![]() Your description helps us a lot, it shows that we need to improve the documentation for the restore command. I apologies for not just looking through the design docs and source code to deduce the answer myself, I need the support of the GitHub community more than ever! Maybe this is querying each element within the repo and restoring them as they match the pattern? The latter seems most likely to me due to the use of the language 'pattern' rather than 'path' in the include/exclude help documentation. Alternatively, the issue is that the command is doing what I expected but not as directly as I expected. ![]() I've reached the conclusion that either my command isn't doing what I expect it is doing, which is restoring just a specified directory. The restoration processes are still running and thus I'm not 100% certain of the outcome but the time involved in completing the processes raises suspicion that they are not simply finding those patterns and restoring them to the target location. I have tried many restore commands and all seem to be running very slow for what they should be restoring. I made a backup of my whole system a couple days ago and today would like to restore only a specific directory from within the single snapshot.įirst of all, is the exclude/include functionality used to restore specific directories/files from within a single snapshot or is it used to restore single snapshots containing those specific directories/files? I was wondering if someone could briefly explain the exclude/include functionality behind the snapshot restoration feature? I do not wish to annoy anyone by bringing this matter up as a GitHub issue, I am simply under a lot of pressure to complete a project, the project exists only in my remote S3 restic repo as yesterday my mac decided it would melt its logic board.
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