dwww Home | Manual pages | Find package

E2IMAGE(8)                  System Manager's Manual                 E2IMAGE(8)

NAME
       e2image - Save critical ext2/ext3/ext4 file system metadata to a file

SYNOPSIS
       e2image [-r|-Q [-af]] [ -b superblock ] [ -B blocksize ] [ -cnps ] [ -o
       src_offset ] [ -O dest_offset ] device image-file
       e2image -I device image-file

DESCRIPTION
       The  e2image program will save critical ext2, ext3, or ext4 file system
       metadata located on device to a file specified by image-file.  The  im-
       age  file  may be examined by dumpe2fs and debugfs, by using the -i op-
       tion to those programs.  This can assist an expert in recovering  cata-
       strophically corrupted file systems.

       It  is a very good idea to create image files for all file systems on a
       system and save the partition layout (which can be generated using  the
       fdisk  -l  command) at regular intervals --- at boot time, and/or every
       week or so.  The image file should be stored on some file system  other
       than  the  file system whose data it contains, to ensure that this data
       is accessible in the case where the file system has been badly damaged.

       To save disk space, e2image creates the image file as a sparse file, or
       in QCOW2 format.  Hence, if the sparse image file needs to be copied to
       another location, it should either be compressed first or copied  using
       the  --sparse=always option to the GNU version of cp(1).  This does not
       apply to the QCOW2 image, which is not sparse.

       The size of an ext2 image file depends primarily on  the  size  of  the
       file systems and how many inodes are in use.  For a typical 10 Gigabyte
       file  system, with 200,000 inodes in use out of 1.2 million inodes, the
       image file will be approximately 35 Megabytes; a 4 Gigabyte file system
       with 15,000 inodes in use out of 550,000 inodes  will  result  in  a  3
       Megabyte image file.  Image files tend to be quite compressible; an im-
       age  file  taking  up 32 Megabytes of space on disk will generally com-
       press down to 3 or 4 Megabytes.

       If image-file is -, then the output of e2image will be sent to standard
       output, so that the output can be piped to  another  program,  such  as
       gzip(1).   (Note  that this is currently only supported when creating a
       raw image file using the -r option, since the  process  of  creating  a
       normal  image  file, or QCOW2 image currently requires random access to
       the file, which cannot be done using a pipe.

OPTIONS
       -a     Include file data in the image file.  Normally e2image only  in-
              cludes  fs  metadata,  not  regular file data.  This option will
              produce an image that is suitable to use to clone the entire  FS
              or  for  backup purposes.  Note that this option only works with
              the raw (-r) or QCOW2 (-Q) formats.  In conjunction with the  -r
              option  it  is possible to clone all and only the used blocks of
              one file system to another device/image file.

       -b superblock
              Get image from partition with broken primary superblock by using
              the superblock located at file system block  number  superblock.
              The  partition  is  copied  as-is  including  broken primary su-
              perblock.

       -B blocksize
              Set the file system blocksize in bytes.  Normally, e2image  will
              search for the superblock at various different block sizes in an
              attempt  to  find  the appropriate blocksize. This search can be
              fooled in some cases.  This option forces e2fsck to only try lo-
              cating the superblock with a particular blocksize.  If  the  su-
              perblock  is  not found, e2image will terminate with a fatal er-
              ror.

       -c     Compare each block to be copied from the source  device  to  the
              corresponding  block  in the target image-file.  If both are al-
              ready the same, the write will be skipped.  This  is  useful  if
              the  file system is being cloned to a flash-based storage device
              (where reads are very fast and where it is  desirable  to  avoid
              unnecessary writes to reduce write wear on the device).

       -f     Override  the  read-only  requirement for the source file system
              when saving the image file using the -r and  -Q  options.   Nor-
              mally,  if the source file system is in use, the resulting image
              file is very likely not going to be useful. In some cases  where
              the  source  file  system  is in constant use this may be better
              than no image at all.

       -I     install the metadata stored in the image file back  to  the  de-
              vice.   It  can be used to restore the file system metadata back
              to the device in emergency situations.

       WARNING!!!!  The -I option should only be used as a desperation measure
       when other alternatives have failed.  If the file  system  has  changed
       since  the  image file was created, data will be lost.  In general, you
       should make another full image backup of the file system first, in case
       you wish to try other recovery strategies afterward.

       -n     Cause all image writes to be skipped, and instead only print the
              block numbers that would have been written.

       -o src_offset
              Specify offset of the image to be read from  the  start  of  the
              source device in bytes.  See OFFSETS for more details.

       -O tgt_offset
              Specify  offset of the image to be written from the start of the
              target image-file in bytes.  See OFFSETS for more details.

