source: MondoRescue/branches/2.2.10/mondo/src/common/mondostructures.h@ 2338

Last change on this file since 2338 was 2338, checked in by Bruno Cornec, 15 years ago
  • Adds LZMA support (Fix #309)
  • Change
  • Property svn:keywords set to Id
File size: 20.0 KB
Line 
1/***************************************************************************
2 mondostructures.h - description
3 -------------------
4 begin : Fri Apr 19 2002
5 copyright : (C) 2002 by Stan Benoit
6 email : troff@nakedsoul.org
7 cvsid : $Id: mondostructures.h 2338 2009-08-20 23:47:12Z bruno $
8 ***************************************************************************/
9
10/***************************************************************************
11 * *
12 * This program is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify *
13 * it under the terms of the GNU General Public License as published by *
14 * the Free Software Foundation; either version 2 of the License, or *
15 * (at your option) any later version. *
16 * *
17 ***************************************************************************/
18
19
20/**
21 * @file
22 * The header file defining all of Mondo's structures.
23 */
24
25
26/** @def MAX_NOOF_MEDIA The maximum number of media that can be used in any one backup. */
27///* So we can override it in config.h: */
28//#ifndef MAX_NOOF_MEDIA
29#define MAX_NOOF_MEDIA 50
30//#endif
31
32/**
33 * Structure indicating one entry in the mountlist.
34 * There is one mountlist_line for each device we're keeping track of in the mountlist.
35 */
36struct mountlist_line {
37 /**
38 * The name of the device (/dev entry) for this mountlist line. Guaranteed to be unique.
39 */
40 char device[64];
41
42 /**
43 * The mountpoint for this mountlist line. Should be unique.
44 * This can be "raid", for a RAID subdisk, or "lvm", for an LVM PV.
45 */
46 char mountpoint[256];
47
48 /**
49 * The filesystem type of this entry. Examples: ext2, ext3, reiserfs, xfs, swap.
50 * Also, this can be "raid", for a RAID subdisk, or "lvm", for an LVM PV.
51 */
52 char format[64];
53
54 /**
55 * The size in kilobytes of this device. 0 or -1 indicates LVM.
56 */
57 long long size;
58
59 /**
60 * For ext2 and ext3, this is the filesystem label or uuid (if there is one). If not, this should be "".
61 */
62 char label[256];
63
64};
65
66/**
67 * The mountlist structure.
68 * This is used to keep track of a list of all the devices/partitions/formats/sizes/labels in the
69 * system, so we can recreate them in a nuke restore.
70 */
71struct mountlist_itself {
72 /**
73 * Number of entries in the mountlist.
74 */
75 int entries;
76
77 /**
78 * The list of entries, all @p entries of them.
79 */
80 struct mountlist_line el[MAX_MOUNTLIST_ENTRIES];
81};
82
83/**
84 * A structure which holds references to elements of the mountlist.
85 * This is used in resize_drive_proportionately_to_fit_new_drives() to
86 * ensure accurate resizing.
87 */
88struct mountlist_reference {
89 /**
90 * The number of entries in the list of mountlist references.
91 */
92 int entries;
93
94 /**
95 * The array of mountlist_line, allocated on demand.
96 */
97 struct mountlist_line **el;
98};
99
100/**
101 * A line in @p additional_raid_variables.
102 */
103struct raid_var_line {
104 /**
105 * The label for this RAID variable.
106 */
107 char label[64];
108
109 /**
110 * The value for this RAID variable.
111 */
112 char value[64];
113};
114
115/**
116 * The additional RAID variables structure.
117 * This is used to store a list of additional variables to be put in the raidtab,
118 * to allow users to use (new) features of RAID which Mondo doesn't (yet) support directly.
119 * Each @p raid_device_record has one.
120 */
121struct additional_raid_variables {
122 /**
123 * The number of entries in the list.
