Irena said:
Here's a little background on how the Retrospect client deals with network
connectivity, so we can better understands why this is happening and how it
might be addressed.
The Retrospect client does in fact initiate a check of the network once an
hour. It sends a request to Open
I'm running it on a beige G3 300MHz desktop. I wouldn't trust a Power
Computing system as a backup server...those are the Packard-Bell of the Mac
clone world.
Actually, most of the motherboards are the same as the Apple equivalents. They
changed other things like floppy drives and CD-ROM
I'm running it on a beige G3 300MHz desktop. I wouldn't trust a Power
Computing system as a backup server...those are the Packard-Bell of the Mac
clone world.
Actually, most of the motherboards are the same as the Apple equivalents.
They changed other things like floppy drives and CD-ROM
Does anyone happen to have an applescript already built to close filemaker
dB's so they can backed up and the reopen after the backup is complete. I do
two nightly scripts and what I'd like to have this happen:
Filemaker/Retrospect are on the same machine.
Applescript to quit filemaker dB's at
I'm running it on a beige G3 300MHz desktop. I wouldn't trust a Power
Computing system as a backup server...those are the Packard-Bell of the Mac
clone world.
Actually, most of the motherboards are the same as the Apple
equivalents. They changed other things like floppy drives and CD-ROM
Hi Garret,
We do! There is a FileMaker Pro Toggle script in the Retrospect Folder
(Retrospect: AppleScript Utilities: Script Examples: FileMaker Pro Server
Toggle). For more information on AppleScripts and Retrospect in general, see
page 191 of the Retrospect 4.2 User's Guide.
Regards,
Irena
The VXA isn't on a PPC as the backup server. The PPC is only a
workbench I'm using to test the drive. I'm trying to figure out why
the device is always blowing up in use with hardware sense code
failures or stuck tapes. This is the second drive we've gotten from
Ecrix.
The backup system is a
Yep. And most used the 7200 as the basis for that equivalency. And the
7200 was Apple's answer to Packard Bell.
lol.
The don't wanna-be Performa? 7200 as built was as stable as anything
else. It earned it's bad reputation based soley off of the fact that
it was hard to upgrade. For it's
Hi,
I've moved my retrospect server (WinNT) behind a firewall, but some
of my clients are still in the unprotected wasteland needing backup.
To limit the holes I put in my firewall to allow this, I need some
details about retrospect's port/protocol usage. The manual says
that retrospect uses
on 9/28/00 8:00 PM, retro-talk at [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Actually, most of the motherboards are the same as the Apple equivalents.
They changed other things like floppy drives and CD-ROM drives to a cheaper
3rd party though.
I had a customer that had a Power Computing PPC. Equivalent
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