Update dates in documentation examples.

This commit is contained in:
Dan Helfman 2023-03-06 22:41:43 -08:00
parent a7c055264d
commit 66194b7304

View file

@ -20,15 +20,15 @@ borgmatic rlist
That should yield output looking something like:
```text
host-2019-01-01T04:05:06.070809 Tue, 2019-01-01 04:05:06 [...]
host-2019-01-02T04:06:07.080910 Wed, 2019-01-02 04:06:07 [...]
host-2023-01-01T04:05:06.070809 Tue, 2023-01-01 04:05:06 [...]
host-2023-01-02T04:06:07.080910 Wed, 2023-01-02 04:06:07 [...]
```
Assuming that you want to extract the archive with the most up-to-date files
and therefore the latest timestamp, run a command like:
```bash
borgmatic extract --archive host-2019-01-02T04:06:07.080910
borgmatic extract --archive host-2023-01-02T04:06:07.080910
```
(No borgmatic `extract` action? Upgrade borgmatic!)
@ -54,7 +54,7 @@ But if you have multiple repositories configured, then you'll need to specify
the repository path containing the archive to extract. Here's an example:
```bash
borgmatic extract --repository repo.borg --archive host-2019-...
borgmatic extract --repository repo.borg --archive host-2023-...
```
## Extract particular files