124 */
125 int entries;
126
127 /**
128 * The list of entries, all @p entries of them.
129 */
130 struct raid_var_line el[MAXIMUM_ADDITIONAL_RAID_VARS];
131};
132
133/**
134 * One disk in a @p list_of_disks.
135 */
136struct s_disk {
137#ifdef __FreeBSD__
138 /**
139 * The name of this disk. If blank it will eventually get filled in automatically.
140 */
141 char name[64];
142#endif
143 /**
144 * The device this entry describes.
145 */
146 char device[64];
147
148 /**
149 * Index number of this entry in the whole disklist.
150 */
151 int index;
152
153 /**
154 * Type of disk.
155 */
156 char type; // ' ' = data (default), S = spare, F = faulty
157
158};
159
160/**
161 * A list of @p s_disk. Every @p raid_device_record has four.
162 */
163struct list_of_disks {
164 /**
165 * The number of entries in the disklist.
166 */
167 int entries;
168
169 /**
170 * The entries themselves, all @p entries of them.
171 */
172 struct s_disk el[MAXIMUM_DISKS_PER_RAID_DEV];
173};
174
175/**
176 * A type of media we're backing up to.
177 */
178typedef enum { none = 0, ///< No type has been set yet.
179 iso, ///< Back up to ISO images.
180 cdr, ///< Back up to recordable CDs (do not erase them).
181 cdrw, ///< Back up to CD-RWs and blank them first.
182 dvd, ///< Back up to DVD+R[W] or DVD-R[W] disks.
183 cdstream, ///< Back up to recordable CDs but treat them like a tape streamer.
184 nfs, ///< Back up to an NFS mount on the local subnet.
185 tape, ///< Back up to tapes.
186 usb, ///< Back up to USB devices.
187 udev ///< Back up to another unsupported device; just send a stream of bytes.
188} t_bkptype;
189
190/**
191 * A type of file in the catalog of recent archives.
192 */
193typedef enum { other, ///< Some other kind of file.
194 fileset, ///< An afioball (fileset), optionally compressed.
195 biggieslice ///< A slice of a biggiefile, optionally compressed.
196} t_archtype;
197
198/**
199 * A type of file in the catalog of recent archives.
200 */
201typedef enum {
202 nuke = 0, /// Nuke mode
203 interactive, /// Interactive mode
204 compare, /// Compare mode
205 mbr, /// MBR mode
206 isoonly, /// ISO mode
207 isonuke, /// ISO+Nuke mode
208} t_restore_mode;
209
210
211#ifdef __FreeBSD__
212
213struct vinum_subdisk {
214 char which_device[64];
215};
216
217struct vinum_plex {
218 int raidlevel;
219 int stripesize;
220 int subdisks;
221 struct vinum_subdisk sd[MAXIMUM_RAID_DEVS];
222};
223
224struct vinum_volume {
225 char volname[64];
226 int plexes;
227 struct vinum_plex plex[9];
228};
229
230struct raidlist_itself {
231 int entries;
232 struct list_of_disks spares;
233 struct list_of_disks disks;
234 struct vinum_volume el[MAXIMUM_RAID_DEVS];
235};
236
237#else
238
239 /**
240 * A RAID device in the raidlist.
241 */
242struct raid_device_record {
243 /**
244 * The name of the RAID device (e.g. /dev/md0).
245 */
246 char raid_device[64];
247
248 /**
249 * The RAID level (-1 to 5) we're using.
250 */
251 int raid_level;
252
253 /**
254 * Whether the disk has a persistent superblock.
255 */
256 int persistent_superblock;
257
258 /**
259 * The chunk size of this RAID device.
260 */
261 int chunk_size;
262
263 /**
264 * The parity algorithm of this RAID device. (RAID5 only)
265 */
266 int parity; // 0=left-asymmetric, 1=right-asymmetric, 2=left-symmetric, 3=right-symmetric
267
268 /**
269 * A list of the disks to use for storing data.
