Provided by: fsarchiver_0.8.7-1_amd64 bug

NAME

       fsarchiver - filesystem archiver

DESCRIPTION

       fsarchiver  is  a  system  tool  that allows you to save the contents of a filesystem to a
       compressed archive file. The filesystem contents can be restored on a device which  has  a
       different  size  and  it  can  be  restored  on  a  different  filesystem. Unlike tar/dar,
       fsarchiver also creates the filesystem when it extracts the data to devices. Everything is
       checksummed  in  the  archive in order to protect the data. If the archive is corrupt, you
       just lose the current file, not the whole archive.

LINKS

   Official project homepage:
       http://www.fsarchiver.org

   Quick Start guide:
       http://www.fsarchiver.org/quickstart/

   Git repository:
       https://github.com/fdupoux/fsarchiver

   Report a bug:
       https://github.com/fdupoux/fsarchiver/issues

SYNOPSIS

       fsarchiver [ options ] savefs archive device ...

       fsarchiver           [           options            ]            restfs            archive
       id=n,dest=device[,mkfs=fstype,mkfsopt=options,label=newlabel,uuid=newuuid] ...

       fsarchiver [ options ] savedir archive directory ...

       fsarchiver [ options ] restdir archive destination

       fsarchiver [ options ] archinfo archive

       fsarchiver [ options ] probe [detailed]

COMMANDS

       savefs Save device filesystem to archive.

       restfs Restore  filesystems  from  archive.   This overwrites the existing data on device.
              Zero-based index n indicates the part of the archive  to  restore.   Optionally,  a
              filesystem  may  be converted to fstype and extra mkfs options specified.  newlabel
              and newuuid override values stored in the archive.

       savedir
              Save directories to archive (similar to a compressed tarball).

       restdir
              Restore data from archive which is not based on a filesystem to destination.

       archinfo
              Show information about an existing archive file and its contents.

       probe  Show list of filesystems detected on the disks.

OPTIONS

       -h, --help
              Show help and information about how to use fsarchiver with examples.

       -V, --version
              Show program version and exit.

       -v, --verbose
              Verbose mode (can be used several times to increase the  level  of  details).   The
              details will be printed to the console.

       -o, --overwrite
              Overwrite the archive if it already exists instead of failing.

       -d, --debug
              Debug  mode  (can  be  used  several  times to increase the level of details).  The
              details will be written in /var/log/fsarchiver.log.

       -x, --experimental
              Allow to save filesystems which support is considered experimental in fsarchiver.

       -A, --allow-rw-mounted
              Allow to save a filesystem which is mounted in read-write (live backup). By default
              fsarchiver  fails  with  an error if the device is mounted in read-write mode which
              allows modifications to be done on the filesystem during the backup.  Modifications
              can  drive to inconsistencies in the backup. Using LVM snapshots is the recommended
              way to make backups since it will provide consistency, but it is only available for
              filesystems  which  are  on  LVM  logical  volumes. Deleted files during the backup
              process are ignored when this option is used.

       -a, --allow-no-acl-xattr
              Allow to save a filesystem when ACLs and extended attributes are not supported  (or
              are disabled) by the kernel. By default fsarchiver fails with an error if it cannot
              access ACLs and extended attributes, since they would not be saved. If you  do  not
              need ACLs and extended attributes preserved then it is safe to use this option.

       -e pattern, --exclude=pattern
              Exclude files and directories that match specified pattern. The pattern can contain
              shell wildcards such as * and ? or may be either  a  simple  file/dir  name  or  an
              absolute  file/dir  path.  You must use quotes around the pattern each time you use
              wildcards, else it would be  interpreted  by  the  shell.  The  wildcards  must  be
              interpreted by fsarchiver. See examples below for more details about this option.

       -L label, --label=label
              Set  the  label  of the archive: it is just a comment about its contents. It can be
              used to remember a  particular  thing  about  the  archive  or  the  state  of  the
              filesystem for instance.

       -z level, --compress=level
              Legacy  compression  levels are between 0 (very fast) and 9 (very good). The memory
              requirement increases a lot with the best compression levels, and it is  multiplied
              by  the  number  of  compression  threads  (option -j). Level 9 is considered as an
              extreme compression level and requires an huge amount of memory to  run.  For  more
              details please read this page: http://www.fsarchiver.org/compression/

       -Z level, --zstd=level
              Zstd  compression  levels  are between 1 (very fast) and 22 (very good). The memory
              requirement increases a lot with the best compression levels, and it is  multiplied
              by the number of compression threads (option -j). Levels above 20 are considered as
              extreme compression levels and requires an huge amount of memory to run.  For  more
              details please read this page: http://www.fsarchiver.org/compression/

       -s mbsize, --split=mbsize
              Split the archive into several files of mbsize megabytes each.

