| .\" -*- nroff -*- |
| .\" Copyright 2001 by Theodore Ts'o. All Rights Reserved. |
| .\" This file may be copied under the terms of the GNU Public License. |
| .\" |
| .TH E2IMAGE 8 "@E2FSPROGS_MONTH@ @E2FSPROGS_YEAR@" "E2fsprogs version @E2FSPROGS_VERSION@" |
| .SH NAME |
| e2image \- Save critical ext2 filesystem data to a file |
| .SH SYNOPSIS |
| .B e2image |
| [ |
| .B \-r |
| ] |
| .I device |
| .I image-file |
| .SH DESCRIPTION |
| The |
| .B e2image |
| program will save critical filesystem data on the ext2 filesystem located on |
| .I device |
| to a file specified by |
| .IR image-file . |
| The image file may be examined by |
| .B dumpe2fs |
| and |
| .BR debugfs , |
| by using the |
| .B \-i |
| option to those programs. This can be used by an expert in assisting |
| the recovery of catastrophically corrupted filesystems. In the future, |
| e2fsck will be enhanced to be able to use the image file to help |
| recover a badly damaged filesystem. |
| .PP |
| If |
| .I image-file |
| is -, then the output of |
| .B e2image |
| will be sent to standard output. |
| .PP |
| The |
| .B \-r |
| option will create a raw image file instead of a normal image file. |
| A raw image file differs |
| from a normal image file in two ways. First, the filesystem metadata is |
| placed in the proper position so that e2fsck, dumpe2fs, debugfs, |
| etc. can be run directly on the raw image file. In order to minimize |
| the amount of disk space consumed by a raw image file, the file is |
| created as a sparse file. (Beware of copying or |
| compressing/decompressing this file with utilities that don't understand |
| how to create sparse files; the file will become as large as the |
| filesystem itself!) Secondly, the raw image file also includes indirect |
| blocks and data blocks, which the current image file does not have, |
| although this may change in the future. |
| .PP |
| It is a very good idea to periodically (at boot time and |
| every week or so) to create image files for all of |
| filesystems on a system, as well as saving the partition |
| layout (which can be generated using the using |
| .B fdisk -l |
| command). Ideally the image file should be stored on some filesystem |
| other that |
| the filesystem whose data it contains, to ensure that its data is |
| accessible in the case where the filesystem has been badly damaged. |
| .PP |
| To save disk space, |
| .B e2image |
| creates the image file as a sparse file. |
| Hence, if the image file |
| needs to be copied to another location, it should |
| either be compressed first or copied using the |
| .B \--sparse=always |
| option to GNU version of |
| .BR cp . |
| .PP |
| The size of an ext2 image file depends primarily on the size of the |
| filesystems and how many inodes are in use. For a typical 10 gigabyte |
| filesystem, with 200,000 inodes in use out of 1.2 million inodes, the |
| image file be approximately 35 megabytes; a 4 gigabyte filesystem with |
| 15,000 inodes in use out of 550,000 inodes will result in a 3 megabyte |
| image file. Image files tend to be quite |
| compressible; an image file taking up 32 megabytes of space on |
| disk will generally compress down to 3 or 4 megabytes. |
| .PP |
| .SH AUTHOR |
| .B e2image |
| was written by Theodore Ts'o (tytso@mit.edu). |
| .SH AVAILABILITY |
| .B e2image |
| is part of the e2fsprogs package and is available from anonymous |
| http://e2fsprogs.sourceforge.net. |
| .SH SEE ALSO |
| .BR dumpe2fs (8), |
| .BR debugfs (8) |
| |