+# SPDX-License-Identifier: GPL-2.0
+
[suite dss]
caption = Subcommands
typestr = dirname
arg_info = required_arg
arg_type = string
+ flag multiple
[help]
The directory on the remote host from which snapshots are taken.
Of course, the user specified as --remote-user must have read access
to this directory.
- This option is mandatory for the create and run subcommands: It must
- be given at the command line or in the config file.
+ This option is mandatory for the create and run subcommands: It may
+ be given multiple times to specify more than one source directory.
+ However, all source directories must reside on the same server.
[/help]
[option dest-dir]
summary = where snapshots are stored
written. This must be writable by the user who runs dss.
This option is mandatory for all subcommands except kill.
+ Unlike --source-dir, this option may only be given once.
+ [/help]
+ [option mountpoint]
+ summary = abort if destination directory is not a mountpoint
+ [help]
+ This option checks whether a file system is mounted on the directory
+ specified as the argument to --dest-dir. Operation proceeds only
+ if this is the case. Otherwise dss exits unsuccessfully without
+ performing any action. Use this option to prevent snapshot creation
+ if the snapshot file system is not mounted.
+
+ This option is silently ignored for subcommands which do not depend
+ on the destination directory.
[/help]
[option Rsync-options]
summary = Controlling how rsync is run
Sending SIGHUP causes the running dss process to reload its config file.
[/help]
+ [option wait]
+ short_opt = w
+ summary = wait until the signalled process has terminated
+ [help]
+ This option is handy for system shutdown scripts which would like
+ to terminate the dss daemon process.
+
+ Without --wait the dss process which executes the kill subcommand
+ exits right after the kill(2) system call returns. At this point the
+ signalled process might still be alive (even if SIGKILL was sent).
+ If --wait is given, the process waits until the signalled process
+ has terminated or the timeout expires.
+
+ If --wait is not given, the kill subcommand exits successfully if
+ and only if the signal was sent (i.e., if there exists another dss
+ process to receive the signal). With --wait it exits successfully
+ if, additionally, the signalled process has terminated before the
+ timeout expires.
+
+ It makes only sense to use the option for signals which terminate dss.
+ [/help]
[subcommand configtest]
purpose = run a configuration file syntax test
[description]