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Joshua S. Bassi
Independent IT Consultant
IBM Certified - AIX/HACMP, SAN, Shark
Tivoli Certified Consultant- ADSM/TSM
Cell (408)&(831) 332-4006
[EMAIL PROTECTED]

-----Original Message-----
From: ADSM: Dist Stor Manager [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]] On Behalf Of
Daniel Sparrman
Sent: Friday, November 02, 2001 6:31 AM
To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Subject: Re: restoring client as a full OS install?

Perhaphs AIX as NIM, MKSYSB and SYSBACK, and HP has ignite, and SUN as
there own to(isn't that NIM?)

But none of these will restore the machine to "current state". They
require
that you make for example a full MKSYSB.

Bare Metal Restore from TKG is the only application that will do a
"current
state" restore.

Best Regards

Daniel Sparrman
-----------------------------------
Daniel Sparrman
Exist i Stockholm AB
Bergk�llav�gen 31D
192 79 SOLLENTUNA
V�xel: 08 - 754 98 00
Mobil: 070 - 399 27 51


 

                    Jeff Bach

                    <jdbach@WAL-M        To:     [EMAIL PROTECTED]

                    ART.COM>             cc:

                    Sent by:             Subject:     Re: restoring
client as a full OS install?                   
                    "ADSM: Dist

                    Stor Manager"

                    <[EMAIL PROTECTED]

                    RIST.EDU>

 

 

                    2001-11-02

                    14:49

                    Please

                    respond to

                    "ADSM: Dist

                    Stor Manager"

 

 




HP has ignite
AIX has NIM and myksysb and sysback
SUN had there own also.

Jeff Bach

> -----Original Message-----
> From: Ray Schafer [SMTP:[EMAIL PROTECTED]]
> Sent: Friday, November 02, 2001 6:51 AM
> To:   [EMAIL PROTECTED]
> Subject:      Re: restoring client as a full OS install?
>
> Alex,
>
> As far as I know, TKG's Bare Metal Restore is the only product
> (commercial or otherwise) to restore an NT, 2000, AIX, Solaris, or HP
UX
> machine from bare metal.  It is also a fully automated restore, using
> only the data in TSM to restore the system.  The web link is
> http://www.tkg.com/bmr/tsm.
>
> Hope that helps.
>
>
> Alexander Lazarevich wrote:
>
> >I'd like to know if anyone has restored a client to a blank/new drive
in
> >order to fully bring back the OS. What I mean is this: If a client
disk
> >drive fails, and I need bring that client machine back up ASAP, it
would
> >be quicker if I could restore every single file that was backed up
for
> the
> >client. If all system/install/data files on the client were backed
up,
> >then the restore should work, right? This would be quicker than
> >reinstalling all apps, because we have a lot of apps...
> >
> >I already tried this. But it didn't work because I was trying to
restore
> >to a drive that was the currently running OS client, and I think ADSM
was
> >unable to restore files that were running processes. So now I'm going
to
> >try and restore to a second clean drive that I installed in the
machine.
> >I also installed a base OS on the second drive, rather than keeping
it a
> >clean drive with a formated filesystem of the OS type. I'm not sure
if
> one
> >was is better than another.
> >
> >I read the ADSM manual, thinking that the section called "Disaster
> >Recovery" would be just what I'm doing, and it's not. I already know
what
> >my machine specs are, I just need to know if I can trully restore the
OS.
> >
> >Cause everything on a computer is a file, right? If that's true then
this
> >should work, right?
> >
> >Anyone done this before?
> >
> >Thanks in advance,
> >
> >Alex
> >~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
> >Alex Lazarevich
> >Systems Administrator
> >Imaging Technology Group, http://www.itg.uiuc.edu
> >Beckman Institute, http://www.beckman.uiuc.edu
> >405 N. Mathews, Urbana IL  61801  USA
> >Ph: (217)244-1565 e-mail: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
> >_________________________________________________
> >
> >
>
> --
> Ray Schafer             The Kernel Group       www.tkg.com
> Sr. Sales Engineer      [EMAIL PROTECTED]    +1 512 433 3300


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