On 8 September 2011 21:40, Hasse Hansson <o...@thorshammare.org> wrote: > Ohhhh... So sorry... I forgot > > "I will not use FreeBSD documentation for OpenBSD." > "I will not use FreeBSD documentation for OpenBSD." > "I will not use FreeBSD documentation for OpenBSD." > > :-) Hasse
Heh. :) Thanks for your gracious response. And by the way, this, in summary, is yet another reason why you don't want to add too many knobs to your de facto/semi-standard ulittleties ;-P -- particularly not without looking left and right at what your other unix brethren are doing: <http://linux.die.net/man/8/dump> and <http://netbsd.gw.com/cgi-bin/man-cgi?dump> > > -L label > The user-supplied text string label is placed into the dump > header, where tools like restore(8) and file(1) can access it. > Note that this label is limited to be at most LBLSIZE (currently > 16) characters, which must include the terminating `\0'. <http://www.freebsd.org/cgi/man.cgi?query=dump> > > -L This option is to notify dump that it is dumping a live file sys- > tem. To obtain a consistent dump image, dump takes a snapshot of > the file system in the .snap directory in the root of the file > system being dumped and then does a dump of the snapshot. The > snapshot is unlinked as soon as the dump starts, and is thus > removed when the dump is complete. This option is ignored for > unmounted or read-only file systems. If the .snap directory does > not exist in the root of the file system being dumped, a warning > will be issued and the dump will revert to the standard behavior. > This problem can be corrected by creating a .snap directory in > the root of the file system to be dumped; its owner should be > ``root'', its group should be ``operator'', and its mode should > be ``0770''. <http://www.openbsd.org/cgi-bin/man.cgi?query=dump> > > *crickets*