7.1.1. grndb¶
7.1.1.1. Summary¶
Note
This executable command is an experimental feature.
New in version 4.0.9.
grndb manages a Groonga database.
Here are features:
- Checks whether database is broken or not.
- Recovers broken database automatically if the database is recoverable.
7.1.1.2. Syntax¶
grndb requires command and database path:
grndb COMMAND [OPTIONS] DATABASE_PATH
Here are available commands:
check- Checks whether database is broken or not.recover- Recovers database.
7.1.1.3. Usage¶
Here is an example to check the database at /var/lib/groonga/db/db:
% grndb check /var/lib/groonga/db/db
Here is an example to recover the database at /var/lib/groonga/db/db:
% grndb recover /var/lib/groonga/db/db
7.1.1.4. Commands¶
This section describes available commands.
7.1.1.4.1. check¶
It checks an existing Groonga database. If the database is broken,
grndb reports reasons and exits with non-0 exit status.
Note
You must not use this command for opened database. If the database is opened, this command may report wrong result.
check has some options.
7.1.1.4.1.1. --target¶
New in version 5.1.2.
It specifies a check target object.
If your database is large and you know an unreliable object, this
option will help you. check need more time for large database. You
can reduce check time by --target option to reduce check target.
The check target is checked recursive. Because related objects of unreliable object will be unreliable.
If the check target is a table, all columns of the table are also checked recursive.
If the check target is a table and its key type is another table, the another table is also checked recursive.
If the check target is a column and its value type is a table, the table is also checked recursive.
If the check target is an index column, the table specified as value type and all sources are also checked recursive.
Here is an example that checks only Entries table and its
columns:
% grndb check --target Entries /var/lib/groonga/db/db
Here is an example that checks only Entries.name column:
% grndb check --target Entries.name /var/lib/groonga/db/db
7.1.1.4.2. recover¶
It recovers an existing broken Groonga database.
If the database is not broken, grndb does nothing and exits with
0 exit status.
If the database is broken and one or more index columns are only
broken, grndb recovers these index columns and exists with 0
exit status. It may take a long time for large indexed data.
If the database is broken and tables or data columns are broken,
grndb reports broken reasons and exits with non-0 exit
status. You can know whether the database is recoverable or not by
check command.
Note
You must not use this command for opened database. If the database is opened, this command may break the database.