-
- amoverview
-Prev Chapter 35. The AMANDA Manual Pages. Next
-
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
-
-Name
-
-amoverview \14 display file systems processed by AMANDA over time
-
-Synopsis
-
-amoverview [[-config ] config ] [-hostwidth width] [-diskwidth width] [-
-skipmissed] [-verbose]
-
-DESCRIPTION
-
-Amoverview displays a chart showing hosts and file systems processed by AMANDA
-along with the backup level performed each day.
-See the amanda(8) man page for more details about AMANDA.
-
-OPTIONS
-
-
-
- -config config
- Use configuration config instead of configuration daily.
-
- -hostwidth width
- Set host field column width to width characters instead of 8.
-
- -diskwidth width
- Set disk field column width to width characters instead of 20.
-
- -skipmissed
- Compacts the output by only printing stats for the days AMANDA actually
- ran.
-
- -verbose
- Amoverview can take a long while on large systems. This option reports
- intermediate steps while it is working.
-
-
-RESULTS
-
-amoverview is a summary of the output of " amadmin <config> find ". When the
-last column of amadmin find contains anything other than "OK", amoverview
-translates this into "E" for that day.
-A number indicates the level of backup and it succeeded. An "E" indicates an
-error for that day. You get an "E" for all errors, like failed to connect,
-datatimeout, computer crashed, etc, but also for failing to write to tape.
-You can have an "E" followed by a number if a filesystem ran into end-of-tape
-once (gives an "E", and later that day, you flush it to a second tape (a
-number: the level, indicating success). If the flush failed too, you get a
-double "EE" for that day.
-You can also have a double code if you have two tapes in the changer and AMANDA
-failed to write to tape the first time because it hit end of tape (resulting in
-"E0", for a full, "E1" for an incremental etc.) or twice with error ("EE"), and
-may a successful flush afterwards giving maybe "EE0". (Only the latest 2
-characters are printed).
-
-EXAMPLE
-
-This shows the /home file system on host2 was backed up at level 3 on the 8th,
-9th and 10th of December, had a full backup on the 11th, a level 1 on the 12th
-and a level 2 on the 13th.
-
- # amoverview
- date 12 12 12 12 12 12
- host disk 08 09 10 11 12 13
-
- host1 / 0 1 1 1 1 1
- host1 /var 0 1 1 1 1 1
- host2 / 1 1 1 1 1 0
- host2 /home 3 3 3 0 1 2
- host2 /opt 1 1 1 1 1 1
- host2 /var 1 1 0 1 1 1
-
-
-SEE ALSO
-
-amadmin(8), amanda(8)
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
-
-Prev Up Next
-ammt Home amplot
-