It's definitely bad idea to try to use it, but it doesn't explain the
core dump.
Also, using DHCP to dish out addresses that don't belong to you AND
aren't on a private network (as defined by IANA) will probably lead to
trouble. Valid private address ranges are:
10.0.0.0 - 10.255.255.255
thanks Frank,
192 is just a sample. if i want to define 125.0.0.0 netmask 255.0.0.0, dhcp
server core dump either. you're right, it is better to use just some
limited addresses to avoid possible troubles. but i want to run my dhcp
server for all possible networks.
now my question is: if i define
Quoting Frank Leonhardt fra...@fjl.co.uk:
There are two common ways of defining a subnet mask - one is a
dotted quad (e.g. 255.255.255.0) and the other is with a slash and
the number of low-order bits - e.g. 192.168.1.0/8. Eight bits here
means you get 2^8 addresses (i.e. 256). Don't use
s m sam.gh1986 at gmail.com writes:
and thank you jb but if i define my network like below, server runs
correctly:
log-facility local7;
subnet 192.168.0.0 netmask 255.255.0.0 {
range 192.168.0.1 192.168.255.255;
}
i think 192.168.255.55 is reserved for broadcast too. is it not
On 23/07/2013 13:35, j.mcke...@ru.ac.za wrote:
Quoting Frank Leonhardt fra...@fjl.co.uk:
There are two common ways of defining a subnet mask - one is a dotted
quad (e.g. 255.255.255.0) and the other is with a slash and the
number of low-order bits - e.g. 192.168.1.0/8. Eight bits here means
hello all,
i have a question about dhcpd in freebsd8.2 . when i define my network like
below in dhcpd.conf file, server doesn't run correctly and return core
dump
this is my dhcpd.conf file:
ddns-update-style none;
log-facility local7;
subnet 192.0.0.0 netmask 255.0.0.0 {
range 192.0.0.1
s m sam.gh1986 at gmail.com writes:
...
subnet 192.0.0.0 netmask 255.0.0.0 {
range 192.0.0.1 192.255.255.255;
The 'range' denotes IP addresses that can be allocated to clients.
The IP 192.255.255.255 is a reserved broadcast address for the network.
jb
On Fri, Jun 14, 2013 at 2:48 PM, Greg Larkin glar...@freebsd.org wrote:
-BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE-
Hash: SHA1
On 6/14/13 6:26 AM, C. L. Martinez wrote:
Hi all,
I have a FreeBSD 9.1 host (fully patched) with ZFS. Every day I am
receiving in security output this message:
Hi all,
I have a FreeBSD 9.1 host (fully patched) with ZFS. Every day I am
receiving in security output this message:
fbsd.domain.local kernel log messages:
+++ /tmp/security.AT1oDecp 2013-06-14 03:02:10.0 +
+pid 75930 (try), uid 0: exited on signal 10 (core dumped) pid 76241
C. L. Martinez writes:
I have a FreeBSD 9.1 host (fully patched) with ZFS. Every day I
am receiving in security output this message:
fbsd.domain.local kernel log messages:
+++ /tmp/security.AT1oDecp 2013-06-14 03:02:10.0 +
+pid 75930 (try), uid 0: exited on
On Fri, Jun 14, 2013 at 11:42 AM, Robert Huff roberth...@rcn.com wrote:
C. L. Martinez writes:
I have a FreeBSD 9.1 host (fully patched) with ZFS. Every day I
am receiving in security output this message:
fbsd.domain.local kernel log messages:
+++ /tmp/security.AT1oDecp 2013-06-14
C. L. Martinez writes:
Have you added anything to the default system crontab? Are
I have added a script to rebuild packages every week with poudriere:
And if you comment that out?
Robert Huff
On Fri, Jun 14, 2013 at 12:17 PM, Robert Huff roberth...@rcn.com wrote:
C. L. Martinez writes:
Have you added anything to the default system crontab? Are
I have added a script to rebuild packages every week with poudriere:
And if you comment that out?
Uhmm .. I will try it ... but for what reason??
It would be nice to see if anything else in the crontab might be causing
it.
You can also run `periodic security` as root and see if it manfiests the
same way.
___
freebsd-questions@freebsd.org
On Fri, Jun 14, 2013 at 12:30 PM, Jason Birch jbi...@jbirch.net wrote:
Uhmm .. I will try it ... but for what reason??
It would be nice to see if anything else in the crontab might be causing
it.
