xfs_metadump(8) — Linux manual page
xfs_metadump(8) System Manager's Manual xfs_metadump(8)
NAME
xfs_metadump - copy XFS filesystem metadata to a file
SYNOPSIS
xfs_metadump [ -aefFgow ] [ -m max_extents ] [ -l logdev ] [ -v
version ] source target
xfs_metadump -V
DESCRIPTION
xfs_metadump is a debugging tool that copies the metadata from an
XFS filesystem to a file. The source argument must be the
pathname of the device or file containing the XFS filesystem and
the target argument specifies the destination file name. If
target is -, then the output is sent to stdout. This allows the
output to be redirected to another program such as a compression
application.
xfs_metadump may only be used to copy unmounted filesystems, or
read-only mounted filesystems.
xfs_metadump does not alter the source filesystem in any way. The
target image is a contiguous (non-sparse) file containing all the
filesystem's metadata and indexes to where the blocks were copied
from.
By default, xfs_metadump obfuscates most file (regular file,
directory and symbolic link) names and extended attribute names
to allow the dumps to be sent without revealing confidential
information. Extended attribute values are zeroed and no data is
copied. The only exceptions are file or attribute names that are
4 or less characters in length. Also file names that span extents
(this can only occur with the mkfs.xfs(8) options where -n size >
-b size) are not obfuscated. Names between 5 and 8 characters in
length inclusively are partially obfuscated.
xfs_metadump cannot obfuscate metadata in the filesystem log.
Log recovery of an obfuscated metadump image may expose clear-
text metadata and/or cause filesystem corruption in the restored
image. It is recommended that the source filesystem first be
mounted and unmounted, if possible, to ensure that the log is
clean. A subsequent invocation of xfs_metadump will capture a
clean log and obfuscate all metadata correctly.
If a metadump must be produced from a filesystem with a dirty
log, it is recommended that obfuscation be turned off with -o
option, if metadata such as filenames is not considered
sensitive. If obfuscation is required on a metadump with a dirty
log, please inform the recipient of the metadump image about this
situation.
The contents of an external log device can be dumped only when
using the v2 format. Metadump in v2 format can be generated by
passing the "-v 2" option. Metadump in v2 format is generated by
default if the filesystem has an external log and the metadump
version to use is not explicitly mentioned.
xfs_metadump should not be used for any purposes other than for
debugging and reporting filesystem problems. The most common
usage scenario for this tool is when xfs_repair(8) fails to
repair a filesystem and a metadump image can be sent for
analysis.
The file generated by xfs_metadump can be restored to filesystem
image (minus the data) using the xfs_mdrestore(8) tool.
OPTIONS
-a Copies entire metadata blocks. Normally, xfs_metadump
will zero any stale bytes interspersed with in-use
metadata. Use this option to copy full metadata blocks,
to provide more debugging information for a corrupted
filesystem. Note that the extra data will be
unobfuscated.
-e Stops the dump on a read error. Normally, it will ignore
read errors and copy all the metadata that is accessible.
-f Specifies that the filesystem image to be processed is
stored in a regular file (see the mkfs.xfs -d file
option). This can also happen if an image copy of a
filesystem has been made into an ordinary file with
xfs_copy(8).
-F Specifies that we want to continue even if the superblock
magic is not correct. If the source is truly not an XFS
filesystem, the resulting image will be useless, and
xfs_metadump may crash.
-g Shows dump progress. This is sent to stdout if the target
is a file or to stderr if the target is stdout.
-l logdev
For filesystems which use an external log, this specifies
the device where the external log resides. If the v2
metadump format is selected, the contents of the external
log will be copied to the metadump. The v2 metadump
format will be selected automatically if this option is
specified.
-m Set the maximum size of an allowed metadata extent.
Extremely large metadata extents are likely to be corrupt,
and will be skipped if they exceed this value. The
default size is 2097151 blocks.
-o Disables obfuscation of file names and extended
attributes.
-v The format of the metadump file to be produced. Valid
values are 1 and 2. The default metadump format is 1.
-w Prints warnings of inconsistent metadata encountered to
stderr. Bad metadata is still copied.
-V Prints the version number and exits.
DIAGNOSTICS
xfs_metadump returns an exit code of 0 if all readable metadata
is successfully copied or 1 if a write error occurs or a read
error occurs and the -e option used.
NOTES
As xfs_metadump copies metadata only, it does not matter if the
source filesystem has a realtime section or not. If the
filesystem has an external log, it is not copied. Internal logs
are copied and any outstanding log transactions are not
obfuscated if they contain names.
xfs_metadump is a shell wrapper around the xfs_db(8) metadump
command.
SEE ALSO
xfs_repair(8), xfs_mdrestore(8), xfs_freeze(8), xfs_db(8),
xfs_copy(8), xfs(5)
BUGS
Email bug reports to linux-xfs@vger.kernel.org.
COLOPHON
This page is part of the xfsprogs (utilities for XFS filesystems)
project. Information about the project can be found at
⟨http://xfs.org/⟩. If you have a bug report for this manual page,
send it to linux-xfs@vger.kernel.org. This page was obtained
from the project's upstream Git repository
⟨https://git.kernel.org/pub/scm/fs/xfs/xfsprogs-dev.git⟩ on
2024-06-14. (At that time, the date of the most recent commit
that was found in the repository was 2024-05-17.) If you
discover any rendering problems in this HTML version of the page,
or you believe there is a better or more up-to-date source for
the page, or you have corrections or improvements to the
information in this COLOPHON (which is not part of the original
manual page), send a mail to man-pages@man7.org
xfs_metadump(8)
Pages that refer to this page: xfs_db(8), xfs_mdrestore(8), xfs_repair(8)