Is there a reason you don't try the GUI? "Gill, Geoffrey L." <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: Someone wrote a perl process that marks files to be archived and archives them one at a time. Very inefficient when there are literally hundreds of thousands of files that need to be done. Now I'd have chose a different way, and I admit I'm not a programmer nor have I seen the script, but my command line q archive commands have so far returned nothing.
I know the process is running because I saw it earlier today and the files are going to the proper pool. The administrator of the Unix box tried to use the GUI to pull a list of archives but according to him it ran 2.5 hours and never returned anything so he killed the session. The question is what command line command will return something for me to see, even if it is a subset, which is really what I am trying to get. Below is a few of the commands I've run without success. I've run them from the directory where the files sit and higher up the tree all with the "ANS1092W No files matching search criteria were found" message returned. So am I in the wrong path, is the command wrong or do I need to see their job to really figure it out? As a side note, in theory I am logged in as the user that is supposed to be the owner of the files and I am not getting an unauthorized message but since I have no root access I can't try the commands there. dsmc q archive "*" dsmc q archive "/psoft/*" -subdir=yes dsmc q archive /psoft/ -subdir=yes dsmc q archive -fromdate=02/15/2007 "/psoft/psprd/input/archive/" dsmc q archive -fromdate=02/15/2007 "/psoft/psprd/input/archive/*" Thanks for the help. Geoff Gill TSM Administrator PeopleSoft Sr. Systems Administrator SAIC M/S-G1b (858)826-4062 Email: [EMAIL PROTECTED] --------------------------------- 8:00? 8:25? 8:40? Find a flick in no time with theYahoo! Search movie showtime shortcut.