You can also run `periodic security` as root and see if it manfiests the
same way.
Running
Hi everyone,
I need a copy of ACPI Source Language (ASL), '# acpidump-dt
copy_model_laptop.asl' of any version of FreeBSD you have the option
ACPI always enabled and does not give any problem on ACER laptops.
Anyone can send me a copy of your ASL dump ( see above ) of ACER
ASPIRE laptops model
enabled and does not give any problem on ACER laptops.
Anyone can send me a copy of your ASL dump ( see above ) of ACER
ASPIRE laptops model?
Hi,
I have an acer/aspire/5741 no problems I'm aware of, so will send you mine.
uname -a
FreeBSD lapr.js.berklix.net 9.1-RELEASE FreeBSD 9.1
Hi Xavier cc questions@ acpi@
I wrote:
acpidump -dt produces 15,840 lines,
so I'll not append to list but private mail you.
I put it here so others on acpi@ questions@ can look too if they want.
http://berklix.com/~jhs/hardware/laptops/acer/aspire/5741/
Cheers,
Julian
--
Hi all,
I have problem loading a partial dump of one repository into a new
repository. When I try to load a partial dump of the old repository, which
paths also corrected, I've got the Checksum mismatch error for a file.
When I try to replace the Text-content-md5 field of the file on the dump
thanks Lowell for your reply,
i want to restore my /usr dump on both of my disks (each one has /usr
partition separately).
i try to use TMPDIR in order to prevent this conflict, but restore does not
identify it and use my /tmp dir yet. this is what i do:
first, i create a tmp1 directory in /tmp
hello guys
i'm trying to restore DUMP file for partition /usr on tow hard disk
parallel y. these two hard are connected to my system (i have freebsd8.2).
i use restore command and it uses /tmp directory to restore dump. in
restoring dump process, two hard disks try to use /tmp directory of my
s m sam.gh1...@gmail.com writes:
i'm trying to restore DUMP file for partition /usr on tow hard disk
parallel y. these two hard are connected to my system (i have freebsd8.2).
i use restore command and it uses /tmp directory to restore dump. in
restoring dump process, two hard disks try
(While the system involved is -CURRENT, this doesn't seem to
have anything CURRENT-related.)
On a system running:
FreeBSD 10.0-CURRENT #0: Sun Dec 30 12:52:09 EST 2012 amd64
running dump causes the system to lock up ... sometimes.
Specifics:
I have
My system
9.1-RELEASE
ll /var/crash/
total 697996
-rw-r--r-- 1 root wheel 2 14 Mar 12:51 bounds
-rw--- 1 root wheel 577047 14 Mar 12:52 core.txt.0
-rw--- 1 root wheel460 14 Mar 12:51 info.0
-rw-r--r-- 1 root wheel 5 4 Dec 10:34 minfree
-rw---
2013-03-14 14:55, Damien Fleuriot skrev:
On 14 Mar 2013, at 12:57, Leslie Jensen les...@eskk.nu wrote:
My system
9.1-RELEASE
ll /var/crash/
total 697996
-rw-r--r-- 1 root wheel 2 14 Mar 12:51 bounds
-rw--- 1 root wheel 577047 14 Mar 12:52 core.txt.0
-rw--- 1
On Thu, Mar 14, 2013 at 3:45 PM, Leslie Jensen les...@eskk.nu wrote:
2013-03-14 14:55, Damien Fleuriot skrev:
On 14 Mar 2013, at 12:57, Leslie Jensen les...@eskk.nu wrote:
My system
9.1-RELEASE
ll /var/crash/
total 697996
-rw-r--r-- 1 root wheel 2 14 Mar 12:51 bounds
Will someone please confirm or deny that (UFS) journaling and
dump -L continue to be incompatible?
Respectfully,
Robert Huff
___
freebsd-questions@freebsd.org mailing list
http://lists.freebsd.org
Snapshots are not yet supported when running with journaled soft
updates: Operation not supported
:-(
On Mon, Feb 11, 2013 at 7:27 AM, Robert Huff roberth...@rcn.com wrote:
Will someone please confirm or deny that (UFS) journaling and
dump -L continue to be incompatible
the core dump files (one set from each).
makeoptions DEBUG=-g# Build kernel with gdb(1) debug
symbols
Is already enabled in the generic (amd64) kernel.
