Pitdate

Use the pitdate option with the pittime option to establish a point in time to display or restore the latest version of your backups.

Files that were backed up on or before the date and time you specify, and which were not deleted before the date and time you specify, are processed. Backup versions that you create after this date and time are ignored.

Use the pitdate option with the following commands:

  • delete backup
  • Windows operating systemsquery asr
  • query backup
  • query group
  • Windows operating systemsLinux operating systemsOracle Solaris operating
systemsAIX operating systemsquery image
  • Windows operating systemsquery nas
  • Windows operating systemsquery systemstate
  • Windows operating systemsquery vm (vmbackuptype=fullvm and vmbackuptype=hypervfull)
  • restore
  • Windows operating systemsLinux operating systemsOracle Solaris operating
systemsAIX operating systemsMac OS X operating
systemsrestore group
  • Windows operating systemsLinux operating systemsOracle Solaris operating
systemsAIX operating systemsrestore image
  • Windows operating systemsLinux operating systemsOracle Solaris operating
systemsAIX operating systemsMac OS X operating
systemsrestore nas
  • Windows operating systemsrestore vm (vmbackuptype=fullvm and vmbackuptype=hypervfull)

When pitdate is used, the inactive and latest options are implicit.

Windows operating systemsLinux operating systemsOracle Solaris operating
systemsAIX operating systemsMac OS X operating
systems

Supported Clients

This option is valid for all clients. The IBM® Storage Protect API does not support this option.

Syntax

Read syntax diagramSkip visual syntax diagramPITDate =  date

Parameters

date
Specifies the appropriate date. Enter the date in the format you selected with the dateformat option.

When you include dateformat with a command, it must precede the fromdate, pitdate, and todate options.

Examples

Mac OS X operating
systemsCommand line:
Mac OS X operating
systemsdsmc restore "/Volumes/proj4/myproj/*" -sub=y -pitdate=08/01/2003 -pittime=06:00:00
Linux operating systemsOracle Solaris operating
systemsAIX operating systemsMac OS X operating
systemsCommand line:
Linux operating systemsOracle Solaris operating
systemsAIX operating systemsMac OS X operating
systemsdsmc restore "/fs1/*" -sub=y -pitdate=08/01/2003 -pittime=06:00:00
Windows operating systemsCommand line:
Windows operating systemsdsmc restore -pitdate=08/01/2003 c:\myfiles\