svn commit: r44510 - head/en_US.ISO8859-1/books/handbook/disks
Dru Lavigne
dru at FreeBSD.org
Wed Apr 9 18:20:06 UTC 2014
Author: dru
Date: Wed Apr 9 18:20:06 2014
New Revision: 44510
URL: http://svnweb.freebsd.org/changeset/doc/44510
Log:
White space fix only. Translators can ignore.
Sponsored by: iXsystems
Modified:
head/en_US.ISO8859-1/books/handbook/disks/chapter.xml
Modified: head/en_US.ISO8859-1/books/handbook/disks/chapter.xml
==============================================================================
--- head/en_US.ISO8859-1/books/handbook/disks/chapter.xml Wed Apr 9 18:14:01 2014 (r44509)
+++ head/en_US.ISO8859-1/books/handbook/disks/chapter.xml Wed Apr 9 18:20:06 2014 (r44510)
@@ -1926,38 +1926,38 @@ cd0: Attempt to query device size failed
</example>
</sect2>
- <sect2 xml:id="backups-tapebackups">
- <title>Using Data Tapes for Backups</title>
+ <sect2 xml:id="backups-tapebackups">
+ <title>Using Data Tapes for Backups</title>
- <indexterm><primary>tape media</primary></indexterm>
+ <indexterm><primary>tape media</primary></indexterm>
- <para>While tape technology has continued to evolve,
- modern backup systems tend to combine
- off-site backups with local removable media.
- &os; supports any tape drive that
- uses <acronym>SCSI</acronym>, such as <acronym>LTO</acronym> or
- <acronym>DAT</acronym>. There is limited support for <acronym>SATA</acronym>
- and <acronym>USB</acronym> tape drives.</para>
-
- <para>For <acronym>SCSI</acronym> tape devices, &os; uses the &man.sa.4; driver and the
- <filename>/dev/sa0</filename>, <filename>/dev/nsa0</filename>,
- and <filename>/dev/esa0</filename> devices. The physical device name is
- <filename>/dev/sa0</filename>. When
- <filename>/dev/nsa0</filename> is used, the backup application will
- not rewind the
- tape after writing a file, which allows writing more than one
- file to a tape. Using <filename>/dev/esa0</filename>
- ejects the tape after the device is closed.</para>
+ <para>While tape technology has continued to evolve, modern
+ backup systems tend to combine off-site backups with local
+ removable media. &os; supports any tape drive that uses
+ <acronym>SCSI</acronym>, such as <acronym>LTO</acronym> or
+ <acronym>DAT</acronym>. There is limited support for
+ <acronym>SATA</acronym> and <acronym>USB</acronym> tape
+ drives.</para>
+
+ <para>For <acronym>SCSI</acronym> tape devices, &os; uses the
+ &man.sa.4; driver and the <filename>/dev/sa0</filename>,
+ <filename>/dev/nsa0</filename>, and
+ <filename>/dev/esa0</filename> devices. The physical device
+ name is <filename>/dev/sa0</filename>. When
+ <filename>/dev/nsa0</filename> is used, the backup application
+ will not rewind the tape after writing a file, which allows
+ writing more than one file to a tape. Using
+ <filename>/dev/esa0</filename> ejects the tape after the
+ device is closed.</para>
<para>In &os;, <command>mt</command> is used to control
operations of the tape drive, such as seeking through files on
a tape or writing tape control marks to the tape. For
- example, the first three files on a tape can be
- preserved by skipping past them before writing a new
- file:</para>
+ example, the first three files on a tape can be preserved by
+ skipping past them before writing a new file:</para>
<screen>&prompt.root; <userinput>mt -f /dev/nsa0 fsf 3</userinput></screen>
-
+
<para>This utility supports many operations. Refer to
&man.mt.1; for details.</para>
@@ -1967,8 +1967,8 @@ cd0: Attempt to query device size failed
<screen>&prompt.root; <userinput>tar cvf /dev/sa0 <replaceable>file</replaceable></userinput></screen>
- <para>To recovering files from a <command>tar</command> archive on tape into
- the current directory:</para>
+ <para>To recovering files from a <command>tar</command> archive
+ on tape into the current directory:</para>
<screen>&prompt.root; <userinput>tar xvf /dev/sa0</userinput></screen>
@@ -1979,12 +1979,13 @@ cd0: Attempt to query device size failed
<screen>&prompt.root; <userinput>dump -0aL -b64 -f /dev/nsa0 /usr</userinput></screen>
- <para>To interactively restore files from a <command>dump</command> file on
- tape into the current directory:</para>
+ <para>To interactively restore files from a
+ <command>dump</command> file on tape into the current
+ directory:</para>
<screen>&prompt.root; <userinput>restore -i -f /dev/nsa0</userinput></screen>
- </sect2>
-
+ </sect2>
+
<sect2 xml:id="backups-programs-amanda">
<title>Third-Party Backup Utilities</title>
@@ -1994,11 +1995,10 @@ cd0: Attempt to query device size failed
<para>The &os; Ports Collection provides many third-party
utilities which can be used to schedule the creation of
- backups, simplify tape backup, and make
- backups easier and more convenient.
- Many of these applications are client/server based
- and can be used to automate the backups of a single system or
- all of the computers in a network.</para>
+ backups, simplify tape backup, and make backups easier and
+ more convenient. Many of these applications are client/server
+ based and can be used to automate the backups of a single
+ system or all of the computers in a network.</para>
<para>Popular utilities include
<application>Amanda</application>,
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