Usage of restore

2013-01-28 Thread Ralf Mardorf
Hi :) I don't understand how to use the restore command. root@freebsd:/mnt/dump # restore -v -t dump-9.1-RELEASE-20130123_193142-usr_f.dump Verify tape and initialize maps /dev/sa0: No such file or directory root@freebsd:/mnt/dump # restore -v -t -f

Re: Usage of restore

2013-01-28 Thread Warren Block
On Mon, 28 Jan 2013, Ralf Mardorf wrote: I don't understand how to use the restore command. root@freebsd:/mnt/dump # restore -v -t dump-9.1-RELEASE-20130123_193142-usr_f.dump Verify tape and initialize maps /dev/sa0: No such file or directory sa0 is the tape device, used by default if -f is

Re: Usage of restore

2013-01-28 Thread Polytropon
On Mon, 28 Jan 2013 15:53:25 +0100, Ralf Mardorf wrote: Hi :) I don't understand how to use the restore command. The answer is in man restore. :-) root@freebsd:/mnt/dump # restore -v -t dump-9.1-RELEASE-20130123_193142-usr_f.dump Verify tape and initialize maps /dev/sa0: No such file

Re: Usage of restore

2013-01-28 Thread Ralf Mardorf
On Mon, 28 Jan 2013 16:54:29 +0100, Polytropon free...@edvax.de wrote: The answer is in man restore. :-) No it isn't ;). I did read it. This was a Wald'n'Bäume situation. Even if I would have add a .bz2, I would have missed it, since on Linux I .tar.bz backups and it's more automated to

Re: Usage of restore

2013-01-28 Thread Polytropon
On Mon, 28 Jan 2013 17:28:10 +0100, Ralf Mardorf wrote: On Mon, 28 Jan 2013 16:54:29 +0100, Polytropon free...@edvax.de wrote: The answer is in man restore. :-) No it isn't ;). I did read it. Eáu còntrair! :-) -f file Write the backup to file; file may be a special device

Re: Usage of restore

2013-01-28 Thread Ralf Mardorf
Another issue. # bunzip2 dump-9.1-RELEASE-20130123_193142-usr_f.dump | restore -t -f - does work, but the output doesn't show the owner and I want to get some output I can use with mtree, to fix a broken owner for some files. Regards, Ralf PS: man restore doesn't tell me, that I missed to