Provided by: amanda-server_3.3.3-2ubuntu1.1+actuallyesm2_amd64 bug

NAME

       amreport - generate a formatted output of statistics for an Amanda run

SYNOPSIS

       amreport [-o configoption...] [(1) command-line options | (2) script options] [config]

       (1) [--log=logfile] [--ps=filename] [--text=filename] [--xml=filename] [--print=printer]
           [--mail-text=recipient]
       (2) [-i] [-M address] [-l logfile] [-f outputfile] [-p postscriptfile] [--from-amdump]

DESCRIPTION

       Amreport generates a summary report of an Amanda backup run.

       See the amanda(8) man page for more details about Amanda.

OPTIONS

       config
           Name of the configuration to process. If no configuration name is specified,
           amanda.conf is read from the current directory.

       -o configoption
           See the "CONFIGURATION OVERRIDE" section in amanda(8).

       Amreport operates in two distinct modes. Command-line mode is intended for use by an
       administrator from the command line, and uses long command-line options for clarity.
       Script mode is intended for use from scripts such as amdump, and has a lot of non-obvious
       default behaviors to suit that need.

       Unless a script-mode option is given, amreport defaults to command-line mode. If no
       options are given, amreport writes a report for the most recent logfile to stdout.

   Command-Line Mode Options
       --log=logfile
           Use this logfile as the basis for the report. If this option is given, then the report
           is a "historical" report and will not include current state from e.g., holding disk
           and curinfo. If this option is not specified, then the most recent logfile will be
           used.

       --ps=filename
           Write a postscript label to filename. See "LABEL PRINTING" below. If filename is not
           specified, then the label is written to stdout.

       --text=filename
           Write a human-readable text report to filename. If filename is not specified, then the
           report is written to stdout.

       --xml=filename
           Write an XML-formatted report to filename. If filename is not specified, then the
           report is written to stdout.

       --print=printer
           Pipe a postscript label to lp or lpr, specifying the given printer. If the printer is
           not specified, uses the default from the Amanda configuration, or the system default
           printer.

       --mail-text=recipient
           Send a human-readable text report to the given recipient via the mailer specified in
           the Amanda configuration. If the recipient is not specified, this uses the mailto from
           the Amanda configuration.

   Script Mode Options
       -i
           Don't email the report.

       -M address
           Mail the report to address instead of the mailto value from amanda.conf.

       -l logfile
           Name of the log file to parse to generate the report. If a log file is not specified,
           it defaults to the file $logdir/log, where $logdir is the log directory defined in
           amanda.conf.

       -f outputfile
           Normally, amreport sends the report via e-mail to the mailto user as defined in the
           amanda.conf file. If outputfile is specified, then the report is put in outputfile.

       -p postscriptfile
           Send the postscript output to the file postscriptfile instead of to the lpr(1)
           command. This option has an effect only if the lbl-templ directive is specified in
           amanda.conf.

       --from-amdump
           Force script mode. Has no other effect.

TEXT REPORT FORMAT

       Amanda's text report format is divided into several sections. Some of these sections only
       appear if they are not empty.

       Although newer versions of Amanda try to use the term "volume" to refer to a unit of
       storage, amreport still uses the term "tape", even if backups are done to non-tape
       devices, to allow scripts which parse amreport's output to continue to function.

   Summary
       Hostname: bkserver
       Org     : DailySet1
       Config  : Daily
       Date    : February 25, 2009

       These dumps were to tape Daily-103.
       The next tape Amanda expects to use is: Daily-142

       FAILURE DUMP SUMMARY:
          jamon.slikon.local /var lev 0  FAILED [/bin/tar exited with status 2]

       The summary section describes the run in broad terms, giving the server hostname,
       organization (from the org configuration parameter), configuration name, and dump date.
       This is followed by a description of the volumes and holding disk used, and an rough
       estimate of the volume(s) Amanda will use on the next run.

       Brief notices of any unusual circumstances will also be included here.

