Provided by: afio_2.5.1.20160103+gitc8e4317-2_amd64 bug

NAME

       afio - manipulate archives and files

SYNOPSIS

       ...  | afio -o [ options ] archive  : write (create) archive
       afio -i [ options ] archive  : install (unpack) archive
       afio -t [ options ] archive  : list table-of-contents of archive
       afio -r [ options ] archive  : verify archive against filesystem
       afio -p [ options ] directory [ ... ] : copy files

DESCRIPTION

       Afio  manipulates  groups  of  files,  copying  them  within  the  (collective) filesystem or between the
       filesystem and an afio archive.

       With -o, reads pathnames from the standard input and writes an archive.

       With -t, reads an archive and writes a table-of-contents to the standard output.

       With -i, installs the contents of an archive relative to the working directory.

       With -p, reads pathnames from the standard input and copies the  files  to  each  directory.   Cannot  be
       combined with the -Z option.

       With  -r,  reads  archive  and  verifies  it  against  the filesystem.  This is useful for verifying tape
       archives, to ensure they have no bit errors.  The verification compares file contents, but not permission
       bits and non-file filesystem entities, so it cannot be used as a reliable tool to detect  every  possible
       change made to a filesystem.

       Creates missing directories as necessary, with permissions to match their parents.

       Removes  leading  slashes  from pathnames, making all paths relative to the current directory.  This is a
       safety feature to prevent inadvertent overwriting of system files when doing restores.  To suppress  this
       safety  feature, the -A option must be used while writing an archive, but also when reading (installing),
       verifying, and cataloging an existing archive.

       Supports compression while archiving, with the -Z option.  Will compress individual files in the archive,
       not the entire archive datastream, which makes afio compressed archives much more  robust  than  `tar zc'
       type archives.

       Supports multi-volume archives during interactive operation (i.e., when /dev/tty is accessible and SIGINT
       is not being ignored).

OPTIONS

       -@ address   Send  email to address when a volume change (tape change, floppy change) is needed, and also
                    when the entire operation is complete.  Uses sendmail(1) to send the mail.

       -a           Preserve the last access times (atimes) of the  files  read  when  making  or  verifying  an
                    archive.   Warning:  if  this  option is used, afio will change the last inode changed times
                    (ctimes) of these files.  Thus, this option cannot be  used  together  with  an  incremental
                    backup scheme that relies on the ctimes being preserved.

       -b size      Read  or write size-character archive blocks.  Suffices of b, k, m and g denote multiples of
                    512, kilobytes, megabytes and gigabytes, respectively.  Defaults to 5120  for  compatibility
                    with  cpio(1).   In  some  cases,  notably when using ftape with some tape drives, -b 10k is
                    needed for compatibility.  Note that -b 10k is the default block size used by tar(1), so  it
                    is usually a good choice if the tape setup is known to work with tar(1).

       -c count     Buffer  count  archive  blocks  between  I/O  operations.  A  large count is recommended for
                    efficient use with streaming magnetic tape drives, in order to reduce  the  number  of  tape
                    stops and restarts.

       -d           Don't create missing directories.

       -e bound     Pad  the  archive  to  a  multiple of bound characters.  Recognizes the same suffices as -s.
                    Defaults to 1x (the -b block size) for compatibility with cpio(1).

       -f           Spawn a child process to actually write to the archive; provides a clumsy  form  of  double-
                    buffering.  Requires -s for multi-volume archive support.

       -g           Change  to  input  file  directories. Avoids quadratic filesystem behavior with long similar
                    pathnames. Requires all absolute pathnames, including those for the -o archive  and  the  -p
                    directories.

       -h           Follow symbolic links, treating them as ordinary files and directories.

       -j           Don't generate sparse filesystem blocks on restoring files.  By default, afio creates sparse
                    filesystem  blocks  (with  lseek(2)) when possible when restoring files from an archive, but
                    not if these files were stored in a compressed form.   Unless stored in a  compressed  form,
                    sparse  files  are  not  archived  efficiently:  they will take space equal to the full file
                    length.  (The sparse file handling in afio does not make much sense except in  a  historical
                    way.)

       -k           Rather  than  complaining  about unrecognizable input, skip unreadable data (or partial file
                    contents) at the beginning of the archive file being read, and search  for  the  next  valid
                    archive  header.   This  option is needed to deal with certain types of backup media damage.
                    It is also useful to support quick selective restores from multi-volume  archives,  or  from
                    searchable  block  devices, if the volume or location of the file to be restored is known in
                    advance (see the -B option).  If, for example, a selective restore is done with  the  fourth
                    volume  of  a multi-volume afio archive, then the -k option needs to be used, else afio will
                    complain about the input not being a well-formed archive.

       -l           With -o, write file contents with each hard link.

                    With -t, report hard links.

                    With -p, attempt to link files rather than copying them.

       -m           Mark output files with a common current timestamp (rather than with input file  modification
                    times).

       -n           Protect newer existing files (comparing file modification times).

