=head1 SYNOPSIS
B<rrdtool> B<dump> I<filename.rrd>
-S<[B<--no-header>|B<-n>]>
+S<[B<--header>|B<-h> {xsd,dtd}]>
S<[B<--daemon> I<address>]>
S<E<gt> I<filename.xml>>
or
B<rrdtool> B<dump> I<filename.rrd> I<filename.xml>
-S<[B<--no-header>|B<-n>]>
+S<[B<--header>|B<-h> {xsd,dtd}]>
S<[B<--daemon> I<address>]>
=head1 DESCRIPTION
The (optional) filename that you want to write the XML output to.
If not specified, the XML will be printed to stdout.
-=item B<--no-header>|B<-n>
+=item B<--header>|B<-h> {xsd,dtd}
-In rrdtool 1.3, the dump function started producing correct xml-headers.
-Unfortunately the rrdtool restore function from the 1.2 series can not
-handle these headers. With this option you can supress the creatinon of
-the xml headers.
+Optionally rrdtool can add a xsd or dtd header to the dump output.
=item B<--daemon> I<address>
Address of the L<rrdcached> daemon. If specified, a C<flush> command is sent
to the server before reading the RRD files. This allows B<rrdtool> to return
-fresh data even if the daemon is configured to cache values for a long time. To
-specify a UNIX domain socket use the prefix C<unix:>, see example below. Other
-addresses are interpreted as normal network addresses, i.E<nbsp>e. IPv4 or IPv6
-addresses in most cases.
+fresh data even if the daemon is configured to cache values for a long time.
+For a list of accepted formats, see the B<-l> option in the L<rrdcached> manual.
rrdtool dump --daemon unix:/var/run/rrdcached.sock /var/lib/rrd/foo.rrd