$ uname -a
FreeBSD alex-laptop 9.1-RELEASE FreeBSD 9.1-RELEASE #0 r243825: Tue Dec
4 09:23:10 UTC 2012
r
hmmm... I used -R when doing a dump, and I see the dump date is
recorded as 1969. Does that mean an incremental dump will dump
the whole thing again?
on a related note, if dumping to a file and not a linear media such
as physical tape, is there any real reason to use -r or -R
I needed to expand a /var partition,
which required saving and restoring /var and /usr
did the following:
booted to backup disk
dump -0aR -h 0 -f /usr/backup/dump_var_0_20121113_1920 /dev/ada0p4
(repeat for /tmp, /usr, / partitions to be safe)
repartitioned the main disk using gpart
El día Wednesday, November 14, 2012 a las 01:20:14AM -0700, Gary Aitken
escribió:
I needed to expand a /var partition,
which required saving and restoring /var and /usr
did the following:
booted to backup disk
dump -0aR -h 0 -f /usr/backup/dump_var_0_20121113_1920 /dev/ada0p4
On Wed, 14 Nov 2012 01:20:14 -0700, Gary Aitken wrote:
mount /dev/ada0p4 /mnt/ssd/var
cd /mnt/ssd/var
restore -r /usr/backup/dump_var_0_20121113_1920
Cannot find file dump list
The last command looks wrong. The restore program requires
the dump file to be provided via -f, so
From: Polytropon free...@edvax.de
To: free...@dreamchaser.org
Cc: FreeBSD Mailing List freebsd-questions@freebsd.org
Sent: Wednesday, November 14, 2012 12:27 PM
Subject: Re: ugh. dump / restore problem(s) Cannot find file dump list
On Wed, 14 Nov 2012 01
El día Wednesday, November 14, 2012 a las 01:01:08AM -0800, Jack Mc Lauren
escribió:
Hi
There is no - . This is the correct format : restore rf /path/to/dump/files
from man restore(8):
RESTORE(8) FreeBSD System Manager's Manual
RESTORE(8)
NAME
restore, rrestore — restore
On Wed, 14 Nov 2012 01:01:08 -0800 (PST), Jack Mc Lauren wrote:
There is no - . This is the correct format : restore rf /path/to/dump/files
Really? The manual at man restore mentions:
restore -r [-dDNuvy] [-b blocksize] [-f file | -P pipecommand]
[-s fileno]
And in the -r
On 11/14/12 01:30, Matthias Apitz wrote:
El día Wednesday, November 14, 2012 a las 01:20:14AM -0700, Gary Aitken
escribió:
I needed to expand a /var partition,
which required saving and restoring /var and /usr
did the following:
booted to backup disk
dump -0aR -h 0 -f /usr/backup
On Wed, 14 Nov 2012, Polytropon wrote:
On Wed, 14 Nov 2012 01:01:08 -0800 (PST), Jack Mc Lauren wrote:
There is no - . This is the correct format : restore rf /path/to/dump/files
Really? The manual at man restore mentions:
restore -r [-dDNuvy] [-b blocksize] [-f file | -P pipecommand
El día Wednesday, November 14, 2012 a las 09:45:22AM -0700, Warren Block
escribió:
One of the (in my opinion) most interesting reference sources
for dump/restore also mentions this format:
# mount /dev/da0s1 /mnt
# mkdir /tmp/oldvar
# cd /tmp/oldvar
# restore -ruf
In message 20121105051447.6eef32ef.free...@edvax.de,
Polytropon free...@edvax.de wrote:
The problem is that delegating compression to a sub-task would
imply that dump cannot precisely adjust its output to match the
media size (as the limit is now defined by how good the compression
works
I would like to make a backup of one of my systems using dump(8) in order
to be sure that I get everything, including all of the obscure file attribute
bits.
I would like to make this backup to a _minimal_ number of DVD+R disks.
What's the proper procedure for this?
In the dump(8) man page, I
On Sun, 04 Nov 2012 16:56:58 -0800, Ronald F. Guilmette wrote:
I would like to make a backup of one of my systems using dump(8) in order
to be sure that I get everything, including all of the obscure file attribute
bits.
That eliminates at least some tools. I have been using a similar
idea
On Sun, Nov 4, 2012 at 4:56 PM, Ronald F. Guilmette
r...@tristatelogic.comwrote:
I would like to make a backup of one of my systems using dump(8) in order
to be sure that I get everything, including all of the obscure file
attribute
bits.