       -s size      Restrict  each  portion of a multi-volume archive to size characters. This option recognizes
                    the same size suffices as -b.  Also, the suffix x denotes a multiple of the  -b  block  size
                    (and  must  follow  any  -b specification).  size can be a single size or a  comma-seperated
                    list of sizes, for example  '2m,5m,8m',  to  specify  different  sizes  for  the  subsequent
                    volumes.   If  there  are  more  volumes than sizes, the last specified size is used for all
                    remaining volumes.  If this option is used, the special character sequences %V and %S in the
                    input/output filename or command string are replaced by the current volume number and volume
                    size.  Use %% to produce a single % character.  The -s option is useful  with  finite-length
                    devices  which  do  not  return short counts at end of media (sigh); output to magnetic tape
                    typically falls into this category.   When an archive is being read  or  written,  using  -s
                    causes afio to prompt for the next volume if the specified volume length is reached.  The -s
                    option  will  also cause afio to prompt if there is a premature EOF while reading the input.
                    The special case -s 0 will activate this prompting for the  next  volume  on  premature  EOF
                    without  setting  a  volume  length.  When writing an archive, afio will prompt for the next
                    volume on end-of-media, even without -s 0 being  supplied,  if  the  device  is  capable  of
                    reporting  end-of-media.   If  the volume size specified is not a multiple of the block size
                    set with the -b option, then afio(1) will silently round down the volume size to the nearest
                    multiple of the block size.  This rounding down can be suppressed using the -9 option: if -9
                    is used, afio(1) will write a small block of data, smaller than the -b size, at the  end  of
                    the  volume  to  completely  fill  it  to the  specified size.  Some devices are not able to
                    handle such small block writes.

       -u           Report files with unseen links.

       -v           Verbose. Report pathnames (to stderr) as they are processed. When used with -t, gives an  ls
                    -l  style report (including link information) to stdout instead.  When used twice (-vv) with
                    -o, gives an ls -l style report to stdout while writing the archive. (But this  use  of  -vv
                    will not work if the archive is also being written to stdout.)

       -w filename  Treats each line in filename as an -y pattern, see -y.

       -x           Retain  file  ownership  and  setuid/setgid permissions.  This is the default for the super-
                    user; he may use -X to override it.

       -y pattern   Restrict processing of files to names matching shell wildcard  pattern  pattern.   Use  this
                    flag once for each pattern to be recognized.  With the possible exception of the presence of
                    a  leading  slash, the complete file name as appearing in the archive table-of-contents must
                    match the pattern, for example  the  file  name  'etc/passwd'  is  matched  by  the  pattern
                    '*passwd'  but  NOT by the pattern 'passwd'.  See `man 7 glob' for more information on shell
                    wildcard pattern matching.  The only difference with shell wildcard pattern matching is that
                    in afio the wildcards will also match '/' characters in file names.  For example the pattern
                    '/usr/src/*' will match the file name '/usr/src/linux/Makefile', and  any  other  file  name
                    starting with '/usr/src'. Unless the -S option is given, any leading slash in the pattern or
                    the  filename  is ignored when matching, e.g.  /etc/passwd will match etc/passwd.  Use -Y to
                    supply patterns which are not to be processed.  -Y overrides -y if a filename matches  both.
                    See  also -w and -W.  See also the -7 option, which can be used to modify the meaning of -y,
                    -Y, -w, and -W when literal matching without wildcard processing is needed.  Note:  if  afio
                    was  compiled  without  using  the GNU fnmatch library, then the full shell wildcard pattern
                    syntax cannot be used, and matching support is limited to patterns which are a full  literal
                    file name and patterns which end in '*'.

       -z           Print  execution  statistics.  This is meant for human consumption; use by other programs is
                    officially discouraged.

       -A           Do not turn absolute paths into relative paths. That is  don't  remove  the  leading  slash.
                    Applies  to  the path names written in an archive, but also to the path names read out of an
                    archive during read (install), verify, and cataloging operations.

       -B           If the -v option is used, prints the byte offset of the start of each file in  the  archive.
                    If  your tape drive can start reading at any position in an archive, the output of -B can be
                    useful for doing quick selective restores.

       -D controlscript
                    Set the control script name to controlscript, see the section on control files below.

       -E [+]filename | -E CS | -E CI
                    While creating an archive with compressed files using the -Z option, disable  (attempts  at)
                    compression  for  files with particular extensions.  This option can be used to speed up the
                    creation of the archive, by making afio avoid trying to  use  gzip  on  files  that  contain
                    compressed  data already.  By default, if no specific -E option is given, all files with the
                    extensions .Z .z .gz .bz2 .tgz .arc .zip .rar .lzh .lha .uc2 .tpz .taz .tgz .rpm  .zoo  .deb
                    .gif  .jpeg .jpg .tif .tiff .png .pdf .arj .avi .bgb .cab .cpn .hqx .jar .mp3 .mpg .mpq .pic
                    .pkz .psn .sit .ogg and .smk will not be compressed.  Also by default,  the  file  extension
                    matching  is  case-insensitive  (to  do  the  right  thing  with  respect  to  MS-DOS  based
                    filesystems).  The -E filename form of this option will replace the  default  list  of  file
                    extensions by reading a new list of file extensions, separated by whitespace, from filename.
                    filename  may  contain  comments preceded by a #.  The extensions in filename should usually
                    all start with a dot, but they do not need to start with a dot, for  example  the  extension
                    'tz'  will  match  the  file name 'hertz'.  The -E +filename form (with a + sign in front of
                    filename) can be used to specify extensions  in  addition  to  the  built-in  default  list,
                    instead of replacing the whole default list.  To make extension matching case-sensitive, add
                    the  special  option  form  -E CS to the command line.  The form -E CI invokes the (default)
                    case-insensitive comparison.  See also the -6 option, which  offers  an  additional  way  to
                    suppress compression.

