You are viewing an old version of this page. View the current version.

Compare with Current View Page History

Version 1 Next »

Contents



Overview
Identifying the Data to Restore Importing the Archived Data


Overview

Note
The archiving procedure that is described in this article only works with MySQL databases. See Exporting and Importing Your DataStore for information on exporting and importing data into Oracle and SQL databases.
This article describes how to retrieve DataStore data that was automatically archived by Uptime Infrastructure Monitor, based on your configured archive policy.
Note
Archived data can only be restored by the same version of Uptime Infrastructure Monitor that was used to create it.
You can configure Uptime Infrastructure Monitor to selectively archive data in the DataStore. Each month, Uptime Infrastructure Monitor checks the DataStore to determine if the data is older than the specified archive period. The archived data is moved into a directory named archives under the base installation directory.
If Uptime Infrastructure Monitor discovers data that is older than the archive period, the data is copied out of the database and saved as a compressed XML file. The name of this file consists of the type of data that was archived and the date on which the data was archived. For example, a file containing file system capacity data that was archived on June 12, 2010 has the following file name:
performance_fscap_2010-06-12.xml.gz

Identifying the Data to Restore

Before importing your data, identify the files that contain the information that you want to import. Uptime Infrastructure Monitor creates the following archives:

Type of Data

Archive Filename

Database Table(s) Archived

CPU Statistics

performance_cpu_<date>.xml.gz

performance_cpu

Overall CPU Statistics

performance_aggregate_<date>.xml.gz

performance_aggregate

NRM Statistics

performance_nrm_<date>.xml.gz

performance_nrm (if you are running Novell NRM in your environment)

Multi-CPU Statistics

performance_cpu_<date>.xml.gz

performance_cpu

Detailed Process Statistics

performance_psinfo_<date>.xml.gz

performance_psinfo

Disk Performance Statistics

performance_disk_<date>.xml.gz

performance_disk

File System Capacity Statistics

performance_fscap_<date>.xml.gz

performance_fscap

Network Statistics

performance_network_<date>.xml.gz

performance_network

User Information Statistics

performance_who_<date>.xml.gz

performance_who

Volume Manager Statistics

performance_vxvol_<date>.xml.gz

performance_vxvol

Retained Data

erdc_int_data_<date>.xml.gz erdc_decimal_data_<date>.xml.gz erdc_string_data_<date>.xml.gz

erdc_int_data erdc_decimal_data erdc_string_data


Importing the Archived Data

When you have identified the archived data that you want to import into the database, run the following commands to import the archived data:

  1. At the command line, navigate to the following directory: On Linux and Solaris: /usr/local/uptime/scripts/.

  2. On Windows: C:\Program Files\uptime software\uptime\scripts.
  3. Run the restorearchive command with one or more of the following options:

-f <filename>
Imports a single file (specify the full path to the file name).
-d <date>
Imports all files with the specified date (in YYYY-MM-DD format).
-D <directory>
The directory containing the archived files. Note that you must specify this option when using the -d option.
-c <configFile>
The full path to the uptime.conf file.
For example, enter the following command to import all data archived on September 23, 2010 which is located in the default directory for archived data:
restorearchive -d 2010-09-23 -d /usr/local/uptime/archives/ -c /usr/local/uptime/uptime.conf

  • No labels