DB_DUMP
NAME SYNOPSIS DESCRIPTION OUTPUT FORMATS ENVIRONMENT VARIABLES SEE ALSO
db_dump - the DB database dump utility
db_dump [__-d__? [__-f output__? db_file db_dump [__-p__? [__-f output__? [__-h home__? db_file
The db_dump utility reads the database file db_file and writes it to the standard output using a portable flat-text format understood by the db_load(1) utility. The argument db_file must be a file produced using the DB library functions.
The options are as follows:
-d
Dump the specified database in a format helpful for debugging the DB library routines. The output format of the -d option is not standard and may change, without notice, between releases of the DB library.
-f
Write to the specified file instead of to the standard output.
-h
Specify a home directory for the database.
-p
If characters in either the key or data items are printing characters (as defined by isprint(3)), use printing characters in file to represent them. This option permits users to use standard text editors to modify the contents of databases.
Note, different systems may have different notions as to what characters are ``printing'', and databases dumped in this manner may be less portable to external systems.
Dumping and reloading hash databases that use user-defined hash functions will result in new databases that use the default hash function. While using the default hash function may not be optimal for the new database, it will continue to work correctly.
Dumping and reloading btree databases that use user-defined prefix or comparison functions will result in new databases that use the default prefix and comparison functions. In this case, it is quite likely that the database will be damaged beyond repair permitting neither record storage or retrieval.
The only available workaround for either case is to modify the sources for the db_load(1) utility to load the database using the correct hash, prefix and comparison functions.
The db_dump utility exits 0 on success, and ''
There are two output formats used by db_dump.
In both output formats, the first few lines of the output contain header information describing the underlying access method, filesystem page size and other bookkeeping information. This information is output in ``name=value pairs, where ``name may be any of the keywords listed in the db_load(1) manual page, and ``value will be its value. While this header information can be edited before the database is reloaded, there is rarely any reason to do so, as all of this information can be overridden by command-line arguments to db_load''.
Following the header information are the key/data pairs from the database. If the database being dumped is of type btree or hash, the output will be paired lines of text, where the first line of the pair is the key item, and the second line of the pair is its corresponding data item. If the database being dumped is of type recno, the output will be lines of text, where each line is a new data item for the database.
If the -p option was specified, each output line will consist of single characters representing any characters from the database that were ``printing, and backslash (``) escaped characters for any that were not. Backslash characters appearing in the output mean one of two things: if the backslash character precedes another backslash character, it means that a literal backslash character occurred in the key or data item. If the backslash character precedes any other character, the next two characters should be interpreted as hexadecimal specification of a single character, e.g., ``0a'' is a newline character in the ASCII character set.
If the -p option was not specified, each output line will consist of paired hexadecimal values, e.g., the line ``726f6f74 is the string ``root in the ASCII character set.
In both output formats, a single newline character ends both the key and data items.
The following environment variables affect the execution of db_dump:
DB_HOME
If the -h option is not specified and the environment variable DB_HOME is set, it is used as the path of the database home, as described in db_appinit(3).
The DB library is a family of groups of functions that provides a modular programming interface to transactions and record-oriented file access. The library includes support for transactions, locking, logging and file page caching, as well as various indexed access methods. Many of the functional groups (e.g., the file page caching functions) are useful independent of the other DB functions, although some functional groups are explicitly based on other functional groups (e.g., transactions and logging).
db_archive(1), db_checkpoint(1), db_deadlock(1), db_dump(1), db_load(1), db_recover(1), db_stat(1),
One page links to db_dump185(1):