270 */
271 struct list_of_disks data_disks;
272
273 /**
274 * A list of the disks to use as "hot spares" in case one dies.
275 */
276 struct list_of_disks spare_disks;
277
278 /**
279 * A list of the disks to use for storing parity information.
280 */
281 struct list_of_disks parity_disks;
282
283 /**
284 * A list of the disks in this RAID device that have failed\. Rare.
285 */
286 struct list_of_disks failed_disks;
287
288 /**
289 * The additional RAID variables for this device.
290 */
291 struct additional_raid_variables additional_vars;
292
293 /**
294 * Resync progress for this device.
295 */
296 int progress;
297};
298
299 /**
300 * The list of RAID devices.
301 * This is intended to be used along with the mountlist, and it can be
302 * directly loaded from/saved to raidtab format.
303 */
304struct raidlist_itself {
305 /**
306 * The number of entries in the list.
307 */
308 int entries;
309
310 /**
311 * The RAID devices in the raidlist, all @p entries of them.
312 */
313 struct raid_device_record el[MAXIMUM_RAID_DEVS];
314};
315
316#endif
317
318/**
319 * The backup information structure.
320 *
321 * This is the central structure to all the activity going on inside Mondo.
322 * It is passed to almost every function that is not just a helper, even those
323 * which only use one variable of it, because it is useful keeping all the information
324 * together in one place. The usage of particular fields in the bkpinfo is marked in
325 * function documentation, but it is best to fill out as many fields as apply, because
326 * that function may in turn pass the bkpinfo to other functions which use other fields.
327 *
328 * To fill out the bkpinfo first call init_bkpinfo() and pre_param_configuration(). Then set
329 * the backup-specific parameters (see mondo/mondoarchive/mondo-cli.c-\>process_switches for
330 * an example). After that, you should call post_param_configuration() to set some final
331 * parameters based on those you have already set. Failure to do the last step will result in
332 * extremely strange and hard-to-track errors in chop_filelist(), since optimal_set_size is 0.
333 */
334struct s_bkpinfo {
335 /**
336 * The device we're backing up to.
337 * If backup_media_type is @b cdr, @b cdrw, or @b cdstream, this should be the SCSI node (e.g. 0,1,0).
338 * If backup_media_type is @b dvd, @b tape, @b usb or @b udev, this should be a /dev entry.
339 * If backup_media_type is anything else, this should be blank.
340 */
341 char *media_device;
342
343 /**
344 * An array containing the sizes of each media in our backup set, in MB.
345 * For example, media 1's size would be stored in media_size[1].
346 * Element 0 is unused.
347 * If the size should be autodetected, make it -1 (preferable) or 0.
348 * @bug This should probably be only one variable, not an array.
349 */
350 long media_size[MAX_NOOF_MEDIA + 1];
351
352 /**
353 * The boot loader that is installed. Available choices are:
354 * - 'G' for GRUB
355 * - 'L' for LILO
356 * - 'E' for ELILO
357 * - (FreeBSD only) 'B' for boot0
358 * - (FreeBSD only) 'D' for dangerously dedicated
359 * - 'R' for Raw
360 * - 'U' for Unknown or None
361 *
362 * The function which_boot_loader() can help you set this.
363 */
364 char boot_loader;
365
366 /**
367 * The boot device on which @p boot_loader is installed.
368 * This is a bit difficult to autodetect; you may want
369 * to take truncate_to_drive_name() of where_is_root_mounted().
370 */
371 char *boot_device;
372
373 /**
374 * The compression program to use. Currently supported
375 * choices are lzop and bzip2; gzip may also work. This is ignored if
376 * compression_level is 0.
377 */
378 char *zip_exe;
379
380 /**
381 * The extension your compression program uses. lzop uses lzo, bzip uses
382 * bz2, gzip uses gz, lzma uses lzma etc. Do not include the dot.
