Oracle® Secure Backup Reference Release 10.1 Part Number B14236-02 |
|
|
View PDF |
Purpose
Use the lscheckpoint
command to list the identity and attributes of current checkpoints.
Prerequisites
You must have the right to query and display information about devices to use the lscheckpoint
command.
Syntax
lscheckpoint::=
lsch•eckpoint [ --short/-s | --long/-l ] [ --host/-h hostname[,hostname]... ]... [ job-id ]...
Semantics
Displays only the IDs of jobs that have checkpoints.
Displays multiple lines for each entry, describing all user-visible information for each checkpoint.
Constrains the listing to checkpoints for the host specified by hostname.
Specifies the Oracle Secure Backup-assigned job ID whose checkpoint information you want to display. If absent, then obtool
displays all checkpoints, or all checkpoints for hosts named specified with the --host/-h
option.
Output
Table 2-5 describes the output of the lscheckpoint
command.
Table 2-5 lscheckpoint Output
Label | Indicates |
---|---|
Job ID |
Unique identifier of a scheduled backup or restore job; assigned by Oracle Secure Backup |
Host |
Name of host |
Operation |
Type of operation being performed |
Checkpoint created |
Date and time at which the checkpoint was created |
Restartable |
Ability to restart a backup job; setting is |
Current context ID |
Identification of the currently active checkpoint |
Example
Example 2-50 displays the job information for job admin/8.1
and then displays the checkpoint information for this job.
Example 2-50 Listing Checkpoint Information
ob> lsjob --long admin/8.1 admin/8.1: Type: backup br_filer Level: full Family: (null) Restartable: yes Scheduled time: none State: running since 2005/05/18.17:45 Priority: 100 Privileged op: no Run on host: (administrative server) Attempts: 1 ob> lscheckpoint --long admin/8.1 Job ID: admin/8.1 Host: br_filer Operation: backup Checkpoint created: 05/18.17:48 Restartable: yes Current context ID: 18