1xfsdump(8)                  System Manager's Manual                 xfsdump(8)
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NAME

6       xfsdump - XFS filesystem incremental dump utility
7

SYNOPSIS

9       xfsdump -h
10       xfsdump [ options ] -f dest [ -f dest ... ] filesystem
11       xfsdump [ options ] - filesystem
12       xfsdump -I [ subopt=value ... ]
13

DESCRIPTION

15       xfsdump backs up files and their attributes in a filesystem.  The files
16       are dumped to storage  media,  a  regular  file,  or  standard  output.
17       Options  allow  the  operator to have all files dumped, just files that
18       have changed since a previous dump, or just files contained in  a  list
19       of pathnames.
20
21       The  xfsrestore(8)  utility re-populates a filesystem with the contents
22       of the dump.
23
24       Each invocation of xfsdump dumps just one filesystem.  That  invocation
25       is  termed a dump session.  The dump session splits the filesystem into
26       one or more dump streams, one per destination.  The split  is  done  in
27       filesystem inode number (ino) order, at boundaries selected to equalize
28       the size of each stream.  Furthermore, the breakpoints between  streams
29       may be in the middle of very large files (at extent boundaries) if nec‐
30       essary to achieve  reasonable  stream  size  equalization.   Each  dump
31       stream  can  span  several media objects, and a single media object can
32       contain several dump streams.  The typical media object is a tape  car‐
33       tridge.   The media object records the dump stream as one or more media
34       files.  A media file is a self-contained partial dump, intended to min‐
35       imize  the  impact  of  media dropouts on the entire dump stream at the
36       expense of increasing the  time  required  to  complete  the  dump.  By
37       default  only  one  media  file  is written unless a media file size is
38       specified using the -d option. Other techniques, such as making a  sec‐
39       ond copy of the dump image, provide more protection against media fail‐
40       ures than multiple media files will.
41
42       xfsdump maintains an online dump inventory  in  /var/lib/xfsdump/inven‐
43       tory.   The  -I  option displays the inventory contents hierarchically.
44       The levels of the hierarchy are: filesystem, dump session, stream,  and
45       media file.
46
47       The options to xfsdump are:
48
49       -a   Specifies  that  files for which the Data Migration Facility (DMF)
50            has complete offline copies (dual-state files) be  treated  as  if
51            they  were  offline (OFL).  This means that the file data will not
52            be dumped by xfsdump, resulting in a smaller dump  file.   If  the
53            file  is  later restored the file data is still accessible through
54            DMF.  If both '-a option' and '-z option' are specified,  the  '-a
55            option' takes precedence (see '-z option' below).
56
57       -b blocksize
58            Specifies  the  blocksize, in bytes, to be used for the dump.  The
59            same blocksize must be specified to restore the tape.  If  the  -m
60            option  is  not  used,  then  -b  does  not  need to be specified.
61            Instead, a default blocksize of 1Mb will be used.
62
63       -c progname
64            Use the specified program to  alert  the  operator  when  a  media
65            change  is  required.  The  alert program is typically a script to
66            send a mail or flash a window to draw the operator's attention.
67
68       -d filesize
69            Specifies the size, in megabytes, of dump  media  files.   If  not
70            specified,  xfsdump  will  dump  data to tape using a single media
71            file per media object.  The specified media file size may need  to
72            be  adjusted if, for example, xfsdump cannot fit a media file onto
73            a single tape.
74
75       -e   Allow files to be excluded from the dump.  This will cause xfsdump
76            to skip files which have the "no dump" file attribute set. See the
77            "Excluding individual files" section below for details on  setting
78            this file attribute.
79
80       -f dest [ -f dest ... ]
81            Specifies a dump destination.  A dump destination can be the path‐
82            name of a device (such as a tape  drive),  a  regular  file  or  a
83            remote  tape  drive  (see rmt(8)).  This option must be omitted if
84            the standard output option (a lone - preceding the source filesys‐
85            tem specification) is specified.
86
87       -l level
88            Specifies  a  dump level of 0 to 9.  The dump level determines the
89            base dump to which this dump is relative.  The base  dump  is  the
90            most  recent dump at a lesser level.  A level 0 dump is absolute -
91            all files are dumped.  A dump level where  1  <=  level  <=  9  is
92            referred  to  as  an  incremental dump.  Only files that have been
93            changed since the base dump are dumped.  Subtree dumps (see the -s
94            option below) cannot be used as the base for incremental dumps.
95
96       -m   Use  the  minimal  tape protocol for non-scsi tape destinations or
97            remote tape destinations which are not scsi Linux tape drives  nor
98            IRIX tape drives.  This option cannot be used without specifying a
99            blocksize to be used (see -b option above).
100
101       -o   Overwrite the tape. With this option, xfsdump does  not  read  the
