This is the command s3qlcp that can be run in the OnWorks free hosting provider using one of our multiple free online workstations such as Ubuntu Online, Fedora Online, Windows online emulator or MAC OS online emulator
PROGRAM:
NAME
s3qlcp - Copy-on-write replication on S3QL file systems
SYNOPSIS
s3qlcp [options] <source-dir> <dest-dir>
DESCRIPTION
S3QL is a file system for online data storage. Before using S3QL, make sure to consult the
full documentation (rather than just the man pages which only briefly document the
available userspace commands).
The s3qlcp command duplicates the directory tree source-dir into dest-dir without
physically copying the file contents. Both source and destination must lie inside the
same S3QL file system.
The replication will not take any additional space. Only if one of directories is modified
later on, the modified data will take additional storage space.
s3qlcp can only be called by the user that mounted the file system and (if the file system
was mounted with --allow-other or --allow-root) the root user.
Note that:
· After the replication, both source and target directory will still be completely
ordinary directories. You can regard <src> as a snapshot of <target> or vice versa.
However, the most common usage of s3qlcp is to regularly duplicate the same source
directory, say documents, to different target directories. For a e.g. monthly
replication, the target directories would typically be named something like
documents_January for the replication in January, documents_February for the replication
in February etc. In this case it is clear that the target directories should be
regarded as snapshots of the source directory.
· Exactly the same effect could be achieved by an ordinary copy program like cp -a.
However, this procedure would be orders of magnitude slower, because cp would have to
read every file completely (so that S3QL had to fetch all the data over the network from
the backend) before writing them into the destination folder.
Snapshotting vs Hardlinking
Snapshot support in S3QL is inspired by the hardlinking feature that is offered by
programs like rsync or storeBackup. These programs can create a hardlink instead of
copying a file if an identical file already exists in the backup. However, using hardlinks
has two large disadvantages:
· backups and restores always have to be made with a special program that takes care of
the hardlinking. The backup must not be touched by any other programs (they may make
changes that inadvertently affect other hardlinked files)
· special care needs to be taken to handle files which are already hardlinked (the restore
program needs to know that the hardlink was not just introduced by the backup program to
safe space)
S3QL snapshots do not have these problems, and they can be used with any backup program.
OPTIONS
The s3qlcp command accepts the following options:
--debug-modules <modules>
Activate debugging output from specified modules (use commas to separate
multiple modules). Debug messages will be written to the target specified by the
--log option.
--debug
Activate debugging output from all S3QL modules. Debug messages will be written
to the target specified by the --log option.
--quiet
be really quiet
--version
just print program version and exit
EXIT CODES
s3qlcp may terminate with the following exit codes:
0 Everything went well.
1 An unexpected error occured. This may indicate a bug in the program.
2 Invalid command line argument.
Use s3qlcp online using onworks.net services