Scott, well, I can't say that this is the best way to do it, but this is what I've been doing. I have ( and I'm guessing most folks probably do ) an email that goes out to the SysAdmins of the machines that we back up with the status of their backup ( completed,failed,missed,?,etc ) and some other useful info on the backups of individual nodes as can be assertained from the activity log. Some useful error codes are as follows.
ANE4987E - Files that are in use at backup time ( and failed for that purpose ) ANE4007E - Files that TSM was denied access to. ( TSM couldn't read the file ) ANE4005E - Files that have probably been deleted I can't say that's it's 100% accurate, but it's not too bad. Anyway, that's what I'm doing, I don't have any idea on your second question. -ed Ed Anderson Unix Systems Administrator University of Mississippi Medical Center [EMAIL PROTECTED] >>> [EMAIL PROTECTED] 2002/03/20 09:30:29 AM >>> I would like to use TSM to determine what files have been deleted from a file server the previous day (or any given day if possible). For example, on Monday TSM backed up the file bob.txt, but on Tuesday that file had been deleted so it was not backed up. I would think that some sort of query on Retain Only Version or Versions deleted may do it, but I don't know how. A related question: Can I use TSM to determine if any files have been drastically reduced in size? For example on Monday bob.txt was 100K when backed up, but on Tuesday it was only 1K when backed up. I would not have a specific file in mind, so this would also need to be done on all files. Thanks for any insight. Scott Foley