       -F           This  is  a  floppy disk, -s is required.  Causes floppy writing in O_SYNC mode under Linux.
                    With kernel version 1.1.54 and above, this allows afio to detect some  floppy  errors  while
                    writing.   Uses  shared memory if compiled in otherwise mallocs as needed (a 3b1 will not be
                    able to malloc the needed memory w/o  shared  memory),  afio  assumes  either  way  you  can
                    malloc/shmalloc  a chunck of memory the size of one disk. Examples: 795k: 3.5" (720k drive),
                    316k (360k drive)
                    At the end of each disk this message occurs:
                     Ready for disk [#] on [output]
                     (remove the disk when the light goes out)
                     Type "go" (or "GO") when ready to proceed
                     (or "quit" to abort):

       -G factor    Specifies the gzip(1) compression speed factor, used when  compressing  files  with  the  -Z
                    option.  Factor 1 is the fastest with least compression, 9 is slowest with best compression.
                    The  default value is 6.  See also the gzip(1) manual page.  If you have a slow machine or a
                    fast backup medium, you may want to specify a low value for factor to speed up  the  backup.
                    On  large  (>200k) files, -G 1 typically zips twice as fast as -G 6, while still achieving a
                    better result than compress(1).  The zip speed for small files is mainly determined  by  the
                    invocation time of gzip (1), see the -T option.

       -H promptscript
                    Specify  a  script to run, in stead of using the normal prompt, before advancing to the next
                    archive volume.  The script will be run with the volume number, archive  specification,  and
                    the  reason for changing to the next volume as arguments.  The script should exit with 0 for
                    OK and 1 for abort, other exit codes will be treated as fatal  errors.   afio  executes  the
                    script  by  taking  the  promptscript  string, appending the arguments, and then calling the
                    shell to execute the resulting command line.   This  means  that  a  general-purpose  prompt
                    script  can  be supplied with additional arguments, via the afio command line, by using a -H
                    option value like -H "generic_promptscript additional_arg_1 additional_arg_2".\

       -J           Try to continue after a media write error when doing a backup (normal behavior is  to  abort
                    with a fatal error).

       -K           Verify  the  output  against  what  is in the memory copy of the disk (-F required).  If the
                    writing or verifying fails the following menu pops up
                        [Writing/Verify] of disk [disk #] has FAILED!
                         Enter 1 to RETRY this disk
                         Enter 2 to REFORMAT this disk before a RETRY

                         Enter quit to ABORT this backup
                    Currently, afio will not process the answers 1 and 2 in the right way.  The  menu  above  is
                    only useful in that it signifies that something is wrong.

       -L Log_file_path
                    Specify the name of the file to log errors and the final totals to.

       -M size      Specifies  the  maximum  amount  of  memory  to use for the temporary storage of compression
                    results when using the -Z option. The default is -M 250m (250 megabytes).  If the compressed
                    version of a file is larger than this (or if afio runs out of virtual  memory),  gzip(1)  is
                    run twice of the file, the first time to determine the length of the result, the second time
                    to get the compressed data itself.

       -P progname  Use  the  program progname instead of the standard gzip(1) for compression and decompression
                    with the -Z option. For example, use the options -Z -P bzip2 to write and  install  archives
                    using  bzip2(1)  compression.   If  progname does not have command line options (-c, -d, and
                    -<number>) in the style of gzip(1) then the -Q option  can  be  used  to  supply  the  right
                    options.   The compression program used must have the property that, if the output file size
                    exceeds the value of the -M option, then when the compression program is run  for  a  second
                    time on the same input, it must produce an output with exactly the same size.  (See also the
                    -M  option  description.)   The GnuPG (gpg) encryption program does not satisfy this lenght-
                    preserving criterion unless its built-in compression is disabled (see examples in  the  afio
                    source script3/ directory).  See also the -Q, -U and -3 options.

       -Q opt       Pass the option opt to the compression or decompression program used with the -Z option. For
                    passing  multiple  options,  use  -Q multiple times.  If no -Q flag is present, the standard
                    options are passed.  The standard  options  are  -c  -6  when  the  program  is  called  for
                    compression and -c -d when the program is called for decompression.  Use the special case -Q
                    "" if no options at all are to be passed to the program.

       -R Disk format command string
                    This is the command that is run when you enter 2 to reformat the disk after a failed verify.
                    The  default  (fdformat /dev/fd0H1440) can be changed to a given system's default by editing
                    the Makefile.  You are also prompted for formatting whenever a disk change is requested.