383 */
384 char *zip_suffix;
385
386 /**
387 * Devices to back up as biggiefiles.
388 *
389 * This is useful for backing up NTFS partitions.
390 * @c ntfsclone is used to back up only the used sectors, so the space tradeoff is not bad.
391 * However, several caveats apply to such a partition:
392 * - It must not be mounted during the backup
393 * - It must be in a format that ntfsclone knows how to handle, i.e. NTFS
394 * - It cannot be verified during the verify or compare phase
395 * - It may not be resized or selectively restored at restore-time (all or nothing)
396 *
397 * This is a useful feature, but use at your own risk.
398 */
399 char *image_devs;
400
401 /**
402 * The compression level (1-9) to use. 0 disables compression.
403 */
404 int compression_level;
405
406 /**
407 * If TRUE, then use @c lzop to compress data.
408 * This is used mainly in estimates. The backup/restore may or may
409 * not work if you do not set this. You should also set @p zip_exe
410 * and @p zip_suffix.
411 */
412 bool use_lzo;
413
414 /**
415 * If TRUE, then use @c gzip to compress data.
416 * This is used mainly in estimates. The backup/restore may or may
417 * not work if you do not set this. You should also set @p zip_exe
418 * and @p zip_suffix.
419 */
420 bool use_gzip;
421
422/**
423 * If TRUE, then use @c lzma to compress data.
424 * This is used mainly in estimates. The backup/restore may or may
425 * not work if you do not set this. You should also set @p zip_exe
426 * and @p zip_suffix.
427 */
428 bool use_lzma;
429
430 /**
431 * If TRUE, then we should verify a backup.
432 */
433 bool verify_data;
434
435 /**
436 * If TRUE, then we should back up some data.
437 */
438 bool backup_data;
439
440 /**
441 * If TRUE, then we should restore some data.
442 */
443 bool restore_data;
444
445
446 /**
447 * If TRUE, then we should backup/restore using star, not afio
448 */
449 bool use_star;
450
451
452 /**
453 * Size of internal block reads/writes
454 */
455 long internal_tape_block_size;
456
457 /**
458 * If TRUE, we're making a CD that will autonuke without confirmation when booted.
459 */
460 bool disaster_recovery;
461
462 /**
463 * The directory we're backing up to.
464 * If backup_media_type is @b iso, then this is that directory.
465 * If backup_media_type is anything else, this is ignored.
466 */
467 char *isodir;
468
469/**
470 * The prefix to put in front of media number
471 * If backup_media_type is @b iso, then this is the prefix for the filename
472 * If backup_media_type is anything else, this is ignored.
473 */
474 char *prefix;
475
476 /**
477 * The scratch directory to use.
478 * This is the "stage" that the CD image is made directly from.
479 * As such, it needs to be at least as large as the largest CD/DVD/ISO.
480 */
481 char *scratchdir;
482
483 /**
484 * The temp directory to use.
485 * This is where filesets are stored by the archival threads before
486 * the main thread moves them to the scratchdir. You don't need a lot
487 * of space here.
488 */
489 char *tmpdir;
490
491 /**
492 * The optimal size for each fileset. This is set automatically in
493 * post_param_configuration() based on your @p backup_media_type; you
494 * needn't set it yourself.
495 */
496 long optimal_set_size;
497
498 /**
499 * The type of media we're backing up to.
500 */
501 t_bkptype backup_media_type;
502
503 /**
504 * Whether we should use a premade filelist or generate our own.
505 * If TRUE, then we generate our own filelist from the directories in @p include_paths.
506 * If FALSE, then we use the filelist whose name is specified in @p include_paths.
507 */
508 bool make_filelist;
509
510 /**
511 * Directories to back up, or (if !make_filelist) the filelist to use.
512 * In the former case, multiple directories should be separated by spaces.
513 * If you do nothing, "/" will be used.