   Statistics
       STATISTICS:
                                 Total       Full      Incr.
                               --------   --------   --------
       Estimate Time (hrs:min)    0:00
       Run Time (hrs:min)         0:01
       Dump Time (hrs:min)        0:00       0:00       0:00
       Output Size (meg)           1.6        0.0        1.6
       Original Size (meg)         1.6        0.0        1.6
       Avg Compressed Size (%)   100.0      100.0      100.0   (level:#disks ...)
       Filesystems Dumped            4          1          3   (1:3)
       Avg Dump Rate (k/s)      1555.1      134.2     1787.3

       Tape Time (hrs:min)        0:00       0:00       0:00
       Tape Size (meg)             1.6        0.0        1.6
       Tape Used (%)               5.5        0.1        5.4   (level:#disks ...)
       Filesystems Taped             4          1          3   (1:3)
                                                               (level:#parts ...)
       Parts Taped                   4          1          3   (1:3)
       Avg Tp Write Rate (k/s)  143966    27624.3     151811

       USAGE BY TAPE:
         Label            Time      Size      %  DLEs Parts
         metals-013       0:00     1650k    5.4     4     4

       This section contains aggregate statistics for the entire run. The three columns break
       down the results into a total for all data handled, only full dumps, and only incremental
       dumps. In the right margin, amreport indicates the breakdown of dump levels at the dumper
       and the taper.

       The rows have the following meanings:

       Estimate Time
           The time used by the planner to estimate dump sizes.

       Run Time
           Total runtime, from the invocation of amdump to its completion.

       Dump Time
           Total time spent dumping clients.

       Output Size
           Total quantity of data dumped, after compression.

       Original Size
           Total quantity of data dumped, before compression.

       Avg Compressed Size
           Compression ratio, calculated from the previous two rows.

       Filesystems Dumped
           Number of DLEs dumped.

       Avg Dump Rate
           Average speed at which clients produced data. Note that, for dumps done directly to a
           slow device, rather than to holding disk, this rate may reflect a write speed
           constrained by the device speed.

       Tape Time
           Total time spent writing to storage volumes. This includes time spent changing tapes,
           including time spent waiting for flush thresholds to be met.

       Tape Size
           Total quantity of data written to storage volumes.

       Tape Used
           Fraction of the total allocated storage (tapetype length times runtapes) actually
           used.

       Filesystems Taped
           Number of filesystems written to storage. This may be larger or smaller than the
           number of filesystems dumped, due to flushes or dumps left on holding disk.

       Parts Taped
           Number of split parts writtten to storage. If this number is very large, then the
           split size may be too small.

       Avg Tp Write Rate
           Taper speed, based on the tape time and tape size, above. Note that, because the tape
           time includes time spent on tasks other than writing to tape, this does not necessary
           reflect the device's real write speed. However, the value is useful for capacity
           planning, as it reflects a realistic estimate of how quickly Amanda can write data to
           storage.

   Usage by Tape
       USAGE BY TAPE:
         Label          Time      Size      %  DLEs Parts
         Conf-001       0:00    20320k   66.2     1     4
         Conf-002       0:00     6470k   21.1     0     2

       This short section gives per-volume statistics: time spent writing to the volume; bytes
       written to the volume; portion of the expected tape length used; number of DLEs started,
       and total number of split parts written.

   Notes
       NOTES:
         taper: tape DAILY-37 kb 30720 fm 3 [OK]

       This section contains any informational log messages from the run. Most messages are
       self-explanatory. The taper message shown in the example is always present, and is
       redundant to the previous section. It indicates that 30720 kb were written to "DAILY-37"
       in 3 files.

