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Theodore Ts'o348e43d2001-05-03 14:43:43 +00001.\" -*- nroff -*-
2.\" Copyright 2001 by Theodore Ts'o. All Rights Reserved.
3.\" This file may be copied under the terms of the GNU Public License.
4.\"
5.TH E2IMAGE 8 "@E2FSPROGS_MONTH@ @E2FSPROGS_YEAR@" "E2fsprogs version @E2FSPROGS_VERSION@"
6.SH NAME
Theodore Ts'oa7ac1df2003-08-24 17:56:41 -04007e2image \- Save critical ext2/ext3 filesystem data to a file
Theodore Ts'o348e43d2001-05-03 14:43:43 +00008.SH SYNOPSIS
9.B e2image
Theodore Ts'o6304baf2001-08-09 05:41:29 -040010[
Theodore Ts'o8c6b6482004-07-28 21:07:53 -040011.B \-rI
Theodore Ts'o6304baf2001-08-09 05:41:29 -040012]
Theodore Ts'o348e43d2001-05-03 14:43:43 +000013.I device
14.I image-file
15.SH DESCRIPTION
Theodore Ts'o0edb4d82001-05-03 16:30:48 +000016The
Theodore Ts'o348e43d2001-05-03 14:43:43 +000017.B e2image
Theodore Ts'o0edb4d82001-05-03 16:30:48 +000018program will save critical filesystem data on the ext2 filesystem located on
Theodore Ts'o0edb4d82001-05-03 16:30:48 +000019.I device
20to a file specified by
21.IR image-file .
22The image file may be examined by
23.B dumpe2fs
24and
25.BR debugfs ,
26by using the
27.B \-i
28option to those programs. This can be used by an expert in assisting
29the recovery of catastrophically corrupted filesystems. In the future,
30e2fsck will be enhanced to be able to use the image file to help
31recover a badly damaged filesystem.
32.PP
Theodore Ts'o1c1e0042001-08-09 06:04:32 -040033If
34.I image-file
Theodore Ts'o11d1e612004-12-01 12:42:33 -050035is \-, then the output of
Theodore Ts'o1c1e0042001-08-09 06:04:32 -040036.B e2image
Theodore Ts'o8ac59292004-03-08 14:18:56 -050037will be sent to standard output, so that the output can be piped to
38another program, such as
39.BR gzip (1).
40(Note that is currently only supported when
41creating a raw image file using the
42.B \-r
43option, since the process of creating a normal image file currently
44requires random-access access to the file, which can not be done using a
45pipe. This restriction will hopefully be lifted in a future version of
46.BR e2image .)
Theodore Ts'o1c1e0042001-08-09 06:04:32 -040047.PP
Theodore Ts'o6304baf2001-08-09 05:41:29 -040048The
Theodore Ts'o8c6b6482004-07-28 21:07:53 -040049.B \-I
50option will cause e2image to install the metadata stored in the image
51file to the device. It can be used to restore the filesystem metadata
52back to the device in emergency situations.
53.PP
54.B WARNING!!!!
55The
56.B \-I
57option should only be used as desperation measure when other
58alternatives have failed. If the filesystem has changed since the image
59file was created, data
60.B will
61be lost. In general, you should make a full image
62backup of the filesystem first, in case you wish to try other recovery
63strategies afterwards.
64.PP
65The
Theodore Ts'o6304baf2001-08-09 05:41:29 -040066.B \-r
Theodore Ts'o1c1e0042001-08-09 06:04:32 -040067option will create a raw image file instead of a normal image file.
68A raw image file differs
Theodore Ts'o6304baf2001-08-09 05:41:29 -040069from a normal image file in two ways. First, the filesystem metadata is
70placed in the proper position so that e2fsck, dumpe2fs, debugfs,
71etc. can be run directly on the raw image file. In order to minimize
72the amount of disk space consumed by a raw image file, the file is
73created as a sparse file. (Beware of copying or
74compressing/decompressing this file with utilities that don't understand
75how to create sparse files; the file will become as large as the
76filesystem itself!) Secondly, the raw image file also includes indirect
Theodore Ts'o1c1e0042001-08-09 06:04:32 -040077blocks and data blocks, which the current image file does not have,
Theodore Ts'o6304baf2001-08-09 05:41:29 -040078although this may change in the future.
79.PP
Theodore Ts'o0edb4d82001-05-03 16:30:48 +000080It is a very good idea to periodically (at boot time and
81every week or so) to create image files for all of
82filesystems on a system, as well as saving the partition
83layout (which can be generated using the using
Theodore Ts'o11d1e612004-12-01 12:42:33 -050084.B fdisk \-l
Theodore Ts'o0edb4d82001-05-03 16:30:48 +000085command). Ideally the image file should be stored on some filesystem
86other that
87the filesystem whose data it contains, to ensure that its data is
88accessible in the case where the filesystem has been badly damaged.
89.PP
90To save disk space,
91.B e2image
92creates the image file as a sparse file.
93Hence, if the image file
94needs to be copied to another location, it should
95either be compressed first or copied using the
Theodore Ts'o11d1e612004-12-01 12:42:33 -050096.B \-\-sparse=always
Theodore Ts'o0edb4d82001-05-03 16:30:48 +000097option to GNU version of
98.BR cp .
99.PP
100The size of an ext2 image file depends primarily on the size of the
101filesystems and how many inodes are in use. For a typical 10 gigabyte
102filesystem, with 200,000 inodes in use out of 1.2 million inodes, the
103image file be approximately 35 megabytes; a 4 gigabyte filesystem with
10415,000 inodes in use out of 550,000 inodes will result in a 3 megabyte
105image file. Image files tend to be quite
Theodore Ts'o6304baf2001-08-09 05:41:29 -0400106compressible; an image file taking up 32 megabytes of space on
Theodore Ts'o0edb4d82001-05-03 16:30:48 +0000107disk will generally compress down to 3 or 4 megabytes.
Theodore Ts'o348e43d2001-05-03 14:43:43 +0000108.PP
109.SH AUTHOR
Theodore Ts'o0edb4d82001-05-03 16:30:48 +0000110.B e2image
Theodore Ts'o348e43d2001-05-03 14:43:43 +0000111was written by Theodore Ts'o (tytso@mit.edu).
112.SH AVAILABILITY
113.B e2image
Theodore Ts'o11d1e612004-12-01 12:42:33 -0500114is part of the e2fsprogs package and is available from
Theodore Ts'o348e43d2001-05-03 14:43:43 +0000115http://e2fsprogs.sourceforge.net.
116.SH SEE ALSO
117.BR dumpe2fs (8),
118.BR debugfs (8)
119