102            tape  first to check the contents. This option may be used if xfs‐
103            dump is unable to determine the block size of a tape .
104
105       -p interval
106            Causes progress reports to be printed at the  specified  interval.
107            interval  is  given in seconds.  The progress report indicates how
108            many files have been dumped, the total number of  files  to  dump,
109            the percentage of data dumped, and the elapsed time.
110
111       -q   Destination  tape  drive  is a QIC tape.  QIC tapes only use a 512
112            byte blocksize, for which xfsdump must make special allowances.
113
114       -s pathname [ -s pathname ... ]
115            Restricts the dump to files contained in the  specified  pathnames
116            (subtrees).  A pathname must be relative to the mount point of the
117            filesystem.  For example, if a filesystem is mounted at  /d2,  the
118            pathname  argument  for  the  directory /d2/users is ``users''.  A
119            pathname can be a file or a directory; if it is a  directory,  the
120            entire hierarchy of files and subdirectories rooted at that direc‐
121            tory is dumped.  Subtree dumps cannot be  used  as  the  base  for
122            incremental dumps (see the -l option above).
123
124       -t file
125            Sets  the  dump  time to the modification time of file rather than
126            using the current time.  xfsdump uses the dump time  to  determine
127            what  files  need to be backed up during an incremental dump. This
128            option should be used when dumping snapshots so that the dump time
129            matches  the time the snapshot was taken. Otherwise files modified
130            after a snapshot is taken may be skipped in the  next  incremental
131            dump.
132
133       -v verbosity
134       -v subsys=verbosity[,subsys=verbosity,...]
135            Specifies  the  level of detail used for messages displayed during
136            the course of the dump. The verbosity argument can  be  passed  as
137            either a string or an integer. If passed as a string the following
138            values may be used: silent, verbose, trace, debug, or  nitty.   If
139            passed  as an integer, values from 0-5 may be used. The values 0-4
140            correspond to the strings already listed. The value 5 can be  used
141            to produce even more verbose debug output.
142
143            The first form of this option activates message logging across all
144            dump subsystems. The second form allows the message logging  level
145            to  be  controlled  on a per-subsystem basis. The two forms can be
146            combined (see the example below). The argument subsys can take one
147            of  the  following values: general, proc, drive, media, inventory,
148            inomap and excluded_files.
149
150            For example, to dump the root filesystem  with  tracing  activated
151            for all subsystems:
152
153                 # xfsdump -v trace -f /dev/tape /
154
155            To enable debug-level tracing for drive and media operations:
156
157                 # xfsdump -v drive=debug,media=debug -f /dev/tape /
158
159            To  enable tracing for all subsystems, and debug level tracing for
160            drive operations only:
161
162                 # xfsdump -v trace,drive=debug -f /dev/tape /
163
164            To list files that will be excluded from the dump:
165
166                 # xfsdump -e -v excluded_files=debug -f /dev/tape /
167
168
169       -z size
170            Specifies the maximum size, in kilobytes, of files to be  included
171            in  the  dump.   Files  over  this size, will be excluded from the
172            dump, except for DMF dual-state files when '-a option'  is  speci‐
173            fied  (see  '-a option' above).  When specified, '-a option' takes
174            precedence over '-z option'. The size is an estimate based on  the
175            number  of  disk blocks actually used by the file, and so does not
176            include holes.  In other words, size refers to the amount of space
177            the  file  would  take  in  the resulting dump.  On an interactive
178            restore, the skipped file is visible with  xfsrestore's  'ls'  and
179            while  you  can use the 'add' and 'extract' commands, nothing will
180            be restored.
181
182       -A   Do not dump extended file attributes.  When dumping  a  filesystem
183            managed  within  a DMF environment this option should not be used.
184            DMF stores file migration status within extended attributes  asso‐
185            ciated  with each file. If these attributes are not preserved when
186            the filesystem is restored, files that had been in migrated  state
187            will not be recallable by DMF. Note that dumps containing extended
188            file attributes cannot be restored with older versions  of  xfsre‐
189            store(8).
190
191       -B session_id
192            Specifies  the ID of the dump session upon which this dump session
193            is to be based.  If this option is specified, the -l  (level)  and
194            -R  (resume) options are not allowed.  Instead, xfsdump determines
195            if the current dump session should be incremental and/or  resumed,
196            by looking at the base session's level and interrupted attributes.
197            If the base session was interrupted, the current dump session is a
198            resumption of that base at the same level.  Otherwise, the current
