>/usr/adm/amanda/changer-status-clean: No such file or directory
This may or may not get auto-created when amdump runs. You might want
to go ahead and create it, owned by your Amanda user.
>ERROR: master: couldn't resolve hostname
>ERROR: localhost: couldn't resolve hostname
You must have some kind of hostname lookup problem, which is unrelated
to Amanda. Amanda tried to look up "master" and "localhost" and got
an error. Start checking your DNS configuration, /etc/resolv.conf,
/etc/hosts, YP/NIS/NIS+ maps, and whatever tells your system how to
do lookups.
>ERROR: amandaserver.mydomain.com: [can not access /dev/sda1 (/): Permission
>denied]
The Amanda user needs read access to devices when using dump. This is
usually done by putting the Amanda user in the group that owns the device
(and having group access set to r--), or by changing the group of the
device to a group Amanda is a member of.
If you're using xinetd, you need "groups yes" in the xinetd config file.
>ERROR: amandaserver.mydomain.com: [can not read/write /etc/dumpdates:
>Permission denied]
Amanda needs read/write access to /etc/dumpdates when using dump. Use
a similar solution as above.
>Isaac
John R. Jackson, Technical Software Specialist, [EMAIL PROTECTED]