514 */
515 char *include_paths;
516
517 /**
518 * Directories to NOT back up. Ignored if make_filelist == FALSE.
519 * Multiple directories should be separated by spaces. /tmp, /proc,
520 * the scratchdir, and the tempdir are automatically excluded.
521 */
522 char *exclude_paths;
523
524 /**
525 * The path to restore files relative to during a restore.
526 * This is useful if you want to extract the files (to test, for example)
527 * without overwriting the old ones. Ignored during a backup.
528 */
529 char *restore_path;
530
531 /**
532 * A command to call BEFORE making an ISO image.
533 */
534 char *call_before_iso;
535
536 /**
537 * A command to call to make an ISO image.
538 */
539 char *call_make_iso;
540
541 /**
542 * A command to call to burn the ISO image.
543 */
544 char *call_burn_iso;
545
546 /**
547 * A command to call AFTER making an ISO image.
548 * BERLIOS: Never initialized in code !!
549 */
550 char *call_after_iso;
551
552 /**
553 * Path to the user's kernel, or "FAILSAFE" or "SUCKS" to use the kernel
554 * included with Mindi.
555 */
556 char *kernel_path;
557
558 /**
559 * The NFS mount to back up to/restore from.
560 * If backup_media_type is not @b nfs, this is ignored.
561 * It must contain a colon, and the server's address should be in dotted-decimal IP
562 * address form. (Domain names will be resolved in post_param_configuration().)
563 */
564 char *nfs_mount;
565
566 /**
567 * The directory, relative to the root of @p nfs_mount, to put
568 * the backups in.
569 */
570 char *nfs_remote_dir;
571
572 /**
573 * The potential user to use for NFS backup
574 */
575 char *nfs_user;
576
577 /**
578 * A tarball containing a program called "usr/bin/post-nuke" that will be run
579 * after nuking the system. If "", do not use a post-nuke tarball.
580 */
581 char *postnuke_tarball;
582
583 /**
584 * If TRUE, then pass cdrecord the argument "blank=fast" to wipe the CDs before
585 * writing to them. This has no effect for DVDs.
586 */
587 bool wipe_media_first;
588
589// patch by Herman Kuster
590 /**
591 * The differential level of this backup. Currently only 0 (full backup) and 1
592 * (files changed since last full backup) are supported.
593 */
594 int differential;
595// end patch
596
597 /**
598 * If TRUE, then don't eject media when backing up or restoring.
599 */
600 bool please_dont_eject;
601
602 /**
603 * The speed of the CD-R[W] drive.
604 */
605 int cdrw_speed;
606
607 /**
608 * If TRUE, then cdrecord will be passed some flags to help compensate for PCs
609 * with eccentric CD-ROM drives. If it has BurnProof technology, or is in a laptop,
610 * it probably falls into this category.
611 */
612 bool manual_cd_tray;
613
614 /**
615 * If TRUE, do not make the first CD bootable. This is dangerous but it saves a minute
616 * or so. It is useful in testing. Use with care.
617 */
618 bool nonbootable_backup;
619
620 /**
621 * If TRUE, make the bootable CD use LILO/ELILO. If FALSE, use isolinux (the default).
622 */
623 bool make_cd_use_lilo;
624
625 /**
626 * If TRUE, make the the tape bootable. If FALSE, normal tape, the default
627 */
628 bool use_obdr;
629
630 /**
631 * Nature of the restore
632 */
633 t_restore_mode restore_mode;
634};
635
636
637
638/**
639 * A node in a directory structure.
640 * Its internals are managed by load_filelist() et al; you only need to keep track of the top node.
641 * @bug My understanding of this structure is horrendously incomplete. Could you please fill in the details?
642 */
643struct s_node {
644 /**
645 * The character this node contains.
646 */
647 char ch;
648
649 /**
650 * The node to the right of this one.
651 */
652 struct s_node *right;
653
654 /**
655 * The node below this one.