I would like to make this backup to a _minimal_
On 11/05/12 11:18, Polytropon wrote:
On Sun, 04 Nov 2012 16:56:58 -0800, Ronald F. Guilmette wrote:
I would like to make a backup of one of my systems using dump(8) in order
to be sure that I get everything, including all of the obscure file attribute
bits.
That eliminates at least some tools
In message caogwamvoncti7akmtjw0+caastfhfae5gw+pkmh+4ldr00-...@mail.gmail.com
Mehmet Erol Sanliturk m.e.sanlit...@gmail.com wrote:
Assume one file will NOT be copied more than ONE DVD , i.e. , each file
will be completely recorded on one DVD :
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cutting_stock_problem
ought to be a -z option integrated into both dump and
restore commands.
The command growisofs -Z /dev/cd0=file will record the file like
an image to the media. In most cases, that would be an ISO-9660 file
system, like growisofs -Z /dev/cd0=stuff.iso (with a premastered
file stuff.iso). In _this_
sense), it should be incorporated to the command.
Yes. There really ought to be a -z option integrated into both dump and
restore commands.
Depending on _what_ kind of compression (gzip, bzip2, 7zip, xz etc.)
there might be many of them. If utilizing the capabilities of
libarchive is possible
In message 50971b88.40...@herveybayaustralia.com.au,
Da Rock freebsd-questi...@herveybayaustralia.com.au wrote:
Also, you may have considered this already (or not :) ), but you are
using a direct write to backup your system, and then considering
compression on top of that. CD/DVD filesystems
In message 20121105035233.e3c4ae8a.free...@edvax.de,
Polytropon free...@edvax.de wrote:
But as I said (above) to make this really work right, dump restore really
need to have -z options, and do the zipping/unzipping internally. Only
if this were available could dump properly deal with end
On Sun, 04 Nov 2012 19:49:24 -0800, Ronald F. Guilmette wrote:
In message 20121105035233.e3c4ae8a.free...@edvax.de,
Polytropon free...@edvax.de wrote:
But as I said (above) to make this really work right, dump restore really
need to have -z options, and do the zipping/unzipping
On 11/05/12 14:14, Polytropon wrote:
On Sun, 04 Nov 2012 19:49:24 -0800, Ronald F. Guilmette wrote:
In message 20121105035233.e3c4ae8a.free...@edvax.de,
Polytropon free...@edvax.de wrote:
But as I said (above) to make this really work right, dump restore really
need to have -z options
Date: Mon, 05 Nov 2012 15:42:45 +1000
From: Da Rock freebsd-questi...@herveybayaustralia.com.au
Subject: Re: Questions about dump/restore to/from DVD media
On 11/05/12 14:14, Polytropon wrote:
For reference, if one did backup the whole slice/disk using dd and then
compressed the data
From: Xin Li delp...@delphij.net
To: Jin Guojun jguo...@sbcglobal.net
Cc: questi...@freebsd.org; hack...@freebsd.org
Sent: Sun, September 30, 2012 1:07:40 PM
Subject: Re: system hangs during dump + compress usb2-drive
On 9/29/12 10:49 PM, Jin Guojun wrote
did up to now.
i have two partition, one is encrypted and the other one is not. the
unencrypted partition has boot folder. when i copy FreeBSD base system
files, FreeBSD start up correctly but when i restore dump files,
FreeBSD doesn't start up correctly.
i hope this information help
thanks saeedeh
OK i try to explain what i have done more in detail.
i want to restore unencrypted dump files on an encrypted file system.
in order to do that, i encrypted my file system by geli command and
sure that is done correctly because when i install base and kernel on
it, freebsd start up
On Sun, Sep 30, 2012 at 10:09 AM, s m sam.gh1...@gmail.com wrote:
thanks saeedeh
OK i try to explain what i have done more in detail.
i want to restore unencrypted dump files on an encrypted file system.
in order to do that, i encrypted my file system by geli command and
sure that is done
-BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE-
Hash: SHA256
On 9/29/12 10:49 PM, Jin Guojun wrote:
In FreeBSD 8.3 release (possibly in earlier release), dump a file
system has 2-3GB or more content can cause system hang in a
specific case (pipe to compression):
dump FS-on-SATA-drive usb-drive
hello guys,
I backed up my freeBSD 8.2 box by dump command and now want to restore
this dump file on an encrypted file system (i used geli to encrypt my
file system) but do not know how to do that.
