>31-Million objects and 8TB and it is/should be a NQR since files weren't selected - just the whole D: drive.
It finally started moving after 2+hours just sitting there. On Thu, Mar 30, 2017 at 7:24 AM, Lee, Gary <[email protected]> wrote: > How many items are on the drive to be restored? > I have had some restores where the drive contains many items sit in idle > state for a long time while database activity is happening. > > I believe this was the rationale for the no query restore. > > -----Original Message----- > From: ADSM: Dist Stor Manager [mailto:[email protected]] On Behalf Of > Zoltan Forray > Sent: Wednesday, March 29, 2017 4:31 PM > To: [email protected] > Subject: [ADSM-L] How to determine why a session is in IdleW > > I have a user who has started a big restore (>31M objects and 8TB of data) > and all it keeps doing is sit in an IdleW state. > > He has tried restarting it numerous times, including rebooting this newly > rebuilt Windows 2012R2 server. He has the latest 8.1 client. He is not > receiving any error messages on the client side and I don't see anything > from the server side. > > It has now been waiting for >10,500 seconds (almost 3-hours). I have > watched it from the server side and the Bytes Sent/Received have not > changed. During one of his previous attempts, the server was running > replication but I killed it - did not make a difference. > > It should be considered an NQR since all he did was select the "D:" drive > and told it to start the restore. > > So how can I figure out what is going on? > > -- > *Zoltan Forray* > Spectrum Protect (p.k.a. TSM) Software & Hardware Administrator > Xymon Monitor Administrator > VMware Administrator > Virginia Commonwealth University > UCC/Office of Technology Services > www.ucc.vcu.edu > [email protected] - 804-828-4807 > Don't be a phishing victim - VCU and other reputable organizations will > never use email to request that you reply with your password, social > security number or confidential personal information. For more details > visit http://infosecurity.vcu.edu/phishing.html > -- *Zoltan Forray* Spectrum Protect (p.k.a. TSM) Software & Hardware Administrator Xymon Monitor Administrator VMware Administrator Virginia Commonwealth University UCC/Office of Technology Services www.ucc.vcu.edu [email protected] - 804-828-4807 Don't be a phishing victim - VCU and other reputable organizations will never use email to request that you reply with your password, social security number or confidential personal information. For more details visit http://infosecurity.vcu.edu/phishing.html