199            dump session is an incremental dump with a level one greater  than
200            that  of  the  base  session.   This option allows incremental and
201            resumed dumps to be based on any previous dump, rather  than  just
202            the most recent.
203
204       -D   Controls  which  directories  are  backed up during an incremental
205            dump. By default unchanged directories  are  dumped  if  files  or
206            directories beneath them have changed. This results in a self-con‐
207            tained dump -- if a base dump is lost, or you know the file(s) you
208            wish  to  restore  is in an incremental dump, you can restore just
209            that dump without loading the base dump(s)  first.  However,  this
210            method  requires  a  potentially  expensive  traversal through the
211            filesystem.
212
213            When -D is specified, unchanged directories are not dumped.   This
214            results  in  a  faster  dump,  but files will end up in the xfsre‐
215            store(8) orphanage directory unless the  base  dump(s)  is  loaded
216            first.
217
218       -E   Pre-erase  media.   If  this  option is specified, media is erased
219            prior to use.  The operator is prompted for  confirmation,  unless
220            the -F option is also specified.
221
222       -F   Don't prompt the operator.  When xfsdump encounters a media object
223            containing non-xfsdump data, xfsdump normally  asks  the  operator
224            for  permission  to  overwrite.  With this option the overwrite is
225            performed, no questions asked.  When  xfsdump  encounters  end-of-
226            media during a dump, xfsdump normally asks the operator if another
227            media object will be provided.   With  this  option  the  dump  is
228            instead interrupted.
229
230       -I   Displays  the  xfsdump  inventory (no dump is performed).  xfsdump
231            records each dump session in an online inventory in  /var/lib/xfs‐
232            dump/inventory.  xfsdump uses this inventory to determine the base
233            for incremental dumps.  It is also useful for manually identifying
234            a dump session to be restored.  Suboptions to filter the inventory
235            display are described later.
236
237       -J   Inhibits the normal update of the inventory.  This is useful  when
238            the media being dumped to will be discarded or overwritten.
239
240       -K   Generate  a  format  2 dump instead of the current format. This is
241            useful if the dump will be restored on a system with an older xfs‐
242            restore  which does not understand the current dump format. Use of
243            this option is otherwise not recommended.
244
245       -L session_label
246            Specifies a label for the dump session.  It can be  any  arbitrary
247            string up to 255 characters long.
248
249       -M label [ -M label ... ]
250            Specifies  a  label  for the first media object (for example, tape
251            cartridge) written on the  corresponding  destination  during  the
252            session.   It  can  be  any  arbitrary string up to 255 characters
253            long.  Multiple media object labels can be specified, one for each
254            destination.
255
256       -O options_file
257            Insert the options contained in options_file into the beginning of
258            the command line.  The options are specified just  as  they  would
259            appear if typed into the command line.  In addition, newline char‐
260            acters (\n) can be used as whitespace.   The  options  are  placed
261            before  all options actually given on the command line, just after
262            the command name.  Only one -O option can be used.  Recursive  use
263            is   ignored.   The  source  filesystem  cannot  be  specified  in
264            options_file.
265
266       -R   Resumes a previously interrupted dump session.  If the most recent
267            dump  at  this dump's level (-l option) was interrupted, this dump
268            contains only files not in the  interrupted  dump  and  consistent
269            with  the  incremental  level.   However,  files  contained in the
270            interrupted dump that have  been  subsequently  modified  are  re-
271            dumped.
272
273       -T   Inhibits interactive dialogue timeouts.  When the -F option is not
274            specified, xfsdump prompts  the  operator  for  labels  and  media
275            changes.   Each dialogue normally times out if no response is sup‐
276            plied.  This option prevents the timeout.
277
278       -Y length
279            Specify I/O buffer ring length.  xfsdump uses  a  ring  of  output
280            buffers to achieve maximum throughput when dumping to tape drives.
281            The default ring length is 3.   However,  this  is  not  currently
282            enabled on Linux yet, making this option benign.
283
284       -    A lone - causes the dump stream to be sent to the standard output,
285            where it can be piped to another utility such as xfsrestore(8)  or
286            redirected  to  a  file.   This  option cannot be used with the -f
287            option.  The - must follow  all  other  options  and  precede  the
288            filesystem specification.
289
290       The filesystem, filesystem, can be specified either as a mount point or
291       as  a  special  device  file  (for  example,  /dev/dsk/dks0d1s0).   The
292       filesystem must be mounted to be dumped.
293

