db_upgrade(1) | General Commands Manual | db_upgrade(1) |
db_upgrade
db_upgrade |
[-NsV ] [-h
home] [-P
password] file ... |
The db_upgrade
utility upgrades the
Berkeley DB version of one or more files and the databases they contain to
the current release version.
The options are as follows:
-h
-N
-P
-s
As part of the upgrade from the Berkeley DB 3.0 release to the 3.1 release, the on-disk format of duplicate data items changed. To correctly upgrade the format requires that applications specify whether duplicate data items in the database are sorted or not. Specifying the -s flag means that the duplicates are sorted; otherwise, they are assumed to be unsorted. Incorrectly specifying the value of this flag may lead to database corruption.
Because the db_upgrade
utility
upgrades a physical file (including all the databases it contains), it
is not possible to use db_upgrade
to upgrade
files where some of the databases it includes have sorted duplicate data
items, and some of the databases it includes have unsorted duplicate
data items. If the file does not have more than a single database, if
the databases do not support duplicate data items, or if all the
databases that support duplicate data items support the same style of
duplicates (either sorted or unsorted),
db_upgrade
will work correctly as long as the -s
flag is correctly specified. Otherwise, the file cannot be upgraded
using db_upgrade
, and must be upgraded manually
using the db_dump and db_load utilities.
-V
It is important to realize that Berkeley DB database upgrades are done in place, and so are potentially destructive. This means that if the system crashes during the upgrade procedure, or if the upgrade procedure runs out of disk space, the databases may be left in an inconsistent and unrecoverable state. See Upgrading databases for more information.
The db_upgrade
utility may be used with a
Berkeley DB environment (as described for the -h option, the environment
variable DB_HOME, or because the utility was run in a directory containing a
Berkeley DB environment). In order to avoid environment corruption when
using a Berkeley DB environment, db_upgrade
should
always be given the chance to detach from the environment and exit
gracefully. To cause db_upgrade
to release all
environment resources and exit cleanly, send it an interrupt signal
(SIGINT).
The db_upgrade
utility exits 0 on success,
and >0 if an error occurs.
DB_HOME
db_archive(1), db_checkpoint(1), db_deadlock(1), db_dump(1), db_load(1), db_printlog(1), db_recover(1), db_stat(1), db_verify(1)
December 3, 2003 | Darwin |