       -p     Show progress of image-file creation.

       -Q     Create a QCOW2-format image file instead of a normal image file,
              suitable for use by virtual machine images, and other tools that
              can use the .qcow image format. See QCOW2 IMAGE FILES below  for
              details.

       -r     Create a raw image file instead of a normal image file.  See RAW
              IMAGE FILES below for details.

       -s     Scramble  directory  entries and zero out unused portions of the
              directory blocks in the written image file  to  avoid  revealing
              information  about  the  contents  of the file system.  However,
              this will prevent analysis of problems related to hash-tree  in-
              dexed directories.

RAW IMAGE FILES
       The -r option will create a raw image file, which differs from a normal
       image  file  in two ways.  First, the file system metadata is placed in
       the same relative offset within image-file as it is in  the  device  so
       that  debugfs(8),  dumpe2fs(8),  e2fsck(8), losetup(8), etc. and can be
       run directly on the raw image file.  In order to minimize the amount of
       disk space consumed by the raw image file, it is created  as  a  sparse
       file.   (Beware  of copying or compressing/decompressing this file with
       utilities that don't understand how to create sparse  files;  the  file
       will become as large as the file system itself!)  Secondly, the raw im-
       age  file also includes indirect blocks and directory blocks, which the
       standard image file does not have.

       Raw image files are sometimes used when sending  file  systems  to  the
       maintainer  as part of bug reports to e2fsprogs.  When used in this ca-
       pacity, the recommended command is as follows (replace  hda1  with  the
       appropriate device for your system):

            e2image -r /dev/hda1 - | bzip2 > hda1.e2i.bz2

       This  will only send the metadata information, without any data blocks.
       However, the filenames in the directory blocks can still reveal  infor-
       mation  about the contents of the file system that the bug reporter may
       wish to keep confidential.  To address this concern, the -s option  can
       be specified to scramble the filenames in the image.

       Note  that  this will work even if you substitute /dev/hda1 for another
       raw disk image, or QCOW2 image previously created by e2image.

QCOW2 IMAGE FILES
       The -Q option will create a QCOW2 image file instead of  a  normal,  or
       raw image file.  A QCOW2 image contains all the information the raw im-
       age  does, however unlike the raw image it is not sparse. The QCOW2 im-
       age minimize the amount of space used by the image  by  storing  it  in
       special  format which packs data closely together, hence avoiding holes
       while still minimizing size.

       In order to send file system to the maintainer as a part of bug  report
       to e2fsprogs, use following commands (replace hda1 with the appropriate
       device for your system):

            e2image -Q /dev/hda1 hda1.qcow2
            bzip2 -z hda1.qcow2

       This  will only send the metadata information, without any data blocks.
       As described for RAW IMAGE FILES the -s  option  can  be  specified  to
       scramble the file system names in the image.

       Note  that  the QCOW2 image created by e2image is a regular QCOW2 image
       and can be processed by tools aware of QCOW2 format such as for example
       qemu-img.

       You can convert a .qcow2 image into a raw image with:

            e2image -r hda1.qcow2 hda1.raw

       This can be useful to write a QCOW2 image  containing  all  data  to  a
       sparse image file where it can be loop mounted, or to a disk partition.
       Note that this may not work with QCOW2 images not generated by e2image.

OFFSETS
       Normally  a  file  system  starts  at the beginning of a partition, and
       e2image is run on the partition.  When working with  image  files,  you
       don't have the option of using the partition device, so you can specify
       the  offset  where  the file system starts directly with the -o option.
       Similarly the -O option specifies the offset that should be  seeked  to
       in the destination before writing the file system.

       For example, if you have a dd image of a whole hard drive that contains
       an  ext2  fs in a partition starting at 1 MiB, you can clone that image
       to a block device with:

            e2image -aro 1048576 img /dev/sda1

       Or you can clone a file system from a block device into an image  file,
       leaving room in the first MiB for a partition table with:

            e2image -arO 1048576 /dev/sda1 img

       If you specify at least one offset, and only one file, an in-place move
       will be performed, allowing you to safely move the file system from one
       offset to another.

AUTHOR
       e2image was written by Theodore Ts'o (tytso@mit.edu).

AVAILABILITY
       e2image  is  part  of  the  e2fsprogs  package  and  is  available from
       http://e2fsprogs.sourceforge.net.

SEE ALSO
       dumpe2fs(8), debugfs(8) e2fsck(8)

E2fsprogs version 1.47.0         February 2023                      E2IMAGE(8)

Generated by dwww version 1.16 on Tue Dec 16 14:42:03 CET 2025.