From ec187fdcde4125510366f1ad2828229038bd4f98 Mon Sep 17 00:00:00 2001 From: Alexander Batischev Date: Tue, 22 Jun 2021 22:26:01 +0300 Subject: Replace n-dashes with m-dashes Cf. https://gitlab.com/obnam/obnam/-/merge_requests/158#note_605879696 --- obnam.md | 42 +++++++++++++++++++++--------------------- 1 file changed, 21 insertions(+), 21 deletions(-) (limited to 'obnam.md') diff --git a/obnam.md b/obnam.md index 7fa4a19..181b2c2 100644 --- a/obnam.md +++ b/obnam.md @@ -574,45 +574,45 @@ use [lstat(2)][] instead. The metadata is stored in an [inode][]. Both variants return a C `struct stat`. On Linux, it has the following fields: -* `st_dev` – id of the block device containing file system where +* `st_dev` — id of the block device containing file system where the file is; this encodes the major and minor device numbers - this field can't be restored as such, it is forced by the operating system for the file system to which files are restored - Obnam stores it so that hard links can be restored, see below -* `st_ino` – the inode number for the file +* `st_ino` — the inode number for the file - this field can't be restored as such, it is forced by the file system whan the restored file is created - Obnam stores it so that hard links can be restored, see below -* `st_nlink` – number of hard links referring to the inode +* `st_nlink` — number of hard links referring to the inode - this field can't be restored as such, it is maintained by the operating system when hard links are created - Obnam stores it so that hard links can be restored, see below -* `st_mode` – file type and permissions +* `st_mode` — file type and permissions - stored and restored -* `st_uid` – the numeric id of the user account owning the file +* `st_uid` — the numeric id of the user account owning the file - stored - restored if restore is running as root, otherwise not restored -* `st_gid` – the numeric id of the group owning the file +* `st_gid` — the numeric id of the group owning the file - stored - restored if restore is running as root, otherwise not restored -* `st_rdev` – the device this inode represents +* `st_rdev` — the device this inode represents - not stored? -* `st_size` – size or length of the file in bytes +* `st_size` — size or length of the file in bytes - stored - restored implicitly be re-creating the origtinal contents -* `st_blksize` – preferred block size for efficient I/O +* `st_blksize` — preferred block size for efficient I/O - not stored? -* `st_blocks` – how many blocks of 512 bytes are actually +* `st_blocks` — how many blocks of 512 bytes are actually allocated to store this file's contents - see below for discussion about sparse files - not stored by Obnam -* `st_atime` – timestamp of latest access +* `st_atime` — timestamp of latest access - stored and restored - On Linux, split into two integer fields -* `st_mtime` – timestamp of latest modification +* `st_mtime` — timestamp of latest modification - stored and restored - On Linux, split into two integer fields -* `st_ctime` – timestamp of latest inode change +* `st_ctime` — timestamp of latest inode change - On Linux, split into two integer fields - stored - not restored @@ -788,18 +788,18 @@ Chunks consist of arbitrary binary data, a small amount of metadata, and an identifier chosen by the server. The chunk metadata is a JSON object, consisting of the following fields: -* `sha256` – the SHA256 checksum of the chunk contents as +* `sha256` — the SHA256 checksum of the chunk contents as determined by the client - this MUST be set for every chunk, including generation chunks - the server allows for searching based on this field - note that the server doesn't verify this in any way, to pave way for future client-side encryption of the chunk data -* `generation` – set to `true` if the chunk represents a +* `generation` — set to `true` if the chunk represents a generation - may also be set to `false` or `null` or be missing entirely - the server allows for listing chunks where this field is set to `true` -* `ended` – the timestamp of when the backup generation ended +* `ended` — the timestamp of when the backup generation ended - note that the server doesn't process this in any way, the contents is entirely up to the client - may be set to the empty string, `null`, or be missing entirely @@ -814,14 +814,14 @@ that can be put into HTTP headers. The server has the following API for managing chunks: -* `POST /chunks` – store a new chunk (and its metadata) on the +* `POST /chunks` — store a new chunk (and its metadata) on the server, return its randomly chosen identifier -* `GET /chunks/` – retrieve a chunk (and its metadata) from +* `GET /chunks/` — retrieve a chunk (and its metadata) from the server, given a chunk identifier -* `GET /chunks?sha256=xyzzy` – find chunks on the server whose +* `GET /chunks?sha256=xyzzy` — find chunks on the server whose metadata indicates their contents has a given SHA256 checksum -* `GET /chunks?generation=true` – find generation chunks -* `GET /chunks?data=True` – find chunks with file data +* `GET /chunks?generation=true` — find generation chunks +* `GET /chunks?data=True` — find chunks with file data - this is meant for testing only - it excludes generation chunks, and chunks used to store the generation's SQLite file -- cgit v1.2.1