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Date:      Mon, 21 Apr 2008 10:58:18 +0200
From:      Dominic Fandrey <kamikaze@bsdforen.de>
To:        Kevin Sanders <newroswell@gmail.com>
Cc:        freebsd-questions@freebsd.org
Subject:   Re: dump restore pain and suffering
Message-ID:  <480C572A.6010407@bsdforen.de>
In-Reply-To: <375baf50804111751o5078081elc7ffe4a0e1feceae@mail.gmail.com>
References:  <375baf50804111751o5078081elc7ffe4a0e1feceae@mail.gmail.com>

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Kevin Sanders wrote:
> I've been dumping and restoring a test system today, and I'm have very
> little success.  Basically, I've been installing a base FreeBSD
> 7-RELEASE/i386 system, doing something like dump -0auL -f
> /mnt/test.root.dump, formating the drive and trying to restore -rf
> /mnt/test.root.dump.  /mnt is a ufs formated usb drive.  After the
> dump, I've even done a restore -rNf /mnt/test.root.dump just to make
> sure it doesn't complain out the dump file.
> 
> I've read the handbook, found a few articles, googled all the errors.
> The header dumpdate thing is harmless, the expected next file is from
> it being a live system, but I'm not ending up with a system that is
> very usable.  Doing a df, I see that sometimes I end up with a
> restored slice that is about the same size as my dump file, sometimes
> less than half.  I know I'm not being very specific with what's not
> working, but is anyone really using dump/restore and having success
> with the restore part?  I'm now full of doubt and worry that my real
> systems are not really backed up.
> 
> I really wished this worked as easy as falling out of a boat and hitting water.
> 
> Kevin

I have used dump/restore to move systems onto other drives, sometimes even 
through an ssh connection. The only thing you have to remember is to:
chmod 1777 /tmp



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