| NAME | SYNOPSIS | DESCRIPTION | FILES | SEE ALSO | AUTHORS | SEE ALSO | COLOPHON |  | 
YUM-FS-SNAPSHOT(1)              User Manuals              YUM-FS-SNAPSHOT(1)
       yum-fs-snapshot
       The yum-fs-snapshot package
       yum-fs-snapshot(1) is a Yum plugin for taking snapshots of your
       filesystems before running a yum transaction.  By default it will
       take a snapshot of any filesystem that can be snapshotted, which
       currently is limited to BTRFS filesystems.  However, all filesystems
       built on LVM logical volumes may be snapshotted at the block level
       using LVM snapshots.  LVM snapshot support is provided for the
       purpose of system rollback.  As such LVM snapshots will only be
       created if the kernel supports the "snapshot-merge" DM target.
       yum-fs-snapshot uses a configuration file for its specific actions:
       /etc/yum/pluginconf.d/fs-snapshot.conf
       yum-fs-snapshot.conf(5)
       Josef Bacik <josef@toxicpanda.com>
       Mike Snitzer <msnitzer@fedoraproject.org>
       yum(1) yum-fs-snapshot.conf(5)
       This page is part of the yum-utils (Yum Package Manager utilities)
       project.  Information about the project can be found at 
       ⟨http://yum.baseurl.org/⟩.  If you have a bug report for this manual
       page, see ⟨http://yum.baseurl.org/report⟩.  This page was obtained
       from the project's upstream Git repository
       ⟨git://yum.baseurl.org/yum-utils.git⟩ on 2018-02-02.  (At that time,
       the date of the most recent commit that was found in the repository
       was 2017-10-30.)  If you discover any rendering problems in this HTML
       version of the page, or you believe there is a better or more up-to-
       date source for the page, or you have corrections or improvements to
       the information in this COLOPHON (which is not part of the original
       manual page), send a mail to man-pages@man7.org
                               3 February 2010            YUM-FS-SNAPSHOT(1)
Pages that refer to this page: yum-fs-snapshot(1), yum-fs-snapshot.conf(5)