Chapter 11 Backups - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Chapter 11 Backups

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Title: Chapter 11 Backups


1
Chapter 11Backups
  • Unix System Administration

2
Backup. Why? Because We Like You.
  • Why backup at all?
  • Restore from data loss
  • Disaster recovery
  • Archival of old data - possibly for legal reasons

3
In the Media...
  • Backup devices/media
  • Tape
  • Optical (MO)
  • CDROM (CD-R, CD-RW)
  • DVD-R, DVD-RW, DVD-RAM
  • Removable Disk (Zip, Jaz, floppy?)
  • Paper?

4
Mr. Nixons Preferred Media
  • There are a variety of tape formats to choose
    from
  • QIC Cartridge 60MB per tape
  • 8mm - 2 to 20GB per tape (native)
  • 4mm - 1.3 to 24GB per tape (native)
  • DLT - Digital Linear Tape - 20 to 35GB per tape
    (native)

5
8mm - Coming to Video Soon
  • Cartridge-based tape derived from the Sony
    Handycam type video tape
  • Handycam tapes will work, but data 8mm tapes are
    of higher quality

Drive Model Tape Length Capacity 8200
112 2.3Gb 8500 112 5 8505 112 5 8505XL 160
7 8900 (Mammoth) 170 20
6
Sometimes Smaller Is Better
  • 4mm
  • Based on DAT (Digital Audio Tape) format

Tape Format Tape Length Capacity DDS-1 60 1.3GB
DDS-DC 90 2 DDS-2 120 4 DDS-3 125 12
7
Ill Have a DLT on Toast
  • DLT - Digital Linear Tape
  • Tape to reel format, that is, the tape is spool
    to another reel in the drive. It is not
    cartridge format.
  • 100 duty cycle

Tape Format Capacity DLT 4000 20GB DLT
7000 35GB DLT 8000 40GB
8
Give Your Data a Big Hug
  • Compression
  • 8mm, 4mm and DLT drive perform hardware
    compression
  • Marketing usually uses 21 ratio
  • Actual is usually 1.81
  • Compression is based on the type of data you are
    backing up. Text most compressible and
    pre-compressed data least compressible

9
Do and Dohs
  • Do
  • Test your backup periodically
  • Store copies of data offsite
  • Label your backups so you know whats on them
  • Dohs
  • Store your tapes near magnetic or electromagnetic
    sources
  • The Earths background radiation can eventually
    erase magnetic tapes

10
Cage Match Stackers Vs. Autoloaders Vs. Jukeboxes
  • Stacker autoloader
  • Sequential tape access
  • Feeds next tape into drive when on is ejected
  • Jukebox
  • Random access to tapes in library

11
Backup oftware
  • Commercial
  • Veritas Netbackup
  • Legato Networker
  • IBM ADSM
  • Free or OS Provided
  • tar
  • cpio
  • dd
  • dump/restore

12
(No Transcript)
13
OS Backup Tools
  • tar - Tape Archiver
  • tar cf /dev/rmt/0 filea fileb filec
  • tar xf /dev/rmt/0
  • tar tf /dev/rmt/0
  • cpio - copy in/out
  • similar to tar, ATT specific
  • dd - disk duplicate
  • dd if/dev/rmt/0 of/dev/rmt/1
  • dd ifboot.img of/dev/rdiskette

14
Whod Want To Restore a Dump?
  • Dump and Restore
  • ufsdump and ufsrestore in Solaris
  • Primarily Used to backup partitions/slices
  • Maintains levels of backups for doing
    incremental dumps
  • Restore program has option for interactive shell
    like file browsing
  • Dump/Restore can be used to backup a
    partition/slice to another partition/slice

15
Dump Examples
ufsdump 0ubf 126 /dev/rmt/0n /dev/rdsk/c0t0d0s0 uf
sdump 5ubf 126 /dev/rmt/0n /dev/rdsk/c0t1d0s7 ufsr
estore ifs /dev/rmt/0 2 Slice-to-Slice
Dump newfs -v /dev/rdsk/c0t1d0s6 mount
/dev/dsk/c0t1d0s6 /mnt ufsdump 0f -
/dev/rdsk/c0t1d0s7 (cd /mnt ufsdump 0f -)
16
Managing Your Tape Worm
  • mt - Magnetic Tape
  • mt -f /dev/rmt/0 rewind
  • mt -f /dev/rmt/0 erase
  • mt -f /dev/rmt/0 offline
  • mt -f /dev/rmt/0 status
  • mt -f /dev/rmt/0 fsf

17
Good Ol ATT Vs. BSD Again
  • /dev/rmt/0 - ATT device name
  • Tape head is left positioned BEFORE filemark
  • You must explicitly move it past the filemark or
    subsequent reads will return 0, -1 or EOF
  • /dev/rmt/0b - BSD device name
  • Tape head left positioned AFTER filemark
  • Data is read/written from that point

18
Q Du Jour
  • What could happen if you mix ATT and BSD tape
    device names when putting multiple backups on a
    tape?
  • Whats a holey file?

19
Holey Files Batman!
  • When a file says it is using more disk space than
    it actually is.
  • Output of du doesnt equal what ls -l says.
  • Seeking way past the eof and writing data no
    data exists between the old eof the new data.
  • Tar and cpio can be fooled into backup this empty
    space, dump/ufsdump can handle this oddity.
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