NOTES

295   Dump Interruption
296       A dump can be interrupted at any time and later resumed.  To interrupt,
297       type control-C (or the  current  terminal  interrupt  character).   The
298       operator  is  prompted  to  select one of several operations, including
299       dump interruption.  After the operator selects dump  interruption,  the
300       dump continues until a convenient break point is encountered (typically
301       the end of the current file).  Very large files are broken into smaller
302       subfiles, so the wait for the end of the current file is brief.
303
304   Dump Resumption
305       A  previously  interrupted  dump  can  be  resumed by specifying the -R
306       option.  If the most recent dump at  the  specified  level  was  inter‐
307       rupted, the new dump does not include files already dumped, unless they
308       have changed since the interrupted dump.
309
310   Media Management
311       A single media object can contain many  dump  streams.   Conversely,  a
312       single  dump  stream can span multiple media objects.  If a dump stream
313       is sent to a media object already containing one or more dumps, xfsdump
314       appends  the  new  dump stream after the last dump stream.  Media files
315       are never overwritten.   If  end-of-media  is  encountered  during  the
316       course of a dump, the operator is prompted to insert a new media object
317       into the drive.  The dump stream continuation  is  appended  after  the
318       last media file on the new media object.
319
320   Inventory
321       Each  dump  session  updates  an  inventory  database  in /var/lib/xfs‐
322       dump/inventory.  xfsdump uses the inventory to determine  the  base  of
323       incremental and resumed dumps.
324
325       This  database can be displayed by invoking xfsdump with the -I option.
326       The display uses tabbed indentation to present the inventory hierarchi‐
327       cally.   The  first  level is filesystem.  The second level is session.
328       The third level is media stream (currently  only  one  stream  is  sup‐
329       ported).  The fourth level lists the media files sequentially composing
330       the stream.
331
332       The following suboptions are available to filter the display.
333
334       -I depth=n
335            (where n is 1, 2, or 3) limits the hierarchical depth of the  dis‐
336            play. When n is 1, only the filesystem information from the inven‐
337            tory is displayed. When n is 2, only filesystem and session infor‐
338            mation  are  displayed.  When n is 3, only filesystem, session and
339            stream information are displayed.
340
341       -I level=n
342            (where n is the dump level) limits the display to  dumps  of  that
343            particular dump level.
344
345       The  display  may  be restricted to media files contained in a specific
346       media object.
347
348       -I mobjid=value
349            (where value is a media ID) specifies  the  media  object  by  its
350            media ID.
351
352       -I mobjlabel=value
353            (where  value  is a media label) specifies the media object by its
354            media label.
355
356       Similarly, the display can be restricted to a specific filesystem.
357
358       -I mnt=mount_point
359            (that  is,  [hostname:]pathname),  identifies  the  filesystem  by
360            mountpoint.   Specifying the hostname is optional, but may be use‐
361            ful in a clustered environment where more than  one  host  can  be
362            responsible for dumping a filesystem.
363
364       -I fsid=filesystem_id
365            identifies the filesystem by filesystem ID.
366
367       -I dev=device_pathname
368            (that is, [hostname:]device_pathname) identifies the filesystem by
369            device. As  with  the  mnt  filter,  specifying  the  hostname  is
370            optional.
371
372       More  than  one of these suboptions, separated by commas, may be speci‐
373       fied at the same time to limit the display of the  inventory  to  those
374       dumps  of  interest.  However, at most four suboptions can be specified
375       at once: one to constrain the display hierarchy depth, one to constrain
376       the dump level, one to constrain the media object, and one to constrain
377       the filesystem.
378
379       For example, -I  depth=1,mobjlabel="tape  1",mnt=host1:/test_mnt  would
380       display only the filesystem information (depth=1) for those filesystems
381       that were mounted on host1:/test_mnt at the time of the dump, and  only
382       those filesystems dumped to the media object labeled "tape 1".
383
384       Dump  records may be removed (pruned) from the inventory using the xfs‐
385       invutil program.
386
387       An additional media file is placed at the  end  of  each  dump  stream.
388       This media file contains the inventory information for the current dump
389       session.  Its contents may be merged back  into  the  online  inventory
390       database at a later time using xfsrestore(1M).
391
392       The  inventory files stored in /var/lib/xfsdump are not included in the
393       dump, even if that directory is contained within the  filesystem  being
394       dumped.   Including  the inventory in the dump may lead to loss or cor‐
