Finally I'm getting back on track after the tar 1.15.91-2 incremental changes. Due to this issue and my yearly holidays, my backups are long overdue and Amanda likes to do lots of level 0s (as expected).
I just noticed this in the mail log of last night's backup: | /-- anakin / lev 0 FAILED [data write: Connection reset by peer] | sendbackup: start [anakin:/ level 0] | sendbackup: info BACKUP=/bin/tar | sendbackup: info RECOVER_CMD=/bin/gzip -dc |/bin/tar -f... - | sendbackup: info COMPRESS_SUFFIX=.gz | sendbackup: info end | ? gtar: ./proc/19106/fd/5: Warning: Cannot stat: No such file or directory | ? gtar: ./proc/19106/task/19106/fd/5: Warning: Cannot stat: No such file or | directory | ? gtar: ./proc/6490/task/19182: Warning: Cannot stat: No such file or | directory | ? gtar: ./proc/6490/task/19182/attr: Warning: Cannot stat: No such file or | directory | ? gtar: ./proc/6490/task/19182/attr: Warning: Cannot stat: No such file or | directory | ? gtar: ./proc/6490/task/19182/fd: Warning: Cannot stat: No such file or | directory | ? gtar: ./proc/6490/task/19182/fd: Warning: Cannot stat: No such file or | directory | ? gtar: ./proc/asound/card0/pcm0p/sub1: file changed as we read it | ? gtar: ./proc/irq/14/ide0: file changed as we read it | ? gtar: ./proc/sys/fs/mqueue: file changed as we read it | ? gtar: ./proc/sys/net/ipv6/conf/default: file changed as we read it | | gtar: ./dev/gpmctl: socket ignored | | gtar: ./dev/log: socket ignored | \-------- Since /proc is on a separate file system, tar is not supposed to enter that directory. Anyone seen that before? I'm using tar 1.15.91-2 and amanda 1:2.5.0p2-1 (+ my backport of the fixes for tar 1.15.91, cfr. http://bugs.debian.org/cgi-bin/bugreport.cgi?bug=378558), on Debian testing/unstable. Is this another tar 1.15.91 breakage? Gr{oetje,eeting}s, Geert -- Geert Uytterhoeven -- There's lots of Linux beyond ia32 -- [EMAIL PROTECTED] In personal conversations with technical people, I call myself a hacker. But when I'm talking to journalists I just say "programmer" or something like that. -- Linus Torvalds