       -S           Do not ignore a leading slash in the pattern or the  file  name  when  matching  -y  and  -Y
                    patterns. See also -A.

       -T threshold Only  compress  a  file  when  using the -Z option if its length is at least threshold.  The
                    default is -T 0k.  This is useful if you have a  slow  machine  or  a  fast  backup  medium.
                    Specifying  -T  3k  typically  halves  the number of invocations of gzip(1), saving some 30%
                    computation time, while creating an archive that is only 5% longer.  The combination  -T  8k
                    -G  1  typically  saves  70%  computation  time  and  gives a 20% size increase.  The latter
                    combination may be a good alternative to not using -Z  at  all.   These  figures  of  course
                    depend  heavily  on  the kind of files in the archive and the processor - i/o speed ratio on
                    your machine.  See also the -2 option.

       -U           If used with the -Z option, forces compressed versions to be stored of all  files,  even  if
                    the  compressed  versions  are  bigger  than  the  original  versions,  and disregarding any
                    (default) values of the -T and -2 options.  This is useful when the -P and  -Q  options  are
                    used  to replace the compression program gzip with an encryption program in order to make an
                    archive with encrypted files.  Due to internal limitations of afio, use of this flag  forces
                    the  writing of file content with each hard linked file, rather than only once for every set
                    of hard linked files.  WARNING: use of  the  -U  option  will  also  cause  compression  (or
                    whatever  operation the -P option indicates) on files larger than 2 GB, if these are present
                    in the input.  Not all compression programs might handle such huge files  correctly  (recent
                    Linux  versions  of  gzip, bzip2, and gpg have all been tested and seem to work OK). If your
                    setup is obscure, some testing might be warranted.

       -W filename  Treats each line in filename as an -Y pattern, see -Y.

       -Y pattern   Do not process files whose names match shell wildcard pattern pattern.  See also -y and -W.

       -Z           Compress the files that go into the archive when creating an  archive,  or  uncompress  them
                    again  when  installing  an  archive.   afio  -Z  will  compress  each  file  in the archive
                    individually, while keeping the archive headers uncompressed.   Compared  to  tar  zc  style
                    archives, afio -Z archives are therefore much more fault-tolerant against read errors on the
                    backup medium.  When creating an archive with the -Z option, afio will run gzip on each file
                    encountered,  and,  if the result is smaller than the original, store the compressed version
                    of the file.  Requires gzip(1) to be in your path.   Mainly  to  speed  up  afio  operation,
                    compression is not attempted on a file if: 1) the file is very small (see the -T option), 2)
                    the  file  is  very  large  (see  the -2 option), 3) the file has a certain extension, so it
                    probably contains compressed data already (see the -E option), 4) the file pathname  matches
                    a  certain  pattern,  as  set  by  the -6 option, 5) the file has hard links (this due to an
                    internal limitation of afio, but this limitation does not apply if the  -l  option  is  also
                    used).   Regardless  of  the above, if the -U option is used then the compression program is
                    always run, and the compressed result is always stored.  When  installing  an  archive  with
                    compressed  files,  the  -Z  option  needs  to  be  used in order to make afio automatically
                    uncompress the files that it compressed earlier.  The -P  option  can  be  used  to  do  the
                    (un)compression  with  programs  other than gzip, see the -P (and -Q and -3) options in this
                    manpage for details.  See also the -G option which provides yet  another  way  to  tune  the
                    compression process.

       -0           Use filenames terminated with '\0' instead of '\n'. When used as follows: find ... -print0 |
                    afio  -o  -0  ...,  it  ensures  that  any  input  filename can be handled, even a file name
                    containing newlines.  When used as afio -t -0 ... | ..., this allows the table  of  contents
                    output to be parsed unambiguosly even if the filenames contain newlines.  The -0 option also
                    affects  the  parsing of the files supplied by -w file and -W file options: if the option -0
                    precedes them in the command line then the pattern lines contained in the  files  should  be
                    terminated  with  '\0' in stead of '\n'.  A second use of -0 toggles the option. This can be
                    useful when using multiple pattern files or when combining with the -t option.

