Restores a Sybase IQ database backup from one or more archive devices.
Syntax 1
RESTORE DATABASE 'db_file' FROM 'archive_device' [ FROM 'archive_device' ]… … [ CATALOG ONLY ] … [ KEY key_spec ] … [ [ RENAME logical-dbfile-name TO 'new-dbspace-path']... | VERIFY [ COMPATIBLE ] ]
RESTORE DATABASE 'database-name' [ restore-option ... ] FROM 'archive_device' ...
READONLY dbspace-or-file [, … ] KEY key_spec RENAME file-name TO new-file-path ...
RESTORE DATABASE 'iqdemo' FROM '/dev/rmt/0n' FROM '/dev/rmt/2n'
RESTORE DATABASE 'marvin' FROM 'marvin_bkup_file1' FROM 'marvin_bkup_file2' FROM 'marvin_bkup_file3' KEY 'is!seCret'
Given this BACKUP statement:
BACKUP DATABASE READONLY DBSPACES iq_main TO '/system1/IQ15/demo/backup/iqmain'
The dbspace iq_main can be restored using either of these RESTORE statements:
RESTORE DATABASE 'iqdemo' READONLY DBSPACES iq_main FROM '/system1/IQ15/demo/backup/iqmain'
or
RESTORE DATABASE 'iqdemo' FROM '/system1/IQ15/demo/backup/iqmain'
A selective backup backs up either all READWRITE dbspaces or specific read-only dbspaces or dbfiles. Selective backups are a subtype of either full or incremental backups.
You can take a READONLY selective backup and restore all objects from this backup (as in the second example above).
You can take an all-inclusive backup and restore read-only files and dbspaces selectively.
You can take a READONLY selective backup of multiple read-only files and dbspaces and restore a subset of read-only files and dbspaces selectively. See “Permissions.”
You can restore the read-only backup, only if the read-only files have not changed since the backup. Once the dbspace is made read-write again, the read-only backup is invalid, unless you restore the entire read-write portion of the database back to the point at which the read-only dbspace was read-only.
RESTORE DATABASE <database_name.db> FROM '/sys1/dump/dmp1' FROM '/sys1/dump/dmp2' VERIFY
When you use validate, specify a different database name to avoid Database name not unique errors. If the original database is iqdemo.db, for example, use iq_demo_new.db instead:
RESTORE DATABASE iqdemo_new.db FROM iqdemo.bkp VERIFY
The RESTORE command requires exclusive access by the DBA to the database. This exclusive access is achieved by setting the -gd switch to DBA, which is the default when you start the server engine.
Issue the RESTORE command before you start the database (you must be connected to the utility_db database). Once you finish specifying RESTORE commands for the type of backup, that database is ready to be used. The database is left in the state that existed at the end of the first implicit CHECKPOINT of the last backup you restored. You can now specify a START DATABASE to allow other users to access the restored database.
The maximum size for a complete RESTORE command, including all clauses, is 32KB.
When restoring to a raw device, make sure the device is large enough to hold the dbspace you are restoring. IQ RESTORE checks the raw device size and returns an error, if the raw device is not large enough to restore the dbspace. See System Administration Guide: Volume 1 > Data Backup, Recovery, and Archiving > Restoring Your Databases > The RESTORE Statement > Moving Database Files > Restoring to a Raw Device.
BACKUP allows you to specify full or incremental backups. There are two kinds of incremental backups. INCREMENTAL backs up only those blocks that have changed and committed since the last backup of any type (incremental or full). INCREMENTAL SINCE FULL backs up all the blocks that have changed since the last full backup. If a RESTORE of a full backup is followed by one or more incremental backups (of either type), no modifications to the database are allowed between successive RESTORE commands. This rule prevents a RESTORE from incremental backups on a database in need of crash recovery, or one that has been modified. You can still overwrite such a database with a RESTORE from a full backup.
Before starting a full restore, you must delete two files: the catalog store file (default name dbname.db) and the transaction log file (default name dbname.log).
If you restore an incremental backup, RESTORE ensures that backup media sets are accessed in the proper order. This order restores the last full backup tape set first, then the first incremental backup tape set, then the next most recent set, and so forth, until the most recent incremental backup tape set. If the DBA produced an INCREMENTAL SINCE FULL backup, only the full backup tape set and the most recent INCREMENTAL SINCE FULL backup tape set is required; however, if there is an INCREMENTAL backup made since the INCREMENTAL SINCE FULL backup, it also must be applied.
Sybase IQ ensures that the restoration order is appropriate, or it displays an error. Any other errors that occur during the restore results in the database being marked corrupt and unusable. To clean up a corrupt database, do a RESTORE from a full backup, followed by any additional incremental backups. Since the corruption probably happened with one of those backups, you might need to ignore a later backup set and use an earlier set.
To restore read-only files or dbspaces from an archive backup, the database may be running and the administrator may connect to the database when issuing the RESTORE statement. The read-only file pathname need not match the names in the backup, if they otherwise match the database system table information.
The database must not be running to restore a FULL, INCREMENTAL SINCE FULL, or INCREMENTAL restore of either a READWRITE FILES ONLY or an all files backup. The database may or may not be running to restore a backup of read-only files. When restoring specific files in a read-only dbspace, the dbspace must be offline. When restoring read-only files in a read-write dbspace, the dbspace can be online or offline. The restore closes the read-only files, restores the files, and reopens those files at the end of the restore.
