Oracle® Secure Backup Reference Release 10.1 Part Number B14236-03 |
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PDF · Mobi · ePub |
Use the lscheckpoint
command to list the identity and attributes of current checkpoints.
See Also:
"Checkpoint Commands" for related commandsYou must have the right to query and display information about devices to use the lscheckpoint
command.
lsch•eckpoint [ --short/-s | --long/-l ] [ --host/-h hostname[,hostname]... ]... [ job-id ]...
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.
Table 2-5 describes the output of the lscheckpoint
command.
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 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