395       ruption of data, should an older version be  restored  overwriting  the
396       current  version.   To  backup  the  xfsdump inventory, the contents of
397       /var/lib/xfsdump should be copied to another location which may then be
398       safely  dumped.   Upon restoration, those files may be copied back into
399       /var/lib/xfsdump, overwriting whatever files may be there, or  xfsinvu‐
400       til(1M)  may  be used to selectively merge parts of the restored inven‐
401       tory back into the current inventory.  Prior to version 1.1.8,  xfsdump
402       would  include the /var/lib/xfsdump directory in the dump.  Care should
403       be taken not to overwrite the /var/lib/xfsdump directory when restoring
404       an  old dump, by either restoring the filesystem to another location or
405       by copying the current contents of /var/lib/xfsdump  to  a  safe  place
406       prior to running xfsrestore(1M).
407
408   Labels
409       The  operator  can  specify  a label to identify the dump session and a
410       label to identify a media object.  The session label is placed in every
411       media  file  produced in the course of the dump, and is recorded in the
412       inventory.
413
414       The media label is used to identify media objects, and  is  independent
415       of  the  session label.  Each media file on the media object contains a
416       copy of the media label.  An error is returned if the  operator  speci‐
417       fies  a  media  label  that  does  not match the media label on a media
418       object containing valid media files.  Media labels are recorded in  the
419       inventory.
420
421   UUIDs
422       UUIDs  (Universally  Unique  Identifiers)  are used in three places: to
423       identify the filesystem being dumped (using the  filesystem  UUID,  see
424       xfs(5) for more details), to identify the dump session, and to identify
425       each media object.  The inventory display (-I) includes all of these.
426
427   Dump Level Usage
428       The dump level mechanism provides  a  structured  form  of  incremental
429       dumps.   A  dump  of  level level includes only files that have changed
430       since the most recent dump at a level less than  level.   For  example,
431       the  operator  can  establish a dump schedule that involves a full dump
432       every Friday and a daily incremental dump containing  only  files  that
433       have changed since the previous dump.  In this case Friday's dump would
434       be at level 0, Saturday's at level 1, Sunday's at level 2, and  so  on,
435       up to the Thursday dump at level 6.
436
437       The above schedule results in a very tedious restore procedure to fully
438       reconstruct the Thursday version of the  filesystem;  xfsrestore  would
439       need  to  be  fed all 7 dumps in sequence.  A compromise schedule is to
440       use level 1 on Saturday, Monday, and Wednesday, and level 2 on  Sunday,
441       Tuesday,  and  Thursday.   The  Monday  and  Wednesday dumps would take
442       longer, but the worst case restore requires the  accumulation  of  just
443       three dumps, one each at level 0, level 1, and level 2.
444
445   Quotas
446       If  the  filesystem being dumped contains user quotas, xfsdump will use
447       xfs_quota(8) to store the quotas in a file called xfsdump_quotas in the
448       root of the filesystem to be dumped. This file will then be included in
449       the dump.  Upon restoration, xfs_quota (8) can be  used  to  reactivate
450       the  quotas for the filesystem.  Note, however, that the xfsdump_quotas
451       file will probably require modification to  change  the  filesystem  or
452       UIDs  if  the  filesystem has been restored to a different partition or
453       system. Group and project quotas will be handled in a  similar  fashion
454       and  saved in files called xfsdump_quotas_group and xfsdump_quotas_proj
455       , respectively.
456
457   Excluding individual files
458       It may be desirable to exclude particular files or directories from the
459       dump.   The  -s  option  can  be  used to limit the dump to a specified
460       directory, and the -z option can be used to exclude files over  a  par‐
461       ticular  size.   Additionally,  when xfsdump is run with the -e option,
462       files that are tagged with the "no dump" file  attribute  will  not  be
463       included  in  the  dump.  The chattr(1) command can be used to set this
464       attribute on individual files or entire subtrees.
465
466       To tag an individual file for exclusion from the dump:
467
468            $ chattr +d file
469
470       To tag all files in a subtree for exclusion from the dump:
471
472            $ chattr -R +d directory
473
474       Note that any new files or directories created in a directory which has
475       the  "no dump" attribute set will automatically inherit this attribute.
476       Also note that xfsdump does not check directories  for  the  "no  dump"
477       attribute.
478
479       Care  should be taken to note which files have been tagged.  Under nor‐
480       mal operation, xfsdump will only report the number  of  files  it  will
481       skip.   The -v excluded_files=debug option, however, will cause xfsdump
482       to list the inode numbers of the individual files affected.
483

