13-10 Dell PowerVault 720N, 740N, and 760N System Administrator and Command Reference Guide
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The subtree containing the directory to be restored was backed up to two tapes:
restore xf rst0a /test
In this command, you must specify the tape device for the first tape; it is rst0a in
this example. This is necessary because restore needs to read information about
the directory structure of the subtree from the first tape before restoring the data.
The filer then displays the following messages to let you specify the tape devices con-
taining the multiple tape volumes. When the filer prompts you for the tape volume
number, start with the last tape volume, as shown in this example:
You have not read any tapes yet.
Unless you know which volume your file(s) are on you should start with
the last volume and work towards the first.
Specify next volume #:
2
Mount tape volume 2
Enter “none” if there are no more tapes
otherwise enter tape name (default: rst0a)
rst1a
You have read volumes: 2
Specify next volume #:
1
Mount tape volume 1
Enter “none” if there are no more tapes
otherwise enter tape name (default: rst1a)
rst0a
After prompting for the tape devices, the filer also displays the following question:
set owner/mode for '.'? [yn]
y
To keep the original owner and permission modes for the restored files and directo-
ries, enter y.

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The following example lists the names of all files backed up to rst0a:
restore tf rst0a
The following example lists the names of all files in the /vol/vol0/home directory on
rst0a after you backed up the /vol/vol0 volume:
restore tf rst0a /home
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Restart the restore command if data recovery is interrupted for reasons such as a
power outage or a Ctrl-C inadvertently entered by someone on the filer console.
When you restart the restore command, the filer restarts data recovery from the