       -1 warnings-to-ignore
                    Control if afio(1) should exit with a nonzero code after printing certain warning  messages,
                    and  if  certain warning messages should be printed at all.  This option is sometimes useful
                    when calling afio(1) from inside a backup script or  program.   afio(1)  will  exit  with  a
                    nonzero  code on encountering various 'hard' errors, and also (with the default value of the
                    -1 option) when it has printed certain  warning  messages  during  execution.   warnings-to-
                    ignore  is a list of letters which determines the behavior related to warning messages.  The
                    default value for this option is -1 mc.  For afio versions 2.4.3 and  earlier,  the  default
                    was  -1 a.  For afio versions 2.4.4 and 2.4.5, the default was -1 ''.  The defined warnings-
                    to-ignore letters are as follows.  a is for for ignoring all possible warnings on  exit:  if
                    this letter is used, the printing of a warning message will never cause a nonzero exit code.
                    m  is  for  ignoring in the exit code any warning about missing files, which will be printed
                    when, on creating an archive, a file whose name was read from  the  standard  input  is  not
                    found.   c  is for ignoring in the exit code the warning that the archive being created will
                    not be not fully compatible with cpio or afio versions 2.4.7 or lower.  C is the same as  c,
                    but  in addition the warning message will not even be printed.  M will suppress the printing
                    of all warning messages asssociated with Multivolume archive handling, messages like "Output
                    limit reached" and "Continuing".  d is for ignoring in the  exit  code  any  warnings  about
                    changed  files,  which  will  be  printed when, on creating an archive, a file that is being
                    archived changes while it is being written into the archive, where the changing is  detected
                    by  examining  the  file modification time stamp.  r is for ignoring certain warnings during
                    the verify (-r) operation.  If this letter is used, some verification errors that  are  very
                    probably  due to changes in the filesystem, during or after the backup was made, are ignored
                    in determining the exit code.  The two verification errors that are ignored are: 1)  a  file
                    in  the  archive  is  no  longer  present on the filesystem, and 2) the file contents in the
                    archive and on the filesystem are different, but the file lengths or the  file  modification
                    times  are  also different, so the difference in contents is probably due to the file on the
                    file system having been changed.  n is for ignoring in the exit code a particular  class  of
                    no-such-file warnings: it ignores these warnings when they happen after the file has already
                    been  successfully  opened. This unusual warning situation can occur when archiving files on
                    Windows smbfs filesystems -- due to a Windows problem, smbfs files with non-ASCII characters
                    in their names can sometimes be opened but not read.  When the -Z  option  is  used,  the  n
                    letter  function is (currently) only implemented for files with sizes smaller than indicated
                    by the -T option, so in that case the -T option is also needed for this letter to  have  any
                    effect.

       -2 maximum-file-size-to-compress
                    Do  not  compress any files which are larger than this size when making a compressed archive
                    with the -Z option. The default value is -2 200m (200 Megabytes). This maximum  size  cutoff
                    lowers  the  risk  that  a  major portion of a large file will be irrecoverable due to small
                    media errors.   If a media error occurs while reading a file  that  afio  has  stored  in  a
                    compressed form, then afio and gzip will not be able to restore the entire remainder of that
                    file.   This is usually an acceptable risk for small files. However for very large files the
                    risk of loosing a large amount of data because of this effect will usually be too big.   The
                    special case -2 0 eliminates any maximum size cutoff.

       -3 filedescriptor-nr
                    Rewind  the  filedescriptor  before  invoking  the  (un)compression  program if using the -Z
                    option. This is useful when the -P and -Q  options  are  used  to  replace  the  compression
                    program gzip with some types of encryption programs in order to make or read an archive with
                    encrypted  files.   The  rewinding  is  needed  to  interface correctly with some encryption
                    programs that read their key from an open filedescriptor.  If the -P  program  name  matches
                    'pgp'  or  'gpg',  then the -3 option must be used to avoid afio(1) reporting an error.  Use
                    the special case -3 0 to suppress the error message without rewinding any  file  descriptor.
                    The  -3  0  option may also be needed to successfully read back encrypted archives made with
                    afio version 2.4.5 and older.

       -4           (Deprecated, the intended effect of this option is now archived by default as long as the -5
                    option is not used.  This option could still  be  useful  for  compatibility  with  machines
                    running  an  older version of afio.)  Write archive with the `extended ASCII' format headers
                    which use 4-byte inode numbers.  Archives using the extended ASCII format  headers  are  not
                    compatible  with  any  other  archiver.   This  option  was useful for reliably creating and
                    restoring sets of files with many internal hard links, for example a news spool.

       -5           Refuse to create an archive that is incompatible with cpio(1).  If this option is used, afio
                    will never write any `large ASCII' file headers that are incompatible with cpio(1), but fail
                    with an error code instead.  See the ARCHIVE PORTABILITY section above for more  information
                    on the use of `large ASCII' file headers.

       -6  filename While  creating  an archive with compressed files using the -Z option, disable (attempts at)
                    compression for files that match particular shell patterns.  This  option  can  be  used  to
                    speed  up the creation of the archive, by making afio avoid trying to use gzip on files that
                    contain compressed data already.  Reads shell wildcard patterns from filename, treating each
                    line in the file as a pattern.  Files whose  names  match  these  patterns  are  not  to  be
                    compressed  when  using  the -Z option.  Pattern matching is done in exactly the same way as
                    described for the -y option.  See also the -E option:  the  (default)  settings  of  the  -E
                    option  will  further  restrict  compression  attempts.   The -E option controls compression
                    attempts based on file extensions; the  -6  option  is  mainly  intended  as  a  method  for
                    excluding all files in certain subdirectory trees from compression..