You can use selective restore to restore a read-only dbspace, as long as the dbspace is still in the same read-only state.
FROM—Specifies the name of the archive_device from which you are restoring, delimited with single quotation marks. If you are using multiple archive devices, specify them using separate FROM clauses. A comma-separated list is not allowed. Archive devices must be distinct. The number of FROM clauses determines the amount of parallelism Sybase IQ attempts with regard to input devices.
The backup/restore API DLL implementation lets you specify arguments to pass to the DLL when opening an archive device. For third-party implementations, the archive_device string has this format:
'DLLidentifier::vendor_specific_information'
A specific example is:
'spsc::workorder=12;volname=ASD002'
The archive_device string length can be up to 1023 bytes. The DLLidentifier portion must be 1 to 30 bytes in length and can contain only alphanumeric and underscore characters. The vendor_specific_information portion of the string is passed to the third-party implementation without checking its contents.
For the Sybase implementation of the backup/restore API, you need not specify information other than the tape device name or file name. However, if you use disk devices, you must specify the same number of archive devices on the RESTORE as given on the backup; otherwise, you may have a different number of restoration devices than the number used to perform the backup. A specific example of an archive device for the Sybase API DLL that specifies a nonrewinding tape device for a UNIX system is:
'/dev/rmt/0n'
CATALOG ONLY—Restores only the backup header record from the archive media.
RENAME—Restore one or more Sybase IQ database files to a new location. Specify each dbspace-name you are moving as it appears in the SYSFILE table. Specify new-dbspace-path as the new raw partition, or the new full or relative path name, for that dbspace.
If relative paths were used to create the database files, the files are restored by default relative to the catalog store file (the SYSTEM dbspace), and a rename clause is not required. If absolute paths were used to create the database files and a rename clause is not specified for a file, it is restored to its original location.
Relative path names in the RENAME clause work as they do when you create a database or dbspace: the main IQ store dbspace, temporary store dbspaces, and Message Log are restored relative to the location of db_file (the catalog store); user-created IQ store dbspaces are restored relative to the directory that holds the main IQ dbspace.
Do not use the RENAME clause to move the SYSTEM dbspace, which holds the catalog store. To move the catalog store, and any files created relative to it and not specified in a RENAME clause, specify a new location in the db_file parameter.
VERIFY [ COMPATIBLE ]— Directs the server to validate the specified Sybase IQ database backup archives for a full, incremental, incremental since full, or virtual backup. The backup must be Sybase IQ version 12.6 or later. The verification process checks the specified archives for the same errors a restore process checks, but performs no write operations. All status messages and detected errors are written to the server log file.
You cannot use the RENAME clause with the VERIFY clause; an error is reported.
The backup verification process can run on a different host than the database host. You must have DBA, BACKUP, or OPERATOR authority to run RESTORE VERIFY.
If the COMPATIBLE clause is specified with VERIFY, the compatibility of an incremental archive is checked with the existing database files. If the database files do not exist on the system on which RESTORE…VERIFY COMPATIBLE is invoked, an error is returned. If COMPATIBLE is specified while verifying a full backup, the keyword is ignored; no compatibility checks need to be made while restoring a full backup.
You must have the database and log files (.db and .log) to validate the backup of a read-only dbspace within a full backup. If you do not have these files, validate the entire backup by running RESTORE…VERIFY without the READONLY dbspace clause.
See System Administration Guide: Volume 1 > Data Backup, Recovery, and Archiving > Restoring Your Databases > The RESTORE Statement > Validating the Database After You Restore.
Run sp_iqcheckdb ‘verify...’ before taking a backup. If an inconsistent database is backed up, then restored from the same backup archive, the data continues to be in an inconsistent state, even if RESTORE VERIFY reports a successful validation.
Other RESTORE issues:
RESTORE to disk does not support raw devices as archival devices.
Sybase IQ does not rewind tapes before using them; on rewinding tape devices, it does rewind tapes after using them. You must position each tape to the start of the Sybase IQ data before starting the RESTORE.
During BACKUP and RESTORE operations, if Sybase IQ cannot open the archive device (for example, when it needs the media loaded) and the ATTENDED option is ON, it waits for ten seconds for you to put the next tape in the drive, and then tries again. It continues these attempts indefinitely until either it is successful or the operation is terminated with Ctrl+C.
If you press Ctrl+C, RESTORE fails and returns the database to its state before the restoration began.
If disk striping is used, the striped disks are treated as a single device.
The file_name column in the SYSFILE system table for the SYSTEM dbspace is not updated during a restore. For the SYSTEM dbspace, the file_name column always reflects the name when the database was created. The file name of the SYSTEM dbspace is the name of the database file.
See also System Administration Guide: Volume 1 > Data Backup, Recovery, and Archiving.
SQL—Vendor extension to ISO/ANSI SQL grammar.
Sybase—Not supported by Adaptive Server Enterprise.
Must have DBA authority. Users with SPACE ADMIN authority can perform read-only selective restore when the -gu server startup option is set to value DBA (the default).