is there any way or command to restore an unencrypted dump on an
encrypted file system? i tried
s m sam.gh1...@gmail.com wrote:
I backed up my freeBSD 8.2 box by dump command and now want to restore
this dump file on an encrypted file system (i used geli to encrypt my
file system) but do not know how to do that.
is there any way or command to restore an unencrypted dump
restore dump files,
FreeBSD doesn't start up correctly.
i hope this information help to understand what is wrong.
thanks
On 9/29/12, Fabian Keil freebsd-lis...@fabiankeil.de wrote:
s m sam.gh1...@gmail.com wrote:
I backed up my freeBSD 8.2 box by dump command and now want to restore
this dump
In FreeBSD 8.3 release (possibly in earlier release), dump a file system has
2-3GB or more
content can cause system hang in a specific case (pipe to compression):
dump FS-on-SATA-drive usb-drive OK
dump FS-on-SATA-drive | anyCompress sata-drive OK
mv a-large-dump-file
Hi,
here is a kernel dump I got recently:
# ls -al /var/crash/
total 285944
drwxr-x--- 2 root wheel512 Sep 5 06:21 .
drwxr-xr-x 25 root wheel512 Sep 5 08:30 ..
-rw-r--r-- 1 root wheel 2 Sep 5 06:21 bounds
-rw--- 1 root wheel 105813 Sep 5 06:21
Hi All,
Running 8.3-STABLE 5/21/2012 on HP DL360. While testing crash dump
functionality, the dump aborts with the following message:
Aborting dump due to I/O error.
status == 0xb, scsi status == 0x0
** DUMP FAILED (ERROR 5) **
Automatic reboot in 5 seconds - press a key on the console
(unlike dump) is FS-agnostic: it must understand the
format of the dumpfile, but it needs no knowledge of how the FS is
represented on disk because it uses ordinary system calls (open,
write, etc.) to access the FS.
What you _do_ need on that recovery disk -- along with a generic
restore -- are ext4
I haven't checked all the features, so I don't know if it includes restore
for ext4.
According to:
http://www.sysresccd.org/Detailed-packages-list
It does not contain any version of restore.
There are a lot of Linux boot disks out there. I haven't found one yet that
includes an ext4
Peter A. Giessel pgies...@mac.com responded:
According to:
http://www.sysresccd.org/Detailed-packages-list
It does not contain any version of restore.
There are a lot of Linux boot disks out there. I haven't found one yet that
includes an ext4 compatible restore. Debian lets you roll your
On Fri, 29 Jun 2012 00:52:35 -0500, Peter A. Giessel pgies...@mac.com
wrote:
There are a lot of Linux boot disks out there. I haven't found one yet
that includes an ext4 compatible restore. Debian lets you roll your own,
but you need to do that before a disaster. It doesn't include
On Thu, 28 Jun 2012 20:59:57 +0100, Vincent Hoffman wrote:
We use dump to backup ext4 filesystems on linux (Centos6) at work
From the linux dump changelog
Changes between versions 0.4b41 and 0.4b42 (released June 18, 2009
On Jun 28, 2012, at 11:59, Vincent Hoffman vi...@unsane.co.uk wrote:
We use dump to backup ext4 filesystems on linux (Centos6) at work
You can find a version of dump for Linux that supports ext4. What I have been
completely unable to find is a linux boot disk that has a version of restore
On 28/06/2012 21:39, Peter A. Giessel wrote:
On Jun 28, 2012, at 11:59, Vincent Hoffman vi...@unsane.co.uk wrote:
We use dump to backup ext4 filesystems on linux (Centos6) at work
You can find a version of dump for Linux that supports ext4. What I have
been completely unable to find
On Jun 28, 2012, at 11:59, Vincent Hoffman vi...@unsane.co.uk wrote:
We use dump to backup ext4 filesystems on linux (Centos6) at work
Peter A. Giessel pgies...@mac.com responded:
You can find a version of dump for Linux that supports ext4. What I have
been completely unable to find
Another thread, which I seem to have lost, was talking about
dump and sizing its cache.
Per my promise, appended is the log of this morning's level 0 dump,
using C=32. THe system is -CURRENT from March, using AMD Phemon II
x4/3ghz and SATA 3gbit drives (one internal, one external
On Mon, 11 Jun 2012, Robert Huff wrote:
Another thread, which I seem to have lost, was talking about
dump and sizing its cache.