       -7           Switch between shell wildcard pattern matching and exact name matching (without interpreting
                    any  wildcard  characters)  for the patterns supplied in the -y, -Y, -w, and -W options.  If
                    the -7 option is used in front of any option -y, -Y, -w, or -W, then the  patterns  supplied
                    in  these  options  are not intrerpreted as wildcard patterns, but as character strings that
                    must match exactly to the file name, except possibly in leading slashes.  This option can be
                    useful for handling the exceptional cases where file names in the archive, or the  names  of
                    files  to  be  archived,  contain  wildcard  characters  themselves.  For example, find /tmp
                    -print0 | afio -ov -Y '*.jpg' -7 -Y '/tmp/a[12]*4' -0 archive can be used to  archive  files
                    all  files  under  /tmp, even files with a '\n' character in the name, except for .jpg files
                    and the file with the exact name /tmp/a[12]*4.  A second use of -7 toggles the matching  for
                    subsequently occurring -y, -Y, -w, and -W back to shell wildcard pattern matching.

       -9           Do not round down any -s volume sizes to the nearest -b block size.  See the -s option.

ARCHIVE PORTABILITY

       afio  archives are portable between different types of UNIX systems, as they contain only ASCII-formatted
       header information.

       Except in special cases discussed below, afio will create archives with the same format as ASCII  cpio(1)
       archives.   Therefore cpio(1) can usually be used to restore an afio archive in the case that afio is not
       available on a system. (With most cpio versions, to unpack an ASCII format archive, use cpio -c, and  for
       GNU  cpio(1)  use cpio -H odc.)  When unpacking with cpio, any compressed files inside an afio -Z archive
       are not uncompressed by cpio, but will be created on the file  system  as  compressed  files  with  a  .z
       extension.

       Unfortunately,  the ASCII cpio archive format cannot represent some files and file properties that can be
       present in a modern UNIX filesystem.  If afio creates an archive with such things, then it uses an  afio-
       specific  'large  ASCII'  header  for  the  files concerned.  Archives with large ASCII headers cannot be
       unpacked completely by cpio or afio versions before 2.4.8.

       When creating an archive, the `large ASCII' header is used by afio to cover the following situations:

          o  A file has a size larger than 2 GB

          o  The archive contains more than 64K files which have hard links

          o  A file, directory, or special file has a UID or GID value larger than 65535.

       The -5 option can be used to always preserve cpio compatibility, it will cause afio to fail  rather  than
       produce an incompatible archive in the cases above.

       Archives made using the (deprecated) -4 option are also not compatible with cpio, but they are compatible
       with afio versions 2.4.4 and later.

ARCHIVE FILE FORMAT

       An  afio  archive  file  has  a  simple format. The archive starts with a file header for the first file,
       followed by the contents of the first file (which will either be the exact contents byte-for-byte, or the
       exact contents in some compressed format).  The data of the first file is  immediately  followed  by  the
       file  header  of  the  second  file,  and so on.  At the end, there is a special `end of archive' header,
       usually followed by some padding bytes.

       A multi-volume afio archive is simply a normal archive split up into multiple parts. There are no special
       volume-level data headers.  This means that that volumes can be split and merged by external programs, as
       long as the data stays in the correct order.  It also implies that the contents  of  a  single  file  can
       cross  volume  boundaries.   Selective restores of files at known volume locations can be done by feeding
       only the needed volumes to afio, provided that the -k option is used.

       The contents of hard linked files are (unless the -l option is used) only stored  once  in  the  archive.
       The  file  headers  for  the second, third, and later occurrence of a hard linked file have no data after
       them.  This makes selective restores of hard-liked files  difficult:  if  later  occurrences  are  to  be
       restored correctly, the first occurrence always needs to be selected too.

NOTES

       Special-case archive names:

          o  Specify  - to read or write the standard input or output, respectively.  This disables multi-volume
             archive handling.

          o  Prefix a command string to be executed with an exclamation mark (!).  The command is executed  once
             for  each  archive  volume,  with  its  standard  input or output piped to afio.  It is expected to
             produce a zero exit code when all is well.

          o  Use system:file to access an archive in file on system.  This is really  just  a  special  case  of
             pipelining.  It requires a 4.2BSD-style remote shell (rsh(1C)) and a remote copy of afio.

          o  A  more  elaborate  case  of  the  above  is [user@]host[%rsh][=afio]:file where the optional user@
             component specifies the user name on the remote host, the optional %rsh specifies the (local)  name
             of the remote shell command to use, and the optional =afio specifies the name of the remote copy of
             the afio command.

          o  Anything  else  specifies  a  local  file or device.  An output file will be created if it does not
             already exist.

          o  When the -s option is used to invoke multi-volume archive processing, any  %V  in  the  file/device
             name or command string is subsisuted by the current volume number, and any %S by the current volume
             size. Use %% to produce a single % character.

       Recognizes obsolete binary cpio(1) archives (including those from machines with reversed byte order), but
       cannot write them.

       Recovers  from  archive corruption by searching for a valid magic number. This is rather simplistic, but,
       much like a disassembler, almost always works.

       Optimizes  pathnames   with   respect   to   the   current   and   parent   directories.   For   example,
       ./src/sh/../misc/afio.c becomes src/misc/afio.c.

CONTROL FILES

       Afio  archives can contain so-called control files.  Unlike normal archive entries, a control file in not
       unpacked to the filesystem.  A control file has a label and some data.  When afio  encounters  a  control
       file  in  the  archive it is reading, it will feed the label and data to a so-called control script.  The
       control script is supplied by the user.  It can perform special actions based on the label  and  data  it
       receives from afio.

