Jean-Louis Martineau wrote:
Steve Wray wrote:
Dustin J. Mitchell wrote:
On Wed, Jan 6, 2010 at 4:01 PM, Steve Wray <[email protected]> wrote:
Am I to understand that there could be a problem in having 'too many' DLE's
for bsd or bsdudp to cope with?

I never thought of there being a limit to the number of DLE's before... Our
disklist file has 178.

Yes, it's quite possible, and quite common with folks who have an
Amanda built with only a small range of available ports.

Ok I'm not sure about amanda as built for Debian but would it be safer for me to change pretty much our entire system to use bsdtcp?

So far my experiments in this regard have not been great; adding just one single DLE using bsdtcp has caused all other DLE's to have problems.

You can't change only one dle, you must change all dles for that client, you must also change inetd/xinetd on that client, don't change it on the server.

This particular client has only one DLE.

The other DLE's which are having problems are all for other clients.

Ie: a change to bsdtcp in the DLE for one client has broken all other clients.



--
Please remember that an email is just like a postcard; it is not confidential nor private nor secure and can be read by many other people than the intended recipient. A postcard can be read by anyone at the mail sorting office and expecting what is written on it to be private and secret is not realistic. Please hold no higher expectation of email.

If you need to send confidential information in an email you need to use encryption. PGP is Pretty good for this.

Reply via email to