With this change it is possible to dump a folder to stdout as a tar. The
It can be used just like the normal dump command:
`./restic dump fa97e6e1 "/data/test/" > test.tar`
Where `/data/test/` is a a folder instead of a file.
This commit is a followup to the addition of the --group-by flag for the
snapshots command. Adding the grouping code there introduced duplicated
code (the forget command also does grouping). This commit refactors
boths sides to only use shared code.
This commit moves the code which is used to group snapshots in the
snapshots command into an own function to deduplicate code shared by the
snapshots command and forget command.
This commit will add json tags to the structs for json output, so all
json variables of the snapshot command output are lowercase and
snake-case.
Furthermore it adds some internal code changes based on the feedback in
the pull request #2087.
This commit adds a --group-by option to the snapshots command, which
behaves similar to the --group-by option of forget. Valid option values
are "host, paths, tags". If this option is given, the output of
snapshots will be divided into multiple tables, according to the value
given (i.e. "host" will create a table of snapshots for each host, that
has a snapshot in the list). Also the JSON output will be grouped.
The default behavior (when --group-by is not given) has not changed.
More to this discussion can be found in issue #2037.
Reading the password from non-terminal stdin used io.ReadFull with a
byte slice of length 1000.
We are now using a Scanner to read one line of input, independent of its
length.
Additionally, if stdin is not a terminal, the password is read only
once instead of twice (in an effort to detect typos).
Fixes#2203
Signed-off-by: Peter Schultz <peter.schultz@classmarkets.com>
This commit changes the signatures for repository.LoadAndDecrypt and
utils.LoadAll to allow passing in a []byte as the buffer to use. This
buffer is enlarged as needed, and returned back to the caller for
further use.
In later commits, this allows reducing allocations by reusing a buffer
for multiple calls, e.g. in a worker function.
This patch makes it more explicit what is meant by the CACHEDIR.TAG file.
It not only has to have this particular name, but also a specific content
(described at http://bford.info/cachedir/spec.html), which is not immediately
obvious to the user.
The `s3.storage-class` option can be passed to restic (using `-o`) to
specify the storage class to be used for S3 objects created by restic.
The storage class is passed as-is to S3, so it needs to be understood by
the API. On AWS, it can be one of `STANDARD`, `STANDARD_IA`,
`ONEZONE_IA`, `INTELLIGENT_TIERING` and `REDUCED_REDUNDANCY`. If
unspecified, the default storage class is used (`STANDARD` on AWS).
You can mix storage classes in the same bucket, and the setting isn't
stored in the restic repository, so be sure to specify it with each
command that writes to S3.
Closes#706