       Control  file  labels.   The  control  file  mechanism can be used for many things.  Examples are putting
       archive descriptions at the beginning of the  archive  and  embedding  lists  of  files  to  move  before
       unpacking the rest or the archive.

       To  distinguish between different uses, the label of a control file should indicate the program that made
       the control file and the purpose of the control file data.  It should have the form

          programname.kindofdata

       where programname is the name of the backup program that generated the control file,  and  kindofdata  is
       the meaning of the control file data.  Some examples are

          tbackup.movelist  tbackup.updatescript
          blebberfiler.archivecontents
          backup_script_of_Joe_User.archivedescription

       The  user-supplied  control  script  should look at the label to decide what to do with the control data.
       This way, control files with unknown labels can be ignored, and afio archives  maintain  some  degree  of
       portability between different programs that restore or index them.

       Control  file  labels that are intended to be portable between different backup programs could be defined
       in the future.

       Making control files.  When making an archive, afio reads a stream containing  the  names  of  the  files
       (directories,  ...) to put in the archive.  This stream may also contain `control file generators', which
       are lines with the following format:

           //--sourcename label

       Here, the //-- sequence signals that a control file is to be made, sourcename  is  the  path  to  a  file
       containing  the control file data, and label is the control file label.  The sourcename must be a regular
       file or a symlink to a regular file.

       A control file will show up as

          //--CONTROL_FILE/label

       in an archive listing, where label is the control file label.

       Control scripts.  A control script is supplied to afio with the

         -D controlscript

       command line option.  The controlscript must be an executable program.  The script is run  whenever  afio
       encounters  a  control file while doing a -i -t or -r operation.  Afio will supply the control file label
       as an argument to the script.  The script should read the control file data from its standard input.   If
       the script exits with a non-zero exit status, afio will issue a warning message.

       If  a  control  file  is  encountered  and  no -D option is given, afio will issue a warning message.  To
       suppress the warning message and ignore all control scripts, -D "" can be used.

       An example of a control script is

         #!/bin/sh
         if [ $1 = "afio_example.headertext" ]; then
           #the headertext control file is supposed to be packed as the first
           #entry of the archive
           echo Archive header:
           cat -
           echo Unpack this archive? y/n
           #stdout is still connected to the tty, read the reply from stdout
           read yn <&1
           if [ "$yn" = n ]; then
             #abort
             kill $PPID
           fi
         else
           echo Ignoring unknown control file.
           cat - >/dev/null
         fi

       Afio never compresses the control file data when storing it in an archive, even when  the  -Z  option  is
       used.   When  a  control file is encountered by cpio(1) or an afio with a version number below 2.4.1, the
       data will be unpacked to the filesystem, and named CONTROL_FILE/label where label  is  the  control  file
       label.

BUGS

       There are too many options.

       Restricts  pathnames  to  1023  characters, and 255 meaningful elements (where each element is a pathname
       component separated by a /).

       Does not use the same default block size as tar(1).  tar(1) uses 10 KB, afio uses 5 KB by  default.  Some
       tape  drives only work with a 10 KB block size, in that case the afio option -b 10k is needed to make the
       tape work.

       There is  no  sequence  information  within  multi-volume  archives.   Input  sequence  errors  generally
       masquerade   as  data  corruption.   A  solution  would  probably  be  mutually  exclusive  with  cpio(1)
       compatibility.

       Degenerate uses of symbolic links are mangled by  pathname  optimization.   For  example,  assuming  that
       "usr.src"  is  a  symbolic  link  to  "/usr/src",  the pathname "usr.src/../bin/cu" is mis-optimized into
       "bin/cu" (rather than "/usr/bin/cu").

       The afio code for handling floppies (-F and -f and -K options) has buggy error handling.  afio  does  not
       allow   one  to  retry  a  failed floppy write on a different floppy, and it cannot recover from a verify
       error.  If the floppy handling code is used and write or verify errors do occur, it is  best  to  restart
       afio completely.  Making backups to floppies should really be done with a more specialised backup program
       that wraps afio.

       The  Linux  floppy  drivers  below kernel version 1.1.54 do not allow afio to find out about floppy write
       errors while writing.  If you are running a kernel below 1.1.54, afio will happily fail to write to (say)
       a write protected disk and not report anything wrong!  The only way to find out  about  write  errors  in
       this case is by watching the kernel messages, or by switching on the verify (-K) option.

       The  remote  archive  facilites  (host:/file  archive  names)  have  not  been exhaustively tested. These
       facilities have seen a lot of real-life use though.  However, there may be bugs in  the  code  for  error
       handling and error reporting with remote archives.

       An  archive  created with a command like 'find /usr/src/linux -print | afio -o ...'  will not contain the
       ownership and permissions of the /usr and /usr/src directories. If these  directories  are  missing  when
       restoring the archive, afio will recreate them with some default ownership and permissions.

