1 | .TH VOL 1
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2 | .SH NAME
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3 | vol \- split input on or combine output from several volumes
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4 | .SH SYNOPSIS
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5 | .B vol
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6 | .RB [ \-rw1 ]
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7 | .RB [ \-b
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8 | .IR blocksize ]
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9 | .RB [ \-m
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10 | .IR multiple ]
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11 | .RI [ size ]
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12 | .I device
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13 | .SH DESCRIPTION
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14 | .B Vol
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15 | either reads a large input stream from standard input and distributes it
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16 | over several volumes or combines volumes and sends them to
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17 | standard output. The size of the volumes is determined automatically if
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18 | the device supports this, but may be specified before the
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19 | argument naming the device if automated detection is not possible or if
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20 | only part of the physical volume is used. The direction of the data is
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21 | automatically determined by checking whether the input or output of
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22 | .B vol
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23 | is a file or pipe. Use the
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24 | .B \-r
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25 | or
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26 | .B \-w
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27 | flag if you want to specify the direction explicitly, in shell scripts
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28 | for instance.
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29 | .PP
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30 | .B Vol
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31 | waits for each new volume to be inserted, typing return makes it continue.
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32 | If no size is explicitely given then the size of the device is determined
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33 | each time before it is read or written, so it is possible to mix floppies
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34 | of different sizes. If the size cannot be determined (probably a tape) then
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35 | the device is assumed to be infinitely big.
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36 | .B Vol
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37 | can be used both for block or character devices. It will buffer the data
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38 | and use a block size appropriate for fixed or variable block sized tapes.
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39 | .PP
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40 | .B Vol
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41 | reads or writes 8192 bytes to block devices, usually floppies. Character
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42 | devices are read or written using a multiple of 512 bytes. This multiple
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43 | has an upper limit of 32767 bytes (16-bit machine), 64 kb (32-bit), or even
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44 | 1 Mb (32-bit VM). The last partial write to a character device is padded
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45 | with zeros to the block size. If a character device is a tape device that
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46 | responds to the
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47 | .BR mtio (4)
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48 | status call then the reported tape block size will be used as the smallest
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49 | unit. If the tape is a variable block length device then it is read or
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50 | written like a block device, 8192 bytes at the time, with a minimum unit
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51 | of one byte.
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52 | .PP
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53 | All sizes may be suffixed by the letters
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54 | .BR M ,
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55 | .BR k ,
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56 | .BR b
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57 | or
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58 | .BR w
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59 | to multiply the number by mega, kilo, block (512), or word (2). The volume
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60 | size by default in kilobytes if there is no suffix.
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61 | .SH OPTIONS
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62 | .TP
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63 | .B \-rw
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64 | Explicitly specify reading or writing. Almost mandatory in scripts.
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65 | .TP
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66 | .B \-1
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67 | Just one volume, start immediately.
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68 | .TP
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69 | .BI \-b " blocksize"
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70 | Specify the device block size.
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71 | .TP
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72 | .BI \-m " multiple"
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73 | Specify the maximum read or write size of multiple blocks. The
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74 | .B \-b
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75 | and
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76 | .B \-m
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77 | options allow one to modify the block size assumptions that are made above.
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78 | These assumptions are
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79 | .B "\-b 1 \-m 8192"
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80 | for block devices or variable length tapes, and
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81 | .B "\-b 512 \-m 65536"
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82 | for character devices (32 bit machine.) These options will not override the
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83 | tape block size found out with an
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84 | .BR mtio (4)
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85 | call. The multiple may be larger then the default if
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86 | .B vol
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87 | can allocate the memory required.
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88 | .SH EXAMPLES
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89 | To back up a tree to floppies as a compressed tarfile:
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90 | .PP
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91 | .RS
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92 | tar cf \- . | compress | vol /dev/fd0
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93 | .RE
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94 | .PP
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95 | To restore a tree from 720 kb images from possibly bigger floppies:
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96 | .PP
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97 | .RS
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98 | vol 720 /dev/fd0 | uncompress | tar xfp \-
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99 | .RE
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100 | .PP
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101 | Read or write a device with 1024 byte blocks:
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102 | .PP
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103 | .RS
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104 | vol \-b 1k /dev/rsd15
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105 | .RE
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106 | .PP
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107 | Read or write a variable block length tape using blocking factor 20 as used
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108 | by default by many
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109 | .BR tar (1)
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110 | commands:
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111 | .PP
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112 | .RS
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113 | vol \-m 20b /dev/rst5
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114 | .RE
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115 | .PP
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116 | Note that
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117 | .B \-m
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118 | was used in the last example. It sets the size to use to read or write,
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119 | .B \-b
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120 | sets the basic block size that may be written in multiples.
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121 | .SH "SEE ALSO"
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122 | .BR dd (1),
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123 | .BR tar (1),
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124 | .BR mt (1),
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125 | .BR mtio (4).
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