amoverview (8) - Linux Manuals
amoverview: display file systems processed by Amanda over time
NAME
amoverview - display file systems processed by Amanda over time
SYNOPSIS
-
amoverview [--hostwidth
width] [--diskwidth width] [--skipmissed] [--last] [--num0] [--togo0] [--verbose] [--config ] config
DESCRIPTION
Amoverview
See the amanda(8) man page for more details about Amanda.
OPTIONS
--config config
- Use configuration config.
--hostwidth width
- Set host field column width to width characters instead of 8.
--diskwidth width
- Set disk field column width to width characters instead of 20.
--skipmissed
- Compacts the output by only printing stats for the days Amanda actually ran.
--last
- Outputs the last status of each disk at the start. Useful for long tapecycles and/or sparse reports.
--num0
- Outputs the number of level 0 dumps for each disk.
--togo0
- Outputs the number of runs until the last level 0 dump is overwritten.
--verbose
- Amoverview can take a long while on large systems. This option reports intermediate steps while it is working.
RESULTS
amoverview is a summary of the output of " amadmin <config> find ". When the last column of amadmin find contains anything other than "OK", amoverview translates this into "E" for that day.
A number indicates the level of backup and it succeeded. An "E" indicates an error for that day. You get an "E" for all errors, like failed to connect, datatimeout, computer crashed, etc, but also for failing to write to tape.
You can have an "E" followed by a number if a filesystem ran into end-of-tape once (gives an "E", and later that day, you flush it to a second tape (a number: the level, indicating success). If the flush failed too, you get a double "EE" for that day.
You can also have a double code if you have two tapes in the changer and Amanda failed to write to tape the first time because it hit end of tape (resulting in "E0", for a full, "E1" for an incremental etc.) or twice with error ("EE"), and may a successful flush afterwards giving maybe "EE0". (Only the latest 2 characters are printed).
EXAMPLE
This shows the /home file system on host2 was backed up at level 3 on the 8th, 9th and 10th of December, had a full backup on the 11th, a level 1 on the 12th and a level 2 on the 13th.
# amoverview date 12 12 12 12 12 12 host disk 08 09 10 11 12 13 host1 / 0 1 1 1 1 1 host1 /var 0 1 1 1 1 1 host2 / 1 1 1 1 1 0 host2 /home 3 3 3 0 1 2 host2 /opt 1 1 1 1 1 1 host2 /var 1 1 0 1 1 1
AUTHOR
Stefan G. Weichinger <sgw [at] amanda.org>