656 */
657 struct s_node *down;
658
659 /**
660 * If TRUE, then this node is selected (for restore, for example).
661 */
662 bool selected;
663
664 /**
665 * If TRUE, then we want to see the directories below this one.
666 */
667 bool expanded;
668};
669
670
671
672/**
673 * Information about one file.
674 * This is used as the "zeroth slice" of a biggiefile to be able to recreate
675 * its name, mode, owner, group, mtime, atime, and to be able to verify it in Compare Mode.
676 */
677struct s_filename_and_lstat_info {
678 /**
679 * The filename of the file this structure is describing.
680 */
681 char filename[MAX_STR_LEN];
682
683 /**
684 * The MD5 checksum (32 hex digits) of this file.
685 */
686 char checksum[64];
687
688 /**
689 * Unused; kept for backwards compatibility.
690 */
691 char for_backward_compatibility;
692
693 /**
694 * The stat buffer for this file.
695 * Generated with a call to <tt>lstat(&(struc->properties))</tt> where @p struc
696 * is the @p s_filename_and_lstat_info.
697 */
698 struct stat properties;
699 bool use_ntfsprog;
700};
701
702
703/**
704 * A file with associated severity if it differed in a verify or compare.
705 */
706struct s_filelist_entry {
707 /**
708 * The name of the file.
709 */
710 char filename[MAX_STR_LEN];
711 /**
712 * The severity if the file has changed between the backup and live filesystem.
713 * This is on a scale from 1 to 3, 3 being the most important. File patterns which cause
714 * a severity of 1 are:
715 * - /etc/adjtime
716 * - /etc/mtab
717 * - /var/lib/slocate
718 * - /var/lock
719 * - /var/log
720 * - /var/spool (except /var/spool/mail)
721 * - /var/run
722 * - *~
723 * - *.log
724 * - *cache*
725 * - other temporary or unimportant files
726 *
727 * File patterns which cause a severity of 2 are:
728 * - /var (except /var/lock, /var/log, /var/run, /var/spool)
729 * - /home
730 * - /root/.*
731 * - /var/lib (except /var/lib/slocate, /var/lib/rpm)
732 * - /var/spool/mail
733 *
734 * File patterns which cause a severity of 3 are:
735 * - /etc (except /etc/adjtime, /etc/mtab)
736 * - /root (except /root/.*)
737 * - /usr
738 * - /var/lib/rpm
739 * - Anything else not matched explicitly
740 *
741 * @see severity_of_difference
742 */
743 int severity;
744};
745
746
747/**
748 * A list of @c s_filelist_entry.
749 */
750struct s_filelist {
751 /**
752 * The number of entries in the list.
753 */
754 int entries;
755
756 /**
757 * The entries themselves, all @p entries of them.
758 */
759 struct s_filelist_entry el[ARBITRARY_MAXIMUM];
760};
761
762
763/**
764 * An entry in the tape catalog.
765 */
766struct s_tapecat_entry {
767 /**
768 * The type of archive it is (afioball, slice, or something else).
769 */
770 t_archtype type;
771
772 /**
773 * The filelist number or biggiefile (not slice!) number.
774 */
775 int number;
776
777 /**
778 * The slice number if it's a biggiefile.
779 */
780 long aux;
781
782 /**
783 * The tape position at the point this entry was added.
784 */
785 long long tape_posK;
786
787 /**
788 * The filename of the file cataloged here.
789 */
790 char fname[MAX_TAPECAT_FNAME_LEN + 1];
791};
792
793
794/**
795 * A tape catalog, made of a list of @p s_tapecat_entry.
796 */
797struct s_tapecatalog {
798 /**
799 * The number of entries in the tape catalog.
800 */
801 int entries;
802
803 /**
804 * The entries themselves, all @p entries of them.
805 */
806 struct s_tapecat_entry el[MAX_TAPECATALOG_ENTRIES];
807};
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