On Tue, Nov 20, 2012 at 09:46:33AM -0500, Bowie Bailey wrote: > On 11/19/2012 4:35 PM, John Rouillard wrote: > > > > What may also work is to use excludes to do your sharding. I have 4 > > "hosts" now with different excludes. All of them back up the same share: > That seems a bit overly complex. Wouldn't it be easier to use includes? > > # include subdirectories starting with a, b, or c case insensitive > $Conf{BackupFilesOnly} = { > '/home1' => [ "/[A-Ca-c]*/**" ], > }; > > # include subdirectories starting with d...m case insensitive > $Conf{BackupFilesOnly} = { > '/home1' => [ "/[D-Md-m]*/**" ], > }; > > # include subdirectories starting with n...z case insensitive > $Conf{BackupFilesOnly} = { > '/home1' => [ "/[N-Zn-z]*/**" ], > }; > # exclude your problem case > $Conf{BackupFilesExclude} = { > '/home1' => [ "- /user/**" ], > };
IIRC BackupFilesOnly and BackupFilesExclude interact in very wierd ways. I think you can only choose one method. > # back up problem user and other misc directories (non-alphabetic > first char) > $Conf{BackupFilesExclude} = { > '/home1' => [ "+ /user/**", "- /[A-Za-z]*/**" ], > }; > > This way, it is much more obvious what is being backed up by each host. That is true but..... > This is off the top of my head and not tested, so it may need to be > tweaked a bit. But what happens when somebody creates a directory starting with '.', '!' or some unicode character that you didn't put in your include range? With exclusion you will get those directories (multiple times but you will get them). With inclusion you must be sure that there is no chance at all of having a directory created that you have not included otherwise you have no backup. There is also no error that you have no backup. Granted expanding the inclusion to all possible initial characters is possible, but IMO more likey to fail. Also character classes depend on the language settings. While I expect everybody to use LANG=C that is probaly a stupid assumption. In Estonian [A-Z] is not the same as it is with LANG=C (see http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Estonian_alphabet first listing). While it's unlikely you would trip over it, you still need to realize the issue as it leads to a silent failure to back up data. So you need to test every possible filename that can possibly be included. If you are using exclusion, you still have the same character class issue, but since you are excluding those files, some host will not have that range/character class excluded and the files will get backed up. So it fails safely - the data is backed up. Hence I claim the testing is easier, you just run 10 or so test cases (control character, puncutation, chars > 128, Things beginging with T if you are Estonian ...) that are not in any of the exclusion ranges and verify that it gets backed up. -- -- rouilj John Rouillard System Administrator Renesys Corporation 603-244-9084 (cell) 603-643-9300 x 111 ------------------------------------------------------------------------------ Monitor your physical, virtual and cloud infrastructure from a single web console. Get in-depth insight into apps, servers, databases, vmware, SAP, cloud infrastructure, etc. Download 30-day Free Trial. Pricing starts from $795 for 25 servers or applications! http://p.sf.net/sfu/zoho_dev2dev_nov _______________________________________________ BackupPC-users mailing list BackupPC-users@lists.sourceforge.net List: https://lists.sourceforge.net/lists/listinfo/backuppc-users Wiki: http://backuppc.wiki.sourceforge.net Project: http://backuppc.sourceforge.net/