- Berkeley DB Reference Guide:
- Access Methods
|
|
Database verification and salvage
The DB->verify method is the standard interface for verifying
that a file, and any databases it may contain, are uncorrupted. In
addition, the method may optionally be called with a file stream
argument to which all key/data pairs found in the database are output.
There are two modes for finding key/data pairs to be output:
- If the DB_SALVAGE flag is specified, the key/data pairs in the
database are output. When run in this mode, the database is assumed to
be largely uncorrupted. For example, the DB->verify method will
search for pages that are no longer linked into the database, and will
output key/data pairs from such pages. However, key/data items that
have been marked as deleted in the database will not be output, as the
page structures are generally trusted in this mode.
- If both the DB_SALVAGE and DB_AGGRESSIVE flags are
specified, all possible key/data pairs are output. When run in this mode,
the database is assumed to be seriously corrupted. For example, key/data
pairs that have been deleted will re-appear in the output. In addition,
because pages may have been subsequently reused and modified during
normal database operations after the key/data pairs were deleted, it is
not uncommon for apparently corrupted key/data pairs to be output in this
mode, even when there is no corruption in the underlying database. The
output will almost always have to be edited by hand or other means before
the data is ready for reload into another database. We recommend that
DB_SALVAGE be tried first, and DB_AGGRESSIVE only tried
if the output from that first attempt is obviously missing data items or
the data is sufficiently valuable that human review of the output is
preferable to any kind of data loss.
Copyright Sleepycat Software