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NAME

       amrestore - low-level data-extraction from Amanda volumes

SYNOPSIS

       amrestore [--config config] [-r | -c | -C] [-b blocksize] [-f filenum]
                 [-l label] [-p] [-h] [{-o configoption}...] [{changerspec} |
                 {[--holding] holdingfile}]
                 [hostname [ diskname [ datestamp [ hostname [ diskname [ datestamp ... ] ] ] ] ]]

       Note that this is the only Amanda command which does not take a
       configuration name as its first argument.

DESCRIPTION

       Amrestore is a very low-level tool for extracting data from Amanda
       volumes. It does not consult any catalog information or other metadata,
       basing its operations only on the headers found on the volume. This
       makes it an appropriate tool for bare-metal restores of an Amanda
       server, or other situations where the catalog is not available.

       See amfetchdump(8) and amrecover(8) for higher-level recoveries.

       The tool does not reassemble split dumps, but can uncompress compressed
       dumps. Note that decompression may fail for split parts after the
       first. If this occurs, extract the parts without decompressing,
       concatenate them, and decompress the result.

       Data is restored from the current volume in changerspec, or from the
       holding file holdingfile. In most cases, changerspec will name a
       particular device, e.g., tape:/dev/nst0 or s3:mybucket/tape-1.

       Only dumps matching the dump specification beginning with hostname are
       extracted. If no specification is given, every file on the volume (or
       the entire holdingfile) is restored. See the "HOST & DISK EXPRESSIONS"
       section of amanda(8) for the format of the hostname and diskname
       parameters, and the "DATESTAMP EXPRESSIONS" section for the format of
       the datestamp parameters.

       Unless -p is used, candidate backup images are extracted to files in
       the current directory named: hostname.diskname.datestamp.dumplevel

OPTIONS

       -b blocksize
           Use the given blocksize to read the volume. The default is defined
           by the device.

       -f filenum
           Seek to file filenum before beginning the restore operation.

       -l label
           Check that the volume has label label.

       -p
           Pipe the first matching file to standard output. This is typically
           used in a shell pipeline to send the data to a process like tar for
           extraction.

       -c, -C
           If the file is not already compressed, compress it using the
           fastest (-c) or best (-C) compression algorithm. Note that
           amrestore will not re-compress an already-compressed file. Without
           either of these options, amrestore will automatically uncompress
           any compressed files. This option is useful when the destination
           disk is small.

       -h
           Include 32k headers on all output files, similar to a holding file.
           This header can be read by another application or utility (see
           Amanda::Header) during the next phase of processing.

       -r
           Output raw files. This is similar to -h, but also disables any
           automatic decompression. Output file names will have a .RAW
           extension.

       -o configoption
           See the "CONFIGURATION OVERRIDE" section in amanda(8).

EXAMPLES

       The following does an interactive restore of disk rz3g from host seine,
       to restore particular files. Note the use of the b option to restore,
       which causes it to read in units of two 512-byte blocks (1 Kbyte) at a
       time. This helps keep it from complaining about short reads.
         amrestore -p /dev/nrmt9 seine rz3g | tar -xv

       The next example extracts all backup images for host seine. This is a
       typical way to extract all data for a host after a disk crash.
         amrestore /dev/nrmt9 seine

       If the backup datestamp in the above example is 20070125 and seine has
       level 0 backups of disks rz1a and rz1g on the tape, these files will be
       created in the current directory:
         seine.rz1a.19910125.0
         seine.rz1g.19910125.0

       You may also use amrestore to extract a backup image from a holding
       disk file that has not yet been flushed to tape:
         amrestore -p /amanda/20001119/seine.rz1a.2 | tar -xv

CAVEATS

       GNU-tar must be used to restore files from backup images created with
       the GNUTAR dumptype. Vendor tar programs sometimes fail to read GNU Tar
       images.

SEE ALSO

       amanda(8), amfetchdump(8), amrecover(8)

       The Amanda Wiki: : http://wiki.zmanda.com/

AUTHORS

       James da Silva <jds@amanda.org>

       Stefan G. Weichinger <sgw@amanda.org>

       Dustin J. Mitchell <dustin@zmanda.com>
           Zmanda, Inc. (http://www.zmanda.com)