Yes, there are several, and they are all empty: chrisho@marlin:$ sudo find /amanda3 -name pid | sudo xargs ls -l
-rw------- 1 amanda amanda 0 Sep 2 23:30 /amanda3/20190225233002/pid -rw------- 1 amanda amanda 0 Sep 2 23:30 /amanda3/20190831233001/pid -rw------- 1 amanda amanda 0 Sep 2 23:30 /amanda3/20190901233002/pid chrisho@marlin:$ sudo find /amanda4 -name pid | sudo xargs ls -l -rw------- 1 amanda amanda 0 Sep 2 23:30 /amanda4/20190225233002/pid -rw------- 1 amanda amanda 0 Sep 2 23:30 /amanda4/20190821233002/pid -rw------- 1 amanda amanda 0 Sep 2 23:30 /amanda4/20190831233001/pid -rw------- 1 amanda amanda 0 Sep 2 23:30 /amanda4/20190901233002/pid chrisho@marlin:$ I presume I can delete those, and maybe that will fix it? On 9/5/19 2:59 PM, Nathan Stratton Treadway wrote:
On Thu, Sep 05, 2019 at 14:12:29 -0400, Chris Hoogendyk wrote:amanda@marlin:~$ amflush daily amflush: Can't kill a non-numeric process ID at /usr/local/share/perl/5.22.1/Amanda/Holding.pm line 244. How do I straighten this out so that Amanda resumes proper runs tonight?This section of Holding.pm seems to be looping through all subdirectories on the holding disk and searching for a file named "pid" inside each one. So -- do you have any files named "pid" down under your holding disk -- and if so, can you do an "ls -l" and "cat" of each one? Nathan ---------------------------------------------------------------------------- Nathan Stratton Treadway - [email protected] - Mid-Atlantic region Ray Ontko & Co. - Software consulting services - http://www.ontko.com/ GPG Key: http://www.ontko.com/~nathanst/gpg_key.txt ID: 1023D/ECFB6239 Key fingerprint = 6AD8 485E 20B9 5C71 231C 0C32 15F3 ADCD ECFB 6239
-- --------------- Chris Hoogendyk - O__ ---- Systems Administrator c/ /'_ --- Biology & Geosciences Departments (*) \(*) -- 315 Morrill Science Center ~~~~~~~~~~ - University of Massachusetts, Amherst <[email protected]> --------------- Erdös 4