   Failure and Strange Details
       FAILED DUMP DETAILS:

       /--  jamon.slikon.local /var lev 0 FAILED [/bin/tar exited with status 2]
       sendbackup: info BACKUP=APPLICATION
       sendbackup: info APPLICATION=amgtar
       sendbackup: info RECOVER_CMD=/usr/bin/gzip -dc |amgtar -f... -
       sendbackup: info COMPRESS_SUFFIX=.gz
       sendbackup: info end
       ? /bin/tar: ./gdm: Cannot savedir: Permission denied
       | Total bytes written: 943831040 (901MiB, 4.9MiB/s)
       | /bin/tar: Error exit delayed from previous errors
       sendbackup: error [/bin/tar exited with status 2]
       sendbackup: size 921710
       sendbackup: end
       \\--------

       STRANGE DUMP DETAILS:

       /--  bsdfw.slikon.local / lev 0 STRANGE
       sendbackup: info BACKUP=APPLICATION
       sendbackup: info APPLICATION=amgtar
       sendbackup: info RECOVER_CMD=/usr/bin/gzip -dc |amgtar -f... -
       sendbackup: info COMPRESS_SUFFIX=.gz
       sendbackup: info end
       | /bin/tar: ./tmp/.X11-unix/X0: socket ignored
       | Total bytes written: 5530869760 (5.2GiB, 3.0MiB/s)
       sendbackup: size 5401240
       sendbackup: end
       \\--------

       This section expands on failures and strange results indicated in earlier sections. In
       both cases, the details contain a messages produced by the underlying backup tool - GNU
       tar, in this example. Failed dumps have actually failed, and the reasons are usually
       clear. Strange dumps, however, are regarded as successful by Amanda, but contain messages
       that Amanda did not recognize and which may be of interest to the operator.

   Dump Summary
       DUMP SUMMARY:
                                              DUMPER STATS                TAPER STATS
       HOSTNAME     DISK        L ORIG-kB  OUT-kB  COMP%  MMM:SS   KB/s MMM:SS     KB/s
       -------------------------- ------------------------------------- ---------------
       strontium    /etc        1     270     270    --     0:00 1146.3   0:00 140918.6
       strontium    -me/elantra 1      10      10    --     0:00   65.6   0:00   9033.4
       strontium    /local      0      20      20    --     0:00  133.9   0:00  27624.3
       strontium    -ository_13 1    1350    1350    --     0:01 2568.5   0:00 175006.5

       The dump summary table has one row for each DLE processed during the run. The "L" column
       gives the level of the dump. The remaining colums are divided into dumper stats and taper
       stats.

       The dumper stats give the original (before compression) and output (after compression)
       size of each dump, as well as a compression ratio, if applicable. The column labeled
       "MMM:SS" gives the time spent on that dump, and the next column is the calculated dump
       rate.

       The taper stats give the time and speed with which the dump was written to storage. This
       value is the sum of the times for each part, and as such does not include time spent
       switching volumes.

LABEL PRINTING

       Amanda can print postscript labels describing the contents of tape(s) written in a run.
       The labels are designed to be folded and inserted into the tape case along with the tape
       or hole punched and put in a 3-ring binder. Various label templates are provided to format
       data for different tape sizes.

       The information printed varies slightly between label templates due to size constraints.
       Labels contain one line for each host/file-system pair and may also contain the file
       number on the tape, the level of the dump, the original size of the dump and the size of
       the (possibly compressed) tape file.

       Add the lbl-templ parameter to the tapetype definition in amanda.conf to enable labels. If
       you don't add this line to your tapetype definition, amreport will not print tape labels.

       You may use the printer keyword in amanda.conf to print to other than the system default
       printer.

TEMPLATES

       Amanda provides label templates for the following tape types. These are pretty generic
       labels and should be easy to customize for other tape types or particular site needs.

           * ExaByte 8mm tapes
           * DAT 4mm tapes
           * DLT tapes
           * 3-ring binder

       The 3-ring binder type is the most generic. It may be used to make a hardcopy log of the
       tapes.

EXIT CODE

       The exit code of amreport is the ORed value of:
        0  = success
        1  = error
        2  = a dle give strange message
        4  = a dle failed
        8  = Don't know the status of a dle (RESULT_MISSING in the report)
        16 = tape error or no more tape

SEE ALSO

       amanda(8), amflush(8)

       The Amanda Wiki: : http://wiki.zmanda.com/

AUTHOR

       Stefan G. Weichinger <sgw@amanda.org>