Per my promise, appended is the log of this morning's level 0 dump,
using C=32. THe system is -CURRENT from March, using AMD Phemon II
x4/3ghz
On Mon, Jun 11, 2012 at 7:14 AM, Robert Huff roberth...@rcn.com wrote:
DUMP: finished in 1746 seconds, throughput 19568 KBytes/sec
Looks like one of your disks must be USB.
--
Adam Vande More
___
freebsd-questions@freebsd.org mailing list
http
Warren Block writes:
Another thread, which I seem to have lost, was talking about
dump and sizing its cache.
Per my promise, appended is the log of this morning's level 0 dump,
using C=32. THe system is -CURRENT from March, using AMD Phemon II
x4/3ghz and SATA 3gbit drives
Adam Vande More writes:
DUMP: finished in 1746 seconds, throughput 19568 KBytes/sec
Looks like one of your disks must be USB.
Source disk: SATA, I believe 3mbit
Target disk: e-SATA, which may be limited to 1.5 mbit/sec.
Robert Huff
Hello,
currently I am experiencing something confusing. Some hours ago I did a
level 0 dump with the following command:
dump -a -0 -f /mnt/da0/backup-compaq.0.dump /
This results in a quite big dump file. After changing a couple of files,
I tried to do another dump. This time as level 1
On 17/05/2012 12:49, Matthias Petermann wrote:
currently I am experiencing something confusing. Some hours ago I did a
level 0 dump with the following command:
dump -a -0 -f /mnt/da0/backup-compaq.0.dump /
This results in a quite big dump file. After changing a couple of files,
I
On Thursday 17 May 2012, Matthias Petermann wrote:
dump -a -1 -f /mnt/da0/backup-compaq.1.dump /
Try a new full backup with
dump -0aLuf /mnt/da0/backup-compaq.1.dump /
then for the incremental use
dump -1aLuf /mnt/da0/backup-compaq.1.dump /
The option you're missing is u, but L
Thanks Mike and Matthew,
the -u switch was what I missed. It now works fine.
Regards,
Matthias
On 17.05.2012 13:52, Mike Clarke wrote:
On Thursday 17 May 2012, Matthias Petermann wrote:
dump -a -1 -f /mnt/da0/backup-compaq.1.dump /
Try a new full backup with
dump -0aLuf /mnt/da0
I run a ZFS on root FreeBSD system. I know I can backup with snapshots
but I want a dump/restore action because I want to transfer this system
to a UFS virtual FreeBSD machine.
My question is: will dump / (root) make a dump of *ALL* other directories?
yanta# df -h
Filesystem
On 07/02/2012 11:00, dick wrote:
I run a ZFS on root FreeBSD system. I know I can backup with snapshots
but I want a dump/restore action because I want to transfer this
system to a UFS virtual FreeBSD machine.
My question is: will dump / (root) make a dump of *ALL* other
directories?
Dump
Op 7-2-2012 12:23, Vincent Hoffman schreef:
On 07/02/2012 11:00, dick wrote:
I run a ZFS on root FreeBSD system. I know I can backup with snapshots
but I want a dump/restore action because I want to transfer this
system to a UFS virtual FreeBSD machine.
My question is: will dump / (root) make
On Tue, Feb 7, 2012 at 1:55 PM, dick d...@nagual.nl wrote:
Op 7-2-2012 12:23, Vincent Hoffman schreef:
On 07/02/2012 11:00, dick wrote:
I run a ZFS on root FreeBSD system. I know I can backup with snapshots
but I want a dump/restore action because I want to transfer this
system to a UFS
On 07/02/2012, at 22:25, dick wrote:
Op 7-2-2012 12:23, Vincent Hoffman schreef:
On 07/02/2012 11:00, dick wrote:
I run a ZFS on root FreeBSD system. I know I can backup with snapshots
but I want a dump/restore action because I want to transfer this
system to a UFS virtual FreeBSD machine
On Tue, 7 Feb 2012, dick wrote:
Op 7-2-2012 12:23, Vincent Hoffman schreef:
On 07/02/2012 11:00, dick wrote:
I run a ZFS on root FreeBSD system. I know I can backup with snapshots
but I want a dump/restore action because I want to transfer this
system to a UFS virtual FreeBSD machine.
