WAS v8.0 > Migration and coexistence > Distributed operating systems > Scenario 2: Migrating cells across operating systems using the command-line tools > 11. Stop and disable the dmgr on the old host
backupConfig command
The backupConfig command is a simple utility to back up the configuration of your node to a file.
Supported configurations:
This topic is about configuration migration, such as migrating dmgrs and federated nodes in a network deployment environment. The Application Migration Toolkit for WAS provides support for migrating applications from previous versions of WAS to the latest product version. For information about migrating applications, read more about the Application Migration Toolkit.
By default, all servers on the node stop before the backup is made so that partially synchronized information is not saved. For more information about where to run this command, see Using command line tools. If you do not have root authority, specify a path for the backup file in a location where we have write permission. The backup file will be in zip format and a .zip extension is recommended.
In a UNIX or Linux environment, 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.
Avoid trouble: This command uses the user ID and password information in the PROFILE_ROOT/properties/ipc.client.props file. To avoid user ID and password prompts when you use this command, add the user ID and password information to the ipc.client.props file.
Location
Issue the command from the
cd PROFILE_ROOT/bin
backupConfig.sh backup_file [options]
...where backup_file specifies the file to which the backup is written. If you do not specify one, a unique name is generated.
Parameters
The following options are available for the backupConfig command:
-nostop
Tells the backupConfig command not to stop the servers before backing up the configuration
-quiet
Suppresses the progress information that the backupConfig command prints in normal mode
-logfile file_name
Location of the log file to which trace information is written By default, the log file is named backupConfig.log and is created in the logs directory.
-profileName profile_name
Defines the profile of the application server process in a multi-profile installation The -profileName option is not required for running in a single-profile environment. The default for this option is the default profile.
-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
User name for authentication if security is enabled in the server; acts the same as the -user option
-user user_name
User name for authentication if security is enabled in the server; acts the same as the -username option
-password password
Password for authentication if security is enabled in the server
-help
Prints a usage statement
-?
Prints a usage statement
Usage
The following example creates a new file that includes the current date:
backupConfig.sh WebSphereConfig_2005-04-22.zip
The following example creates a file called myBackup.zip and does not stop any servers before beginning the backup process:
backupConfig.sh myBackup.zip -nostop
restoreConfig command