       Afio  can  not  restore  time stamps on symlinks.  Also, on operating systems without an lchown(2) system
       call, afio can not restore owner/group information on symlinks. (Linux has lchown  since  kernel  version
       2.1.86.)

       Afio  tries  to restore modification time stamps of directories in the archive correctly.  However, if it
       exits prematurely, then the modification times will not be restored correctly.

       A restore using decompression will fail if the gzip binary used by afio is overwritten,  by  afio  or  by
       another  program, during the restore.  The restore will also fail if any shared libraries needed to start
       gzip are overwritten during the restore.  afio should not normally be used to overwrite the system  files
       on  a  running system.  If it is used in this way, a flag like -Y /bin/gzip can often be added to prevent
       failure.

       The -r option verifies the file contents of the files in the archive against the files on the filesystem,
       but does not cross-check details like permission bits on files, nor does  it  cross-check  that  archived
       directories or other non-file entities still exist on the filesystem.

       There  are  several  problems with archiving hard links.  1) Due to internal limitations, files with hard
       links cannot be stored in compressed form, unless the -l or -U options are used  which  force  each  hard
       linked file to be stored separately.  2) Archives which contain hard links and which were made with older
       (pre-2.4.8) versions of afio or with cpio can not always be correctly unpacked.  This is really a problem
       in  the archives and not in the current version of afio.  The risk of incorrect unpacking will be greater
       if the number of files or hard links in the archives is larger.   3)  In  a  selective  restore,  if  the
       selection  predicates  do  not select the first copy of a file with archive-internal hard links, then all
       subsequent copies, if selected, will not be correctly restored.  4) Unless the -4  option  is  used,  the
       inode  number  fields  in the archive headers for files with hard links of the archive will sometimes not
       contain the actual (least significant 16 bits of) the inode number of the original file.

       Some Linux kernels no not allow one to create a hard link to a symbolic link.  afio will try to re-create
       such hard links when unpacking an archive, but might fail due to kernel restrictions.

       Due to internal limitations of afio, the use of the -U option forces the writing  of  file  content  with
       each hard linked file, rather than only once for every set of hard linked files.

       When  it  is  run  without  super-user privileges, afio is not able to unpack a file into a directory for
       which it has no write permissions, even if it just created that directory itself.  This can be a  problem
       when trying to restore directory structures created by some source code control tools like RCS.

       When  block or character device files are packed into an archive on one operating system (e.g. Linux) and
       unpacked on another operating system, which uses different sizes for the major and  minor  device  number
       data  types  (e.g.  Solaris),  the  major  and  minor  numbers  of  the device files will not be restored
       correctly.  This can be a  problem  if  the  operating  systems  share  a  cross-mounted  filesystem.   A
       workaround is to use tar(1) for the device files.

EXAMPLES

       Create an archive with compressed files:
       find .... | afio -o -v -Z /dev/fd0H1440

       Install (unpack) an archive with compressed files:
       afio -i -v -Z archive

       Install (unpack) an archive with compressed files, protecting newer existing files:
       afio -i -v -Z -n archive

       Create an archive with compressed files on floppy disks:
       find .... | afio -o -v -s 1440k -F -Z /dev/fd0H1440

       Create an archive with all file contents encrypted by pgp:
       export PGPPASSFD=3
       find .... | afio -ovz -Z -U -P pgp -Q -fc -Q +verbose=0 -3 3 archive 3<passphrasefile

       Create an archive on recordable CDs using the cdrecord utility to write each CD:
       find .... | afio -o -b 2048 -s325000x -v '!cdrecord .... -'

       Extract a single named file from an archive on /dev/tape:
       afio -i -v -Z -y /home/me/thedir/thefile /dev/tape
       (If  these  do  not  exist  yet,  afio will also create the enclosing directories home/me/myfiledir under
       current working directory.)

       Extract files matching a pattern from an archive on /dev/tape:
       afio -i -v -Z -y '/home/me/*' /dev/tape
       (If these do not exist yet, afio will also create the enclosing directories home/me under current working
       directory.)

       If your filesystem cannot handle files larger than  2GB,  but  you  want  to  make  an  archive  on  that
       filesystem  that is larger than 2GB, you use the following trick to split the archive into multiple files
       of each 1 GB:
       find /home | afio -o ... - | split -b1024m - archive.
       the files will be called archive.aa, archive.ab, etc.  You can restore the whole archive using:
       cat archive.* | afio -i ... -
       The wildcard expansion by the shell will ensure that cat will read the parts in  the  right  (alphabetic)
       order.

SEE ALSO

       cpio(1), find(1), tar(1), compress(1), gzip(1).

WEB SITE AND INTERNET RESOURCES

       The afio home page is at http://members.chello.nl/~k.holtman/afio.html
       See the home page for information on submitting questions, bug reports, patches, etc.

AUTHORS

       Mark Brukhartz
       Jeff Buhrt
       Dave Gymer
       Andrew Stevens
       Koen Holtman (current maintainer) koen.holtman@ieee.org
       Anders Baekgaard
       Too many other people to list here have contributed code, patches, ideas, and bug reports.  Many of these
       are mentioned in the HISTORY file that is included with the sources.

                                                                                                         AFIO(1)