland.sun.com>
In-Reply-To: <20030428205357.GA67147@dragon.nuxi.com>
References:  <16042.64964.345642.224980@ultrahot.finland.sun.com> <20030426215744.GA97642@pit.databus.com> <200304281613.h3SGDKY0046012@apollo.backplane.com> <20030428205357.GA67147@dragon.nuxi.com>

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David O'Brien writes:
 > On Mon, Apr 28, 2003 at 09:13:20AM -0700, Matthew Dillon wrote:
 > >     Use restore's 'r' option instead of 'x' if you want an exact restore.
 > >     'x' is used when restoring part of a backup, 'r' is used when restoring
 > >     the entire backup.  For example, if you just wanted to restore the 'etc
 > 
 > IIRC, 'r' doesn't restore the exact owner, modification time, and mode.
 > _______________________________________________
 >
BTW my original point was to make somekind of best practices how to
migrate ufs1 to ufs2.  Dump says maximum block size is 1000 and it
doesn't work.  Why this doesn't work?  I understand that maximum block
size is 64k when writing through device layer (physio?) but what's
happening on this case?

  Tomppa



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