# Licensed under the GPL v2. For licencing details see COPYING.
package "dss"
-version "0.0.5"
+version "0.1.2"
purpose "the dyadic snapshot scheduler
dss creates hardlink-based snapshots of a given directory on a remote
group="command"
details="
This is the main mode of operation. Snapshots will be created
- as needed and pruned automatically.
+ in an endless loop as needed and pruned automatically. The loop
+ only terminates on fatal errors or if a terminating signal was
+ received. See also the --exit-hook option.
"
###############################
optional
multiple
details="
- These option may be given multiple times. The arguments passed
- to that option are passed verbatim to the rsync command.
+ This option may be given multiple times. The given argument is
+ passed verbatim to the rsync command. Note that in order to use
+ rsync options that require an argument, you have to specify the
+ option and its argument as separate --rsync-options, like this:
+
+ --rsync-option --exclude --rsync-option /proc
"
###################
unit intervals.
dss removes any snapshots older than n times u and tries to
- keep 2^(k-1) snapshots in interval k, where the interval number
- k counts from zero, zero being the most recent unit interval.
+ keep 2^(n - k - 1) snapshots in interval k, where the interval
+ number k counts from zero, zero being the most recent unit
+ interval.
In other words, the oldest snapshot will at most be u * n days
(= 20 days if default values are used) old. Moreover, there
are at most 2^n - 1 snapshots in total (i. e. 31 by default).
- Observe that you have to create at least 2 ^ (n - 1) snapshots
+ Observe that you have to create at least 2^(n - 1) snapshots
each interval for this to work out because that is the number
of snapshots in interval zero.
"
store them in a database for further analysis.
"
+option "pre-remove-hook" -
+#~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
+"Executed before snapshot removal"
+string typestr="command"
+optional
+details="
+ Execute this command before removing a snapshot. The full
+ path to the snapshot about to be deleted is passed to the
+ command as the first argument. If the command returns with
+ a non-zero exit status, no snapshot is being removed and the
+ operation is retried later.
+
+ For example, one might want to execute a script that checks
+ whether the snapshot to be deleted is currently used by
+ another process, e.g. by a tape-based backup system that runs
+ concurrently to dss.
+
+ Another possible application of this is to record disk-usage
+ patterns before and after snapshot removal.
+"
+
+option "post-remove-hook" -
+#~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
+"Executed after snapshot removal"
+string typestr="command"
+optional
+details="
+ Execute this after a snapshot has successfully been removed. As
+ for the pre-remove hook, the full path of the removed snapshot
+ is passed to the hook as the first argument. The exit code
+ of this hook is ignored.
+"
+
+option "exit-hook" e
+#~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
+"Executed if run command exits"
+string typestr="command"
+optional
+details="
+ This hook is only used if the --run command was given which
+ instructs dss to run in an endless loop. The exit-hook gets
+ executed whenever this endless loop terminates. The reason
+ for terminating the loop is passed as the first argument.
+
+ One possible application for this hook is to send email to the
+ system administrator to let her know that no more snapshots
+ are going to be created.
+"
+
###############################
section "Disk space monitoring"
###############################
A value of zero (the default) deactivates this check.
"
+
+option "keep-redundant" k
+#~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
+"Prune by disk space only"
+flag off
+details="
+ If this flag is not given dss removes redundant and outdated
+ snapshots automatically.
+
+ Otherwise, this feature is deactivated so that snapshots are
+ only being removed in case disk space or number of free inodes
+ becomes low. Use this flag if the file system containing the
+ destination directory is used for snapshots only.
+"