On Friday 10 June 2005 15:22, Ben Coakley wrote:
> luiz.nogueira <at> valeo.com wrote:
> > When bacula is doing the backup of some Windows 2000 folders, I get the
> > following error:
> >
> > 28-May 00:08 vws-cam-s009-fd: Could not stat
> > E:/publico/Comum/Mecq/Arq363: ERR=Access is denied.
> >
> > I could not find any different permission on this folder than I have on
> > other folders, on which bacula does not find any problem.
>
> I'm having the same problem with a new Win2K bacula installation. In my
> case, the folders that the bacula client can't access are user roaming
> profiles. It's not the root folder of the profile that's inaccessible,
> though - it's all the subfolders and files inside. For example:
>
> sample-fd: Could not stat f:/Profiles/sample.user/Application Data:
> ERR=Access is denied.
>
> sample-fd: Could not stat f:/Profiles/sample.user/Cookies:
> ERR=Access is denied.
> [...]
> sample-fd: Could not stat f:/Profiles/sample.user/NTUSER.DAT:
> ERR=Access is denied.
>
> and so on.
>
> There doesn't seem to be a lot of advice about the Windows client
> available. Do most people just allow it to run under the LocalSystem
> account? I tried creating a "bacula" user, adding the user to the
> BackupOperators group, and running the client service under that
> account, but the results were even worse. The client couldn't access
> anything that wasn't accessible to "Everyone". I was a little surprised
> by this - the bacula docs claim that they use Windows' native APIs, and
> the comment on the BackupOperators group claims that BackupOperators can
> ignore file permissions for the purpose of backing up files. I don't
> have the "portable=yes" option specified.
Perhaps you were not Administrator when you installed Bacula, and if you are
then Bacula should run under User Name SYSTEM (and not LocalSystem).
Normally, there is no reason to fiddle with trying to create a "bacula" user
on Windows it only complicates things.
--
Best regards,
Kern
(">
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