.TH mfssnapshots "1" "February 2023" "MooseFS 3.0.117-1" "This is part of MooseFS" .SH NAME mfssnapshots \- \fBMooseFS\fP snapshot tools .SH SYNOPSIS .B mfsappendchunks [\fB-s \fP\fIFROM\fP\fB:\fP\fITO\fP] \fISNAPSHOT_FILE\fP \fIOBJECT\fP... .PP .B mfsmakesnapshot [\fB-o\fP|\fB-c\fP|\fB-p\fP] \fISOURCE\fP... \fIDESTINATION\fP .PP .B mfsrmsnapshot [\fB-f\fP] \fIOBJECT\fP... .SH DESCRIPTION \fBmfsappendchunks\fP (equivalent of \fBmfssnapshot\fP from MooseFS 1.5) appends a lazy copy of specified file(s) to specified snapshot file ("lazy" means that creation of new chunks is delayed to the moment one copy is modified). If multiple files are given, they are merged into one target file in such a way that each file begins at \fIchunk\fP (64MB) boundary; padding space is left empty. Optionally only slice of chunks can be appended (option \fB-s\fP). Slice definition is similar to Python: \fIFROM\fP is included, \fITO\fP excluded, negative numbers mean backwards from the end. If \fIFROM\fP or \fITO\fP is not specified then it means from the beginning or to the end of file respectively. See examples below. .PP \fBmfsmakesnapshot\fP makes a "real" snapshot (lazy copy, like in case of \fBmfsappendchunks\fP) of some object(s) or subtree (similarly to \fBcp -r\fP command). It's atomic with respect to each \fISOURCE\fP argument separately. If \fIDESTINATION\fP points to already existing file, error will be reported unless \fB-o\fP (overwrite) option is given. Note: if \fISOURCE\fP is a directory, it is copied as a whole; but if it's followed by trailing slash, only directory content is copied. When \fB-c\fP option is given then attributes of newly created files are more similar to those created by ordinary \fBcp\fP (without attribute preserving). Option \fB-p\fP preserves hardlinks in \fISOURCE\fP (when two or more objects inside \fISOURCE\fP are hardlinked to each other then in \fIDESTINATION\fP folder those objects will be hardlinked to each other as well). .PP \fBmfsrmsnapshot\fP removes objects created as a result of \fBmfsmakesnapshot\fP (similarly to \fBrm -r\fP, but much faster). For safety reasons objects created via \fBmfsmakesnapshot\fP have the \fBsnapshot\fP attribute set (see \fBmfseattr\fP(1)) and only such objects can be removed using \fBmfsrmsnapshot\fP command. By default all files and directories inside specified directory must have this attribute set for the command to remove the whole directory; otherwise the command will not remove anything. This behavior can be overridden by \fB-f\fP option. With this option \fBmfsrmsnapshot\fP will remove only those files/directories that have \fBsnapshot\fP attribute set and will leave everything else untouched. .SH "SLICES" \fIFROM\fP\fB:\fP\fITO\fP for source file with chunks 0,1,2,...,N-1,N: .PP 2:4 = chunks 2 and 3 .PP 3: = chunks 3,4,...,N .PP :5 = chunks 0,1,2,3,4 .PP :-1 = chunks 0,1,2,3,...,N-1 .PP -4:-2 = chunks N-3,N-2 .SH "REPORTING BUGS" Report bugs to . .SH COPYRIGHT Copyright (C) 2023 Jakub Kruszona-Zawadzki, Saglabs SA This file is part of MooseFS. MooseFS is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it under the terms of the GNU General Public License as published by the Free Software Foundation, version 2 (only). MooseFS is distributed in the hope that it will be useful, but WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. See the GNU General Public License for more details. You should have received a copy of the GNU General Public License along with MooseFS; if not, write to the Free Software Foundation, Inc., 51 Franklin St, Fifth Floor, Boston, MA 02111-1301, USA or visit http://www.gnu.org/licenses/gpl-2.0.html .SH "SEE ALSO" .BR mfsmount (8), .BR mfstools (1), .BR mfseattr (1)