SYNOPSIS
bup damage [-n count] [-s maxsize] [--percent pct] [-S seed] [--equal] <filenames...>
DESCRIPTION
Use bup damage to deliberately destroy blocks in a .pack or .idx file (from .bup/objects/pack) to test the recovery features of bup-fsck(1) or other programs.
THIS PROGRAM IS EXTREMELY DANGEROUS AND WILL DESTROY YOUR DATA
bup damage is primarily useful for automated or manual tests of data recovery tools, to reassure yourself that the tools actually work.
OPTIONS
- -n, --num=numblocks
-
the number of separate blocks to damage in each file (default 10).
Note that it's possible for more than one damaged segment to fall in
the same bup-fsck(1) recovery block, so you might not damage
as many recovery blocks as you expect.
If this is a problem, use --equal.
- -s, --size=maxblocksize
-
the maximum size, in bytes, of each damaged block (default 1 unless
--percent is specified).
Note that because of the way bup-fsck(1) works, a multi-byte
block could fall on the boundary between two recovery blocks, and thus
damaging two separate recovery blocks.
In small files, it's also possible for a damaged block to be larger
than a recovery block.
If these issues might be a problem, you should use the default damage
size of one byte.
- --percent=maxblockpercent
-
the maximum size, in percent of the original file, of each damaged
block.
If both --size and --percent are given, the
maximum block size is the minimum of the two restrictions.
You can use this to ensure that a given block will never damage more
than one or two git-fsck(1) recovery blocks.
- -S, --seed=randomseed
-
seed the random number generator with the given value.
If you use this option, your tests will be repeatable, since the damaged
block offsets, sizes, and contents will be the same every time.
By default, the random numbers are different every time (so you can run
tests in a loop and repeatedly test with different damage each time).
- --equal
-
instead of choosing random offsets for each damaged block, space the
blocks equally throughout the file, starting at offset 0.
If you also choose a correct maximum block size, this can guarantee that
any given damage block never damages more than one git-fsck(1)
recovery block.
(This is also guaranteed if you use -s 1.)
EXAMPLES
-
# make a backup in case things go horribly wrong cp -pPR ~/.bup/objects/pack ~/bup-packs.bak # generate recovery blocks for all packs bup fsck -g # deliberately damage the packs bup damage -n 10 -s 1 -S 0 ~/.bup/objects/pack/*.{pack,idx} # recover from the damage bup fsck -r
BUP
Part of the bup(1) suite.