restoreConfig command
Use the restoreConfig command to restore the configuration of your node after backing up the configuration using the backupConfig command.
The restoreConfig command is a simple utility to restore the configuration of your node after backing up the configuration using the backupConfig command. By default, all servers on the node stop before the configuration restores so that a node synchronization does not occur during the restoration. If the configuration directory already exists, it is renamed before the restoration occurs. For more information about where to run this command, see Using command line tools.
If you directly make changes to the application files in the app_server_root/installedApps directory, a process known as "hot deployment", but do not make the same changes to the application files in the app_server_root/config directory, the changes might be overwritten if you use the restoreConfig command.
The backupConfig command does not save file permissions or ownership information. The restoreConfig command uses the current umask and effective user ID (EUID) to set the permissions and ownership when restoring a file. If it is required that the restored files have the original permissions and ownership, use the tar command (available on all UNIX or Linux® systems) to back up and restore the configuration.
If you are using a logical directory for app_server_root/config, the restoreConfig command will not work.
Location
Issue the command from the profile_root/bin directory.
Syntax
The command syntax is as follows:
restoreConfig.sh backup_file [options]
restoreConfig.bat backup_file [options]
restoreConfig backup_file [options]
where
backup_file specifies the file to be restored. If you do not specify one, the
command will not run.Parameters
The following options are available for the restoreConfig command:
- -help
- Prints a usage statement
- -location directory_name
- Specifies the directory where the backup file is restored
- -logfile file_name
- Specifies the location of the log file to which trace information is written
By default, the log file is named restoreConfig.log and is created in your logs directory.
- -nostop
- Tells the restoreConfig command not to stop the servers before restoring the configuration
- -password password
- Specifies the password for authentication if security is enabled in the server
- -profileName profile_name
- Defines the profile of the Application Server process in a multiple-profile installation
The -profileName option is not required for running in a single profile environment. The default for this option is the default profile.
- -quiet
- Suppresses the progress information that the restoreConfig command prints in normal mode
- -replacelog
- Replaces the log file instead of appending to the current log
- -trace
- Generates trace information into the log file for debugging purposes
- -username user_name
- Specifies the user name for authentication if security is enabled in the server; acts the same as the -user option
- -user user_name
- Specifies the user name for authentication if security is enabled in the server; acts the same as the -username option
- -?
- Prints a usage statement
Usage
The following example demonstrates correct syntax:
restoreConfig.sh WebSphereConfig_2006-04-22.zip
restoreConfig.bat WebSphereConfig_2006-04-22.zip
restoreConfig WebSphereConfig_2006-04-22.zip
The following example restores the given file to the /tmp directory and does not stop any servers before beginning the restoration:
restoreConfig.sh WebSphereConfig_2006-04-22.zip -location /tmp -nostop
restoreConfig.bat WebSphereConfig_2006-04-22.zip -location /tmp -nostop
restoreConfig WebSphereConfig_2006-04-22.zip -location /tmp -nostop
restoreConfig /home/mydir/myprofileBackup.zip -profileName myprofile
Be aware that if you restore the configuration to a directory that is different from the directory that was backed up when you performed the backupConfig command, you might need to manually update some of the paths in the configuration directory.