       -j count, --jobs=count
              Create  more than one (de)compression thread. Useful on multi-core CPUs. By default
              fsarchiver will only use one (de)compression  thread  (-j  1)  and  then  only  one
              logical processor will be used for the task. You should use this option if you have
              a multi-core CPU or more than one physical CPU on your computer. The typical way to
              use  it  is  to  specify the number of logical processors available so that all the
              processing power is used to (de)compress the archive very  quickly.  You  may  also
              want to use all logical processors but one so that your system stays responsive for
              other applications.

       -c password, --cryptpass=password
              Encrypt/decrypt data in archive. Password length:  6  to  64  characters.  You  can
              either provide a real password or a dash (-c -). Use the dash if you do not want to
              provide the password in the command line. It  will  be  prompted  in  the  terminal
              instead.

EXAMPLES

   save only one filesystem (/dev/sda1) to an archive:
       fsarchiver savefs /data/myarchive1.fsa /dev/sda1

   save two filesystems (/dev/sda1 and /dev/sdb1) to an archive:
       fsarchiver savefs /data/myarchive2.fsa /dev/sda1 /dev/sdb1

   restore the first filesystem from an archive (first = number 0):
       fsarchiver restfs /data/myarchive2.fsa id=0,dest=/dev/sda1

   restore the second filesystem from an archive (second = number 1):
       fsarchiver restfs /data/myarchive2.fsa id=1,dest=/dev/sdb1

   restore two filesystems from an archive (number 0 and 1):
       fsarchiver restfs /data/arch2.fsa id=0,dest=/dev/sda1 id=1,dest=/dev/sdb1

   restore a filesystem from an archive and convert it to reiserfs:
       fsarchiver restfs /data/myarchive1.fsa id=0,dest=/dev/sda1,mkfs=reiserfs

   restore a filesystem from an archive and specify extra mkfs options:
       fsarchiver restfs /data/myarchive1.fsa id=0,dest=/dev/sda1,mkfs=ext4,mkfsopt="-I 256"

   restore a filesystem from an archive and specify a new filesystem label:
       fsarchiver restfs /data/myarchive1.fsa id=0,dest=/dev/sda1,label=root

   restore a filesystem from an archive and specify a new filesystem UUID:
       fsarchiver    restfs   /data/myarchive1.fsa   id=0,dest=/dev/sda1,uuid=5f6e5f4f-dc2a-4dbd-
       a6ea-9ca997cde75e

   save the contents of /usr/src/linux to an archive (similar to tar):
       fsarchiver savedir /data/linux-sources.fsa /usr/src/linux

   save a filesystem (/dev/sda1) to an archive split into volumes of 680MB:
       fsarchiver savefs -s 680 /data/myarchive1.fsa /dev/sda1

   save a filesystem and exclude all files/dirs called 'pagefile.*':
       fsarchiver savefs /data/myarchive.fsa /dev/sda1 --exclude='pagefile.*'

   generic exclude for 'share' such as '/usr/share' and '/usr/local/share':
       fsarchiver savefs /data/myarchive.fsa --exclude=share

   absolute exclude valid for '/usr/share' but not for '/usr/local/share':
       fsarchiver savefs /data/myarchive.fsa --exclude=/usr/share

   save a filesystem (/dev/sda1) to an encrypted archive:
       fsarchiver savefs -c mypassword /data/myarchive1.fsa /dev/sda1

   same as before but prompt for password in the terminal:
       fsarchiver savefs -c - /data/myarchive1.fsa /dev/sda1

   extract an archive made of simple files to /tmp/extract:
       fsarchiver restdir /data/linux-sources.fsa /tmp/extract

   show information about an archive and its filesystems:
       fsarchiver archinfo /data/myarchive2.fsa

WARNING

       fsarchiver is considered stable for Linux filesystems such as EXT4 and  XFS  but  unstable
       for NTFS.

AUTHOR

       fsarchiver  was  written  by  Francois  Dupoux. It is released under the GPL2 (GNU General
       Public License version 2). This manpage was written by Ilya Barygin and Francois Dupoux.

                                         30 December 2009                           FSARCHIVER(8)