On Tuesday 23 December 2003 14:24, jessica blackburn wrote: >I think im using the amanda win32 because i could get samba to see > the files of the MS box but not back them up. so, i moved on the > try the win32. do i need to use samba and win32 together? or just > one over the other? and if so which is better?
They would be two seperate programs Jessica. Having samba lets you look at the files, move or copy them to/from your machine & generally gives the human an eye into things. But the win32 client should be able to run regardless of the samba connection status. >On Tue, 2003-12-23 at 14:19, Kurt Yoder wrote: >> jessica blackburn said: >> > hello again! >> > >> > i got the samba working so i can talk with the ms box. now i'm >> > trying >> > to get the amanda win32 working to try and backup the system. i >> > am connecting to the MS box but i am getting an error that i >> > can't seem to >> > figure out when i'm running amcheck. >> > >> > >> > -bash-2.05b$ /usr/sbin/amcheck DailySet1 >> > Amanda Tape Server Host Check >> > ----------------------------- >> > Holding disk /var/tmp: 28918452 KB disk space available, that's >> > plenty >> > amcheck-server: slot 4: date 20031205 label DailySet103 (exact >> > label match) >> > NOTE: skipping tape-writable test >> > Tape DailySet103 label ok >> > Server check took 0.320 seconds >> > >> > Amanda Backup Client Hosts Check >> > -------------------------------- >> > ERROR: NAK hccdevelop03: execute access to >> > "/usr/amanda/libexec/selfcheck" denied >> > Client check: 2 hosts checked in 0.135 seconds, 1 problem found >> >> This looks an awful lot like an amanda-win32-client error. Are you >> sure you're actually using samba in your disklist? It should look >> like >> >> machine_with_smbclient //hccdevelop03/c$ user-tar >> >> if it looks like >> >> hccdevelop03 /mnt_c user-tar >> >> you're still using win32 client -- Cheers, Gene AMD [EMAIL PROTECTED] 320M [EMAIL PROTECTED] 512M 99.22% setiathome rank, not too shabby for a WV hillbilly Yahoo.com attornies please note, additions to this message by Gene Heskett are: Copyright 2003 by Maurice Eugene Heskett, all rights reserved.