EXAMPLES

485       To perform a level 0, single stream dump of the root  filesystem  to  a
486       locally mounted tape drive, prompting for session and media labels when
487       required:
488
489            # xfsdump -f /dev/tape /
490
491       To specify session and media labels explicitly:
492
493            # xfsdump -L session_1 -M tape_0 -f /dev/tape /
494
495       To perform a dump to a remote tape using the minimal rmt protocol and a
496       set blocksize of 64k:
497
498            # xfsdump -m -b 65536 -f otherhost:/dev/tape /
499
500       To  perform  a  level  0, multi-stream dump to two locally mounted tape
501       drives:
502
503            # xfsdump -L session_2 -f /dev/rmt/tps4d6v -M tape_1 \
504                      -f /dev/rmt/tps5d6v -M tape_2 /
505
506       To perform a level 1 dump relative to the last level 0 dump recorded in
507       the inventory:
508
509            # xfsdump -l 1 -f /dev/tape /
510
511       To  copy  the contents of a filesystem to another directory (see xfsre‐
512       store(8)):
513
514            # xfsdump -J - / | xfsrestore -J - /new
515
516

FILES

518       /var/lib/xfsdump/inventory
519                                dump inventory database
520

SEE ALSO

522       attr(1),   rmt(8),    xfsrestore(8),    xfsinvutil(8),    xfs_quota(8),
523       attr_get(2).
524

DIAGNOSTICS

526       The exit code is 0 on normal completion, non-zero if an error occurs or
527       the dump is terminated by the operator.
528
529       For all verbosity levels greater than 0 (silent) the final line of  the
530       output shows the exit status of the dump. It is of the form:
531
532            xfsdump: Dump Status: code
533
534       Where  code  takes one of the following values: SUCCESS (normal comple‐
535       tion), INTERRUPT (interrupted), QUIT (media no longer  usable),  INCOM‐
536       PLETE  (dump  incomplete),  FAULT (software error), and ERROR (resource
537       error).  Every attempt will be made to keep both  the  syntax  and  the
538       semantics  of this log message unchanged in future versions of xfsdump.
539       However, it may be necessary to refine or expand the set of exit codes,
540       or their interpretation at some point in the future.
541
542       The  message  ``xfsdump:  WARNING:  unable  to  open  directory: ino N:
543       Invalid argument'' can occur with filesystems which are actively  being
544       modified while xfsdump is running.  This can happen to either directory
545       or regular file inodes - affected files will not end up  in  the  dump,
546       files below affected directories will be placed in the orphanage direc‐
547       tory by xfsrestore.
548

BUGS

550       xfsdump does not dump unmounted filesystems.
551
552       The dump frequency field of /etc/fstab is not supported.
553
554       xfsdump uses the alert program only when a media change is required.
555
556       xfsdump requires root privilege (except for inventory display).
557
558       xfsdump can only dump XFS filesystems.
559
560       The media format used by xfsdump can only be understood by xfsrestore.
561
562       xfsdump does not know how to manage  CD-ROM  or  other  removable  disk
563       drives.
564
565       xfsdump  can become confused when doing incremental or resumed dumps if
566       on the same machine you dump two XFS filesystems and  both  filesystems
567       have  the  same  filesystem  identifier (UUID).  Since xfsdump uses the
568       filesystem identifier to identify filesystems,  xfsdump  maintains  one
569       combined  set  of  dump inventories for both filesystems instead of two
570       sets of dump inventories.  This scenario can happen only if dd or  some
571       other  block-by-block  copy  program  was used to make a copy of an XFS
572       filesystem.  See xfs_copy(8) and xfs(5) for more details.
573
574
575
576                                                                    xfsdump(8)
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