From c404eebc3587c7b817572b463fd03fd3ff2d627a Mon Sep 17 00:00:00 2001 From: =?UTF-8?q?Per=20=C3=98yvind=20Karlsen?= Date: Sun, 21 Nov 2010 15:39:18 +0000 Subject: bring back urpmi.recover :) --- pod/urpmi.recover.8.pod | 110 ++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++ 1 file changed, 110 insertions(+) create mode 100644 pod/urpmi.recover.8.pod (limited to 'pod/urpmi.recover.8.pod') diff --git a/pod/urpmi.recover.8.pod b/pod/urpmi.recover.8.pod new file mode 100644 index 00000000..2866798a --- /dev/null +++ b/pod/urpmi.recover.8.pod @@ -0,0 +1,110 @@ +=head1 NAME + +urpmi.recover - manages repackaging of old RPMs and rollbacks + +=head1 SYNOPSIS + + urpmi.recover --checkpoint [--noclean] + urpmi.recover --list '1 week ago' + urpmi.recover --rollback '1 hour ago' + urpmi.recover --disable [--noclean] + +=head1 DESCRIPTION + +B is a tool to help management of RPM rollbacks. It has +three main functions: + +C is used to define a point in your system +that you consider stable, and to start storing info that will enable you +to rollback installations and upgrades to this state. + +C is used to list chronologically all installations +and upgrades on your system. (It has two variants, C<--list-all> and +C<--list-safe>.) + +C is used to roll back installations and +upgrades to a previous point in the past (at most until your checkpoint.) + +=head1 OPTIONS + +=over 4 + +=item --checkpoint + +Define the repackaging checkpoint. From now on, using rpm and/or +urpmi/urpme to install, upgrade or remove packages, the older packages +will be stored in F, or whatever directory you set +the C<%_repackage_dir> rpm macro to. This way one can use them for +rollbacks. + +Technically, using this option writes a file +F that overrides the rpm macros +used to set up the repackaging functionalities of rpm. You can change +C<%_repackage_dir> there if you want to. Note that you'll probably need +plenty of space to store repackaged rpms for a long timeframe. + +You can also choose to turn off repackaging by setting +C<%_repackage_all_erasures> to 0 in this file. (Of course if you do so +rollbacks won't be possible anymore.) + +=item --noclean + +C<--checkpoint> defines a new checkpoint and removes everything in the +repackage directory. To prevent this cleaning, use the C<--noclean> +option. + +=item --list + +Lists all installations and upgrades from now since the provided date, +grouped by installation transactions. The date parser is quite elaborated, +so you can give a date in ISO format or close to it (C) or a duration (e.g. "1 day ago"). + +=item --list-all + +Lists all installations and upgrades known to the RPM database. + +=item --list-safe + +Lists all installations and upgrades up to the date of the checkpoint. + +=item --rollback + +=item --rollback + +Roll back the system to the given date (see C<--list> for accepted date +formats), or rolls back the given number of transactions. + +=item B<--urpmi-root> I + +Use the file system tree rooted for urpmi database and rpm install. Contrary +to B<--root>, the urpmi configuration comes from the rooted tree. + +=item --disable + +Turn off repackaging. Unless C<--noclean> was also specified, this cleans +up the repackage directory as well. To turn it on again, use +C<--checkpoint>. + +=back + +=head1 BUGS + +When enabled, you can't install and repackage delta rpms (rpms generated +with the C tool.) Also, if you install a delta rpm, you +won't be able to rollback past this point. A sound advice would be to +completely avoid delta rpms if you're planning to use urpmi.recover. + +=head1 FILES + + /etc/rpm/macros.d/urpmi.recover.macros + +=head1 AUTHOR + +Rafael Garcia-Suarez, + +Copyright (C) 2006 Mandriva SA + +=head1 SEE ALSO + +urpmi(8), urpme(8) -- cgit v1.2.1