My
Le Wed, 18 Jan 2012 16:42:10 -0700,
Dale Scott dalesc...@shaw.ca a écrit :
# mount
/dev/ada0p2 on / (ufs, local, journaled soft-updates)
devfs on /dev (devfs, local, multilabel)
/dev/ad1as1d on /backup (ufs, local, soft-updates)
#
# cd /backup
# dump -0aLf 20120118.dump
I'm getting a non-responsive system after issuing dump on a relatively fresh
install of FreeBSD-9.0-RELEASE. The system is a VirtualBox 4.1.2 vm, with a
20GB GPT system drive and a 20GB MBR backup drive. Since it was created, the
ports tree has been updated and apache22, mysql55-server
I have two FreeBSD 8.2-STABLE servers running NFS. I have tons of files on
Server A that I want to backup to a big drive on Sever B. Server B nfs_mounts
one of the filesystems on Server A to /mnt. So if I wanted to make a backup of
the filesytem on Server A to Server B I tried:
dump -d /home
to make a backup
of the filesytem on Server A to Server B I tried:
dump -d /home/my_home/backups/20111024 /mnt
but each time I try this it tells me that filesystem /mnt is unknown. /mnt is
not in /etc/fstab. I manually mounted this via NFS and that's where all the
files I want to backup
on Server A to Server B I tried:
dump -d /home/my_home/backups/20111024 /mnt
but each time I try this it tells me that filesystem /mnt is unknown. /mnt is
not in /etc/fstab. I manually mounted this via NFS and that's where all the
files I want to backup are accessible to the command line on Server B
of
the filesytem on Server A to Server B I tried:
dump -d /home/my_home/backups/20111024 /mnt
but each time I try this it tells me that filesystem /mnt
is unknown. /mnt is not in /etc/fstab. I manually mounted
this via NFS and that's where all the files I want to backup
are accessible
Hello.
2011/10/23 21:08:14 +0200 Polytropon free...@edvax.de = To Bill Tillman :
P The dump + restore mechanism operates on device files
P representing a file system, not a _mounted_ file system,
P as source.
dump(8) is able to make a snapshot behind teh scenes, and use that snapshot as
a source
On Sun, 23 Oct 2011, Polytropon wrote:
But note that this will dump the _complete_ file system's
content to /mnt as dump cannot be more selective here.
The nodump flag along with -h0 can be used to exclude files or
directories. But agreed, dump is gear towards entire filesystems
3.6G 24G13%/var
procfs 4.0k4.0k 0B 100%/proc
/dev/ad2s1f 39G 25G 10G71%/mnt
devfs 1.0k1.0k 0B 100%/var/named/dev
as you can see /dev/ad4s1f is 40G and /dev/ad2s1f is 39G
but on ad4s1f only 25G used.
How can I dump
/dev/ad2s1f 39G 25G 10G71%/mnt
devfs 1.0k1.0k 0B 100%/var/named/dev
as you can see /dev/ad4s1f is 40G and /dev/ad2s1f is 39G
but on ad4s1f only 25G used.
How can I dump /dev/ad4s1f and restore it on /dev/ad2s1f?
These commands:
#mount
Здравствуйте, Robert.
Вы писали 30 сентября 2011 г., 4:11:15:
From owner-freebsd-questi...@freebsd.org Thu Sep 29 14:37:35 2011
Date: Thu, 29 Sep 2011 22:36:38 +0300
From: =?windows-1251?B?yu7t/Oru4iDF4uPl7ejp?= kes-...@yandex.ru
To: freebsd-questions@freebsd.org
Subject: dump/restore, how
can I dump /dev/ad4s1f and restore it on /dev/ad2s1f?
These commands:
#mount /dev/ad2s1f /mnt
#cd /mnt
#dump -0Lf - /usr | restore -rf -
does not help, because of ad2s1f does not have space to restore
'end of ' /dev/ad4s1f.
May help any?
--
Konkov mailto:kes
see /dev/ad4s1f is 40G and /dev/ad2s1f is 39G
but on ad4s1f only 25G used.
How can I dump /dev/ad4s1f and restore it on /dev/ad2s1f?
These commands:
#mount /dev/ad2s1f /mnt
#cd /mnt
#dump -0Lf - /usr | restore -rf -
does not help, because of ad2s1f does not have space to restore
'end
2011-09-08 22:11, Andrea Venturoli skrev:
Hello.
Anyone can give any hint on this?
Guessing!
You have run out of swapspace, based on these 2 lines
panic: ffs_write: dir write
current process = 0 (swapper)
Or you have a hardware error. Does the current process
change between panics or is it
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