Gretchen, I don't understand the following: > Prior to the v4.2 client, you could simply exclude the files on the > client side and the files would be expired. This probably led to > unpleasant/unexpected results, so this doesn't work anymore and the > client expire was introduced.
What unpleasant/unexpected results are you referring to? If no longer wish to back up files in c:\junk and it's subdirectories, then I don't see why using EXCLUDE.DIR wouldn't work. You could use a client options set to do this. Regards, Andy Andy Raibeck IBM Software Group Tivoli Storage Manager Client Development Internal Notes e-mail: Andrew Raibeck/Tucson/[EMAIL PROTECTED] Internet e-mail: [EMAIL PROTECTED] The only dumb question is the one that goes unasked. The command line is your friend. "Good enough" is the enemy of excellence. "Gretchen L. Thiele" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> Sent by: "ADSM: Dist Stor Manager" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> 02/12/2004 08:51 Please respond to "ADSM: Dist Stor Manager" To [EMAIL PROTECTED] cc Subject Client/Server Expiration Problem Due to a change in policy (and limited storage), we're going to limit what we back up. The problem lies in how to 'expire' the files on the server without re-backing up the data, while maintaining deleted files for the duration of retonly. While we could rename the filespace and implement the new policy, this is a lot of administrative work and I don't think we would be able to accomodate the data (storage and bandwidth). Prior to the v4.2 client, you could simply exclude the files on the client side and the files would be expired. This probably led to unpleasant/unexpected results, so this doesn't work anymore and the client expire was introduced. THE PROBLEM: I need to expire subdirectories without explicitly naming them. The client expire command only expires the named subdirectory, ignoring any include/exclude statements in the config files and not accepting -subdir=yes on the command line. If I enter 'expire c:\junk\*', I expire all of the files in the junk directory, but none of the files in any subdirectories will be expired. Wildcards, such as c:\junk\...\*, aren't supported, and the -filelist option requires explicit filenames and/or directories. Since I need to run this from the server as a scheduled command and it's not feasible to get the precise list of subdirectories for each of 5,000 clients, I'm stumped. Am I missing something? Server is AIX 5.1, TSM 5.2.2.1 and the clients are Windows (Win9x, Win2K, WinXP) with TSM 5.x.x.x (will work on Unix nodes after these are done). Gretchen Thiele Princeton University
