On 04/03/10 01:21, Jean-Francois wrote:
A level 0 dumps includes all files. A level n dump are all the files
that have changed or were added since the last level n - 1 dump.
-Otto
Are all dump levels packed into the same one file like I seem to understand ?
As far as I am concerned I dump in this way :
dump -0u -f /mnt/backup/backup /mnt/donnees/
dump -1u -f /mnt/backup/backup /mnt/donnees/
...
This is correct, is'nt it ?
Regards.
That's incorrect.
In your first command you do a full backup of /mnt/donnees
and save it to the file /mnt/backup/backup.
With your second command you do an incremental backup which saves
only the changed files between the first backup and now. You save it
on the same file which means that you overwrite/delete the first backup.
If you wanted to restore something you would be able to restore
only the changed files between first and second backup. You need
to have both files (stored separately) to do full -current (tm)
restore of your files.
If you wander why to use different dump levels the answer is for
organizing the backup policy and saving a hell lot of space/tapes
than